Jymbob
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Me again, with another question which I fear will become more common as Smart Home technology becomes more popular.
Lighting isolation: is it a requirement to have a switch which breaks the live circuit close to the light?
Background: I've got some smart bulbs which I can turn 'on' and 'off' using various apps or controllers, but only if there's actually power to the bulb (obviously). I'm hoping to replace the wall switches with 'smart' switches which communicate with the bulb, but don't actually physically interrupt the power supply. To do this, the plan is to wire the bulb to permanent live.
From what I'm reading, to comply with 237.3.2.4 I need to make sure the means of isolation is clearly identified, so my intention is to print a small label to place on the light fitting saying something like: "CAUTION: live circuit - isolate at consumer board before maintenance"
I'm not an electrician, so I don't pretend to know the ins and outs of the regs. What I'm really asking is:
1. Is there anything which prevents me from doing this?
2. If you, as an electrician, came across this, would you be okay with it, or would it end up back on here in a "Look at this idiot" post?
Lighting isolation: is it a requirement to have a switch which breaks the live circuit close to the light?
Background: I've got some smart bulbs which I can turn 'on' and 'off' using various apps or controllers, but only if there's actually power to the bulb (obviously). I'm hoping to replace the wall switches with 'smart' switches which communicate with the bulb, but don't actually physically interrupt the power supply. To do this, the plan is to wire the bulb to permanent live.
From what I'm reading, to comply with 237.3.2.4 I need to make sure the means of isolation is clearly identified, so my intention is to print a small label to place on the light fitting saying something like: "CAUTION: live circuit - isolate at consumer board before maintenance"
I'm not an electrician, so I don't pretend to know the ins and outs of the regs. What I'm really asking is:
1. Is there anything which prevents me from doing this?
2. If you, as an electrician, came across this, would you be okay with it, or would it end up back on here in a "Look at this idiot" post?