Hi Folks
I'm a DIY'er based in Hong Kong (same electrical system as the UK), and don't take on new electrical installations naturally, but do try to fix some simple problems.
The quick question:
2 spotlights to be connected into 2 terminal blocks buried (4 wires in total with 2 terminals blocks, protruding from some 35mm holes in the concrete) inside a wall, the 2 terminal blocks are dedicated terminals for spotlights connected in the past and removed because they (the spots) broke. Each Terminal block has 2 wires (the 4 wires in total described above) from the mains in their own terminals (1 x L & 1 x N) from one hole and (1 x N & 1 x E) from the other hole.
When testing with a basic voltage testing pen, there is current running to both terminal block when switched on at the wall. ( I haven't yet separated the wires from the terminal blocks and tested them individually, do I need to do that?)
But when connecting one of the lights (L to L and N to N naturally) it doesn't light up. Even if it did, I wouldn't know what to connect with the 2nd terminal block which has an N and an E wire.
What do I need to do to connect the lights correctly? It seems very unlikely, that the original sparky would have used a Green/Yellow wire for the live on one of the terminals, far more likely is that I'm missing a simple trick (running a blue between the 2 N's on the seperate terminal blocks to make this work?)
The new spots are 3W LED's each with their own little transformer connected, and naturally they both have 2 wires to connect them to the mains, a Brown (L) and a Blue (N)
The location is in a tiled concrete cavity above the bathroom mirror. I can't get access to the 2 sets of 2 wires protruding from the 35mm holes once they disappear up inside those holes without some major demolition work but I know that they're the same circuit as the switch at the wall, powers current to both terminal blocks on and off again when it's switched.
FYI
It's my friends flat,. I said I'd help out do some stuff in return for a few favours he's done me.
Thanks in advance for your help in advising a novice!
I'm a DIY'er based in Hong Kong (same electrical system as the UK), and don't take on new electrical installations naturally, but do try to fix some simple problems.
The quick question:
2 spotlights to be connected into 2 terminal blocks buried (4 wires in total with 2 terminals blocks, protruding from some 35mm holes in the concrete) inside a wall, the 2 terminal blocks are dedicated terminals for spotlights connected in the past and removed because they (the spots) broke. Each Terminal block has 2 wires (the 4 wires in total described above) from the mains in their own terminals (1 x L & 1 x N) from one hole and (1 x N & 1 x E) from the other hole.
When testing with a basic voltage testing pen, there is current running to both terminal block when switched on at the wall. ( I haven't yet separated the wires from the terminal blocks and tested them individually, do I need to do that?)
But when connecting one of the lights (L to L and N to N naturally) it doesn't light up. Even if it did, I wouldn't know what to connect with the 2nd terminal block which has an N and an E wire.
What do I need to do to connect the lights correctly? It seems very unlikely, that the original sparky would have used a Green/Yellow wire for the live on one of the terminals, far more likely is that I'm missing a simple trick (running a blue between the 2 N's on the seperate terminal blocks to make this work?)
The new spots are 3W LED's each with their own little transformer connected, and naturally they both have 2 wires to connect them to the mains, a Brown (L) and a Blue (N)
The location is in a tiled concrete cavity above the bathroom mirror. I can't get access to the 2 sets of 2 wires protruding from the 35mm holes once they disappear up inside those holes without some major demolition work but I know that they're the same circuit as the switch at the wall, powers current to both terminal blocks on and off again when it's switched.
FYI
It's my friends flat,. I said I'd help out do some stuff in return for a few favours he's done me.
Thanks in advance for your help in advising a novice!