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I need to get an outside floodlight fitted, just need to think the best way to keep things logical.
Just want to make life easier for whoever might work on the installation at a later date.
The isolation switch will be in the kitchen but the actual light will be going outside through the wall of an adjacent room.
There are 3 options:
1. Connect into kitchen light loop with MF junction box on landing (where the other kitchen JB's are already) then run a long cable into next room to connect to the floodlight via another JB to join the cable to the flex going outside. (-ve uses 2 JB's, +ve the wiring is amongst the other kitchen lighting - makes sense as that is where the switch will be)
2. The light fitting in the adjacent room is the end of the radial circuit. The power for the floodlight could be connected there and run to a MF junction box near where the flex goes through the wall outside. Then run a long cable into the kitchen for the switch. (+ve only uses 1 JB, +ve JB for flood light is logically near the actual floodlight. -ve switch is in different room to most of the other wiring. -ve power is from one room switch in another)
3. The power could be run from a loop out from one of the landing JB's (for other kitchen lighting) all the way to the adjacent room next to where the flex exits the wall and then run back to the landing JB. The switch would run all the way from the kitchen to the adjacent room aswell meaning 3 cables in total. (-ve more effort and more wires, +ve uses only 1 JB amd keeps wiring logically close to the switch).
Finally, the landing is a good location for future because another floodlight for the front of the house could be connected there and share the same switch in the kitchen.
A drawing would make this easier to follow, but I'd like to hear some views on what kind of issues you consider when trying to keep things logical and avoid unnecessary cable runs and so on.
There is often more than one right answer. Thanks
Just want to make life easier for whoever might work on the installation at a later date.
The isolation switch will be in the kitchen but the actual light will be going outside through the wall of an adjacent room.
There are 3 options:
1. Connect into kitchen light loop with MF junction box on landing (where the other kitchen JB's are already) then run a long cable into next room to connect to the floodlight via another JB to join the cable to the flex going outside. (-ve uses 2 JB's, +ve the wiring is amongst the other kitchen lighting - makes sense as that is where the switch will be)
2. The light fitting in the adjacent room is the end of the radial circuit. The power for the floodlight could be connected there and run to a MF junction box near where the flex goes through the wall outside. Then run a long cable into the kitchen for the switch. (+ve only uses 1 JB, +ve JB for flood light is logically near the actual floodlight. -ve switch is in different room to most of the other wiring. -ve power is from one room switch in another)
3. The power could be run from a loop out from one of the landing JB's (for other kitchen lighting) all the way to the adjacent room next to where the flex exits the wall and then run back to the landing JB. The switch would run all the way from the kitchen to the adjacent room aswell meaning 3 cables in total. (-ve more effort and more wires, +ve uses only 1 JB amd keeps wiring logically close to the switch).
Finally, the landing is a good location for future because another floodlight for the front of the house could be connected there and share the same switch in the kitchen.
A drawing would make this easier to follow, but I'd like to hear some views on what kind of issues you consider when trying to keep things logical and avoid unnecessary cable runs and so on.
There is often more than one right answer. Thanks