TheJay

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DIY
I have new two new wall light fittings to mount and have three cables coming out of the wall. Earth, live and neutral.

The light fitting only has live and neutral.

How do I identify which cable is live and which is neutral? Both of the cables are covered in black sheathing, so it's impossible to differentiate as you would usually when wiring a socket/plug.

FYI Both wall lights are operated by the same switch.

pBCq1hx.jpg

Can someone help please?
 
Last edited:
I’ve been trying to understand that picture since yesterday.

Looks to me like grey sheathed singles.
Uninsulated cpc just twisted together.

Are you saying they are all black, under the grey sheath?

Did you take down old light fittings? How were they wired?


Technically, a standard light bulb can be wired either way round, so it wouldn’t matter… but as there’s 3 cables there, you can’t mix them up as you might have a live to neutral short.

Two of them look like they are twisted together… Keep them together!
 
I’ve been trying to understand that picture since yesterday.

Looks to me like grey sheathed singles.
Uninsulated cpc just twisted together.

Are you saying they are all black, under the grey sheath?

Did you take down old light fittings? How were they wired?


Technically, a standard light bulb can be wired either way round, so it wouldn’t matter… but as there’s 3 cables there, you can’t mix them up as you might have a live to neutral short.

Two of them look like they are twisted together… Keep them together!
Thank you for your reply. Yes, under the grey is black. I did take down the old light fitting about 8 months ago and didn't take any photos annoyingly.

The third cable is definitely earth. The second terminates at the light. The first is twisted together. Could twisted be live and terminated be neutral?
 
I’m afraid the only way to be sure is by testing with a voltage tester. Either two-prong or non contact.

I won’t go into how you do that until you can say if you’ve got one and know how to use it.
 
I stand by my last post!.
I'm not sure why you are concerned. The bare twisted strands are from the original earthing cable. The twisted pair was connected to one terminal on the original wall light from the point the wire is exposed and the single at the end to the other terminal.
 
I’m afraid the only way to be sure is by testing with a voltage tester. Either two-prong or non contact.

I won’t go into how you do that until you can say if you’ve got one and know how to use it.
I have a meter like this:
universal-multimeter-uni-t-ut33a.jpg
 
Because you have single sheathed singles, all the same colour, apparently emerging from a void, plus a cpc that I wouldn't trust unless confirmed by testing.
 
It’s unusual that sheathed singles were used anywhere domestically. It’s not 6241y, single and earth cable as the earths don’t look like they’re coming from the cable, but something behind the wall.
These earths need proved that they do actually go back to the fuse board.

It’s been a diy job when first put in, using whatever cable was available to be scrounged at the time.

So we can’t advise without testing. Only guess, which wouldn’t be smart.
 
so after sleeving or taping the twisted earths, put the single cable in 1 light terminal, and the loop with the bit of insulation missing in the other. then if the new fitting is classI (metal with an earth terminal, connect the twisted earths to that).
1. it works..... hooray
2. it doesn't work........ aaaah shyte
3. it goes bang........ call in a sparks.

and that purple and white stripe is horrible. 🤪🤪
 
most likely scenario is neutrals twisted together and live conductor on its own (or vice versa) but as previous post advise to get it properly tested and cpc continuity confirmed even though it sounds like you have class 2 fittings now (ie no cpc needed at the fitting?).
 
Thank you all for your replies.

The new light fittings are dimmable and the fitting type is E14 (SES). It doesn't come with a place to connect earth and there isn't any reference to earth in the instructions.
 
If it has a “square within a square” icon on the box, then it’s double insulated and doesn’t need an earth, but make sure the cpc is connected through, just in case it’s supplying an earth to another point.
 

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Thread starter

TheJay

DIY
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Wiring wall lights, which is live and neutral?
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