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I'm removing all the lighting in my home (will get an electrician to fit the new lights) and came across this wiring configuration. The switch in the pic was a part of the light fitting, and the earth tab was connected to the light housing. There is only one wall switch. Every other light in the house was wired normally, that is just connected to a single (or sometimes two daisy chained) L/N/E wire. What's going on here?

Unconventional light wiring 20191010_084823 - EletriciansForums.net
 
It's a bit odd. The cable with the green sleeved earth looks like the supply, except that the line (red) was not connected and was replaced by whatever that smaller white cable is with its sheath going right into the terminal. That does not look from here like a normal installation cable, so my first guess is that it is a DIY workaround for the line in the real supply cable having been damaged. The cable may or may not be suitable for the purpose.

Then it looks normal, with the switch cable being the one connected with its black to the red of the light fitting. However, its CPC does not appear to be connected, so the switch may not have an earth.

I would think the electrician who installs the new lights will want to investigate the reason for the separate line conductor entering the fitting as it could indicate an inappropriate repair.
 
Thanks. The switch was earthed when it was originally connected to the light's housing, along with the green earth wire. If the real supply cable was damaged, then why would there be two more cables running to repair it?
 
you have a switched feed and neutral to the buld holder via an inline switch to boot

then a blanked off live and a what appears to be some flex feeding the light

looks a bit rough if you ask me
 
I meant the switch on the wall may not have an earth as the CPC in its cable was not connected this end.
 
Its a little difficult to work out from the picture what is going on but it looks pretty normal.
2 PL's, 1 x N and 1 x SL, plus an extra little switch. I cant quite make out what the white flex is doing.
 
The white cable is most likely an SDI (Single core Double Insulated), often used in Australia to carry an extra active conductor.

My thoughts on how this setup came to be:
1. TPS bringing N+E from the nearest light on the circuit, active will either be switched with the other light or not connected, depending on if this light is new or was on the other circuit already. The earth is not sheathed, it's green-yellow insulated.
2. SDI bringing a hard active then twin-active TPS (red-black, more modern Aussie twin-active will be red-white) to a switch. Light switches do not have to include an earth here unless it's a metal faceplate, most household gear is plastic fronted.
3. Estimate 70s-80s, after we moved to insulated earths but before stranded cable became more common at the 1.5mm2 range.
 
Yes, the wall switch is not grounded, but none of them are due to being plastic.

Yes, found another light nearby with a daisy chained TPS, presume that's providing the N+E.

Found a nearby light switch that provides the SDI active (but doesn't switch it).

The two core cable goes back to a switch that looks a little different to the others, so maybe it was an afterthought (as opposed to bypassing cable damage).

House was built early 80s.

Thanks guys, all makes sense now.
 
Looks like there was no active where they got the neutral and earth from, so they had to run a SDI active from another outlet. The red wire in the connector should be dead.
 

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