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New Type Lamp holder.

Mornin' all, on this bright and breezy morning,


here in the backwoods where I live, I come across lots of old electrical stuff. But yesterday I came upon something very new that I have never seen before. I had to remove a ceiling lighting pendant set in a kitchen of a new house to fit the customer's new light fitting (luminaire). The pendant set comprised a circular round white ceiling rose, a short length of white two core flex, and a lamp holder. This was no ordinary lamp holder such as a B.C. or E.S. type. It was a GU10 type. I have never come across a GU10 lamp holder in a pendant set before. The lamp holder had a special L.E.D. lamp fitted with a GU10 cap, but was like a traditional G.L.S. type lamp in style to give a good all round spread of light output.


The benefits I can see are:


 1. Only energy efficient lamps can be fitted.


2. The lamp holder will prevent inadvertent touching of live parts.


The disadvantage is that now a new line of GU10 lamps has to be made and stocked, suited to pendant use.


Waddaufink?


Z.
Parents
  • Presumably it’s not attractive or particularly practical as your customer has already paid you to replace it.


    How many of those dedicated low energy pendants that had to be installed a few years ago to meet the requirements of the building regulations in new build homes are still in use and haven’t been replaced with standard BC pendants or decorative fittings?


    Unless it has some real outstanding benefits it’s another idea that won’t go far.


    Andy
Reply
  • Presumably it’s not attractive or particularly practical as your customer has already paid you to replace it.


    How many of those dedicated low energy pendants that had to be installed a few years ago to meet the requirements of the building regulations in new build homes are still in use and haven’t been replaced with standard BC pendants or decorative fittings?


    Unless it has some real outstanding benefits it’s another idea that won’t go far.


    Andy
Children
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