Hiding Wagos in ceiling void

I have a light fitting in a loft room - it is a set of positionable G9 lights located in the ridge, and I have discovered a mess of choc-block shoved into the ceiling void, so want to fix this.  The cables terminating at that light fitting are: incoming power, outgoing power to other lights, and the cable to the wall switch.  Unfortunately there isn't enough room above the plasterboard to fit a Wago box, and there isn't enough space in the light itself to fit the connectors, so I'm looking for ideas for how to do this as a neat job?  Would it be acceptable to put a dry lining box into the ceiling with plastic blank plate to house some Wago connectors, and screw the light fitting to the blank plate?

Thanks.

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  • put a dry lining box into the ceiling with plastic blank plate to house some Wago connectors, and screw the light fitting to the blank plate?
    Yes, if the fitting is light enough. Even if not socket boxes and cover plates make can be used as  'accessible from below' junction boxes in rooms under flat roofs and so on. Not the most elegant, but quite handy sometimes, in less obvious places. also the plasterboard mounting round "conduit" boxes can fit under a large ceiling rose with a flatter cover plate.  
    And there are very slim junction boxes  or even smaller for such situations as well that can post into the void through a slot behind a fitting 

    regards Mike.

  • Good point - I'd just assumed a round dry-lining box for a ceiling (with a plastic round conduit box lid as a cover)- you very rarely see square/rectangular anything on ceilings - as they'd look very odd unless kept parallel with the walls, and you can't use anything simple like a spirit level to get the angle right on a horizontal ceiling,

       - Andy,

  • I thought about posting a junction box through the hole in the ceiling - whilst it would certainly fit behind the plasterboard, the space available means I wouldn't be able to post it up (vertically) through the hole and rotate it to lay horizontally on the top of the ceiling, so it would involve removing and then replacing plasterboard in order to fit it.

    Thanks for these ideas.

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  • I thought about posting a junction box through the hole in the ceiling - whilst it would certainly fit behind the plasterboard, the space available means I wouldn't be able to post it up (vertically) through the hole and rotate it to lay horizontally on the top of the ceiling, so it would involve removing and then replacing plasterboard in order to fit it.

    Thanks for these ideas.

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