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Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
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    • CommentAuthorwookey
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016 edited
     
    As part of major bedroom refurb I've replaced one pendant CFL with LEDs. 3 circuits. One for general room light (2x 3W/300lm luminaires) and 2 (1W/100lm) ceiling-mounted reading-lights, one each side of the bed, with standard '2 switch' circuits so there is a switch by the bed as well as the door.

    The LEDs are all current-driven 350mA units. There are 3 drivers, one for each circuit. The switching is all mains. The drivers are in the loft for future accessibility, with all through-cabling gasketed to preserve airtightness as much as possible. The Luminaires are in a false ceiling below the airtightness membrane.

    After much farting about I have all the wiring done and I even got it right - the switches turn on/off the right lights. However, whilst the main room light works fine, both the reading-lights flash on momentarily every few seconds even when 'off'. One with 4-second period, the other 7.

    They worked fine when initially tested, and when all three drivers were running off one switch (temporary wiring setup for a couple of weeks until today). But now that the cabling is properly separated and in conduit I have this interesting strobing. What on earth is that about?

    The LED/drivers combo for the 1W LEDs are these:
    http://www.ledkia.com/uk/buy-led-downlights/1104-adjustable-1w-cob-led-spotlight.html (you have to click the right photo to see the driver - website too fancy for me to give you an actual URL), i.e. 'cheap and nasty' but they work with about 70% efficiency which is good enough given the very low power.

    So how does the driver manage to generate some light when its mains input is switched off? And why hasn't it being doing it for the last few weeks? My best guess is that now I have cables properly laid there is some voltage induced from nearby parallel cables and because it's such a low-power driver this is enough for the driver to try and start up? I've not done any measurements yet, because I've spent about 12 hours cabling/wiring this weekend and I'm bored of that. The cables from junction boxes to switch are parallel for about 3m. But those shouldn't have any current in them when all the circuits are off. The incoming mains doesn't run parallel at all, so my theory isn't very convincing to me, but otherwise it makes even less sense. It's also on a short spur so won't be current-carrying unless at least one of the circuits is on.

    I suppose I need to disconnect some things and see what it is that makes it stop.

    Just thought I'd post in case anyone else had come across this sort of peculiarity before.
    • CommentAuthorCWatters
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016
     
    Most likely induction from parallel wires. Especially if you have a permanent live drop down to the switch in same conduit as switched live.

    I have same problem in bathroom but they are dim when off. Using one halogen and the rest led was a temporary cure.
    • CommentAuthorbarney
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016
     
    Capacitive coupling between permanent live and switch live cores (and neutrals)

    Once any real load is applied, it will swamp the coupling current (the halogen above is doing this job)

    The simplest retrofit is to put a small mains rated capacitor across the LED fitting. It's like having a minimum load, but without the heat.

    You need the capacitance to be several times larger than the capacitance across the switch and its wiring in the off state.

    Use something like 10- 100 nanoFarad for this task - wire ended ones are easier for connection.

    Wire in parallel with the lamp, not across the switch - you want to form a capacitive voltage divider between the switch and the capacitor you are adding to lower the voltage when off to below the striking voltage for the electronics in the lamp.

    Also please check you do have adequate earthing on the lighting system

    Regards

    Barney
    • CommentAuthorringi
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016
     
    It is very possible you have got N, L or E mixed up at some point, you can get them mixed at the a ceiling rose and that rooms light at still work when tested, but it effect anther rooms light....
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016 edited
     
    If there's no current in the parallel wires but there is a mains voltage on them then it might be capacitive rather than inductive coupling. E.g., live wire to a switch which is off next to switched live coming back to the ceiling junction box forming a capacitor to allow a small amount of power through, enough to slowly charge the big capacitor in the switch mode power supply.

    [PS, cross posted with Barney.]
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016
     
    Useful thread which gives an actual number for the capacitive coupling:

    http://www.theiet.org/forums/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=205&threadid=3053

    “Capacitive coupling is highly likely to be the problem here. The 91 volts is more than probable in this instance. With cables having coupling in the order of about 100pf/metre (minimum), it only takes 10m to get a whole 1nF (i.e. 73uA leakage). Digital multimeters (good ones, that is) are about 20Mohm input. If you measure with a good ol' analogue meter you'll probably find a lot lower than 91V.”
    • CommentAuthorsnyggapa
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016
     
    we have an LED light in the hall that when off flickers almost imperceptibly, but only when the landing lights are on. Landing lights off, no flickering.

    I am assuming parallel running cables at some point is the cause in my case (everything goes back to a central point so there is a gathering where they all end up running together) but my runs are all low voltage DC and I would have thought that DC wouldn't suffer from that problem so much as AC. It could I guess be the lighting controller that has a slight leakage - I haven't checked to see if the hall is on the same controller as the landing.

    Been like it for five years and I suspect that it will be like it for another five :)
    • CommentAuthorwookey
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016
     
    OK, that all makes sense. Cheers chaps.

    It is also the case that the upstairs lighting circuit is old enough not to be earthed. So I have carefully wired the earth in all the new wiring, but it's not connected back to a real earth at the CU yet (replacing that wire is harder...) and thus is floating. I'd expect that not to make any real difference - there is an extra wire in all the cables, doing 'nothing' and not connected to any other wires in the circuit, but I guess it could make a capacitance problem worse? Would earthing it make the capacitance lower? I'll have to read that IET thread and have a proper think.

    Fixing this has been 'on the list' for a while. I wasn't aware that earthing was deemed unnecessary for lighting circuits back in the 60s till I bought a house that came like that. And with modern LED drivers, there is of course nothing to attach it to at the business end except the junction box terminal, but there is a minor benefit in terms of potential cable-damage protection.

    Ringi. Yes. I've not done all the circuit and insulation testing yet to check I didn't do anything backwards. That'll be tonight's excitement :-)
    • CommentAuthorwookey
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016 edited
     
    <blockquote><cite>Posted By: barney</cite>The simplest retrofit is to put a small mains rated capacitor across the LED fitting</blockquote>

    Across the fitting, or across the driver? - they are several metres apart and it's the driver input that will be seeing the capacitance from the switch cables. Ah yes, you say 'electronics in the lamp', so you do mean 'across the driver'.

    An alternative to adding a capacitor is presumably to use a less shoddy driver unit with better rejection of such capacitive switch loads. (I looked inside and it was not pretty - I wasn't expecting much for Ă‚ÂŁ2.95 for lamp _and_ driver)
    • CommentAuthorbarney
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016 edited
     
    OK - suggest you get it "earthed" soonest - and if you do have spare cores, strap them to earth as well. If getting back to the consumer unit is difficult, run a bit of 4.00mm2 green/yellow single core to the nearest power point, immersion circuit or similar - something you know has a reasonable circuit protective conductor connected back to the consumer unit

    The insulation testing is probably pointless now - your switch on bang test seems to prove you've got it about right

    Put the capacitor in parallel with the driver - it's the mains side capacitance on the driver input you want to control

    Regards

    Barney
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016
     
    BTW, I realise you plan to connect it but a floating earth wire, even on a circuit which doesn't need earths, is a reason for failing electrical inspections. Somebody I know put in mains-powered smoke and fire alarms and used T+E, because that's what he had, for the interconnection but the electrician who came round to inspect his installation (for building warrant sign off for a major DIY renovation/extension project) snagged it for that reason. Fix was just to connect it to earth somewhere, of course.
    • CommentAuthorbarney
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016
     
    It's probably the other way round Ed - BS 7671 suggests that you provide an "earth" at every outlet and accessory, needed or not - it's there for the day when someone changes the accessory or outlet to a type that does need earthing

    Whilst not really relevant in a house, it's not ideal to have unconnected cores on bigger systems - the voltage tends to escalate on the core (again capacitive coupling) and it can be a bit of a jolt if you end up touching it - nowhere near fatal (not enough current) but has caused a few people to flinch and fall or similar

    Bad time to mention RCD's ?

    Regards

    Barney
    •  
      CommentAuthordjh
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016
     
    The mains-powered alarms I have state that they do not need an earth but they provide a 'convenience' terminal to terminate an earth in case it happens to be present. They do need a three core cable though, because of the interconnect signal.

    RCDs and alarms cause confusion for some electricians, I believe.
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016
     
    Pretty sure from the way he described it that in that application 2-core (or maybe 3-core?) without an earth would have been signed off OK but, because it was present, the earth wire needed to actually be earthed. I did ask if that was in case somebody in future assumed it was a good earth but he said, no, it was in case of it becoming live in a fault condition.

    Agree, though, that it's usually better to provide an earth for future proofing.
    • CommentAuthorbarney
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016
     
    OK - I suspect said spark might have been confusing things slightly

    The requirement is in the big book of fun, Regulation 411.3.1.1 - last sentence - as almost without exception in a domestic setting the protective measure of automatic disconnection of supply is relied on for safety (regardless if the actual item relies on double or reinforced installation)

    Note the requirement (for a circuit protective conductor) for "............. run to, and terminated at..........."

    Regards

    Barney
    • CommentAuthorTimSmall
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016
     
    I used to have a CFL which did the same thing - very dim flash every 30 seconds or so I think. All the wiring checked out fine, so I put it down to some sort of inductance.
    • CommentAuthorwookey
    • CommentTimeDec 12th 2016 edited
     
    So, a bit of experimentation reveals that the earth is (not very surprisingly) floating at about 118V from both N and L. And if I earth it to a handy pipe then _one_ of the lamps stops strobing. But not both. Curiouser and curiouser. Switch the 2-ways to the other way round and the 2nd lamp stops strobing too. So without earth they both strobe in one switch position but not the other. With earth only one strobes in one position. So I can conclusively say that floating earths affect the capacitance in switch drops.

    Measuring at the drivers (with a high-impedance digital meter) they see about 17V in one switch arrangement, and either 39V in the other (for the one that's not strobing) and gently rising over a few seconds up to 48V in the other. At 50V the driver strikes and the voltage falls to something below 8V (0V? digital meter lag) and the process repeats. So, if you can keep the voltage at the driver under about 45V then everything works as expected.

    I've taken the drivers out for a proper look with my scope.

    This is the driver: http://szdarkenergy.com/product/detail/118.html which uses a BP9021A: http://www.bpsemi.com/en/Data/BP9021A_EN_DS_Rev%201.0.pdf

    It's not obvious to me why the capacitance changes between the two switch positions, even after drawing out the wiring. In the section between the two switches (the bit that changes) you get NNEL in one position and NLEN in the other (or maybe NENL and NELN, depending which wires are connected where. The cable is flat. The two neutrals are connected at the far end of the cable.
    Anyone grok this? (largely of academic interest - it clearly does approx double (I have 3m to 1st switch, then 6 - 8 between the switches).

    The 17th regs seems to say nothing about cable capacitance, which surprises me. (well, one mention saying that big capacitors must also have a discharge resistor).
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeDec 13th 2016
     
    Posted By: wookeyyou get NNEL in one position and NLEN in the other
    It seems to me that the first of these will have lower capacitive coupling than the second with the live wire physically further away from the switched wires and with an earth wire in between.

    In some high speed parallel interfaces using flat cables they carefully put a ground wire between each pair of data wires to reduce the capacitive coupling between them. I don't see why it wouldn't help with lighting cable, too.

    I assume you're using the “straight-through” arrangement shown below as the more common “back-to-back” arrangement (which avoids an extra floating connection in the first switch box) would have two L wires in one of the off positions.

    The problem is that neither arrangement allows you to make sure the earth is between the live and the switched[-off] wire in both positions, which is a pity.
      dsc02100-small.jpg
    • CommentAuthorbarney
    • CommentTimeDec 13th 2016
     
    Sounds about right

    The difference is due to a differing length of conductor depending on how you set the 2 way switches (draw it out and you should see a doubling/halving effect - which your measurements support)

    17th edition wouldn't be specifically concerned as

    1 - It expects the system to be earthed

    2 - It expects proper workmanship etc so doesn't really predict long length of capacitive coupled cabling (the physical arrangement tends to mitigate this)

    Keep in mind the wiring regs are only concerned with protecting persons and livestock from shock fire and burns

    Regards

    Barney
    • CommentAuthorringi
    • CommentTimeDec 13th 2016
     
    Sooner we get wireless control of all lighting, with no cables from the switches the better, then it will just be all lights connected to a simple L,N,E radical.
    • CommentAuthorbarney
    • CommentTimeDec 13th 2016
     
    Hardly radical

    I've a small office design on the go that powers the LED lighting with power over Ethernet (plus)

    Just stuff a 13A power supply into the "hub" and wire out to all the luminaires, switches, etc with Cat 6 cable

    Easy to install, and great fun to programme for just about any circumstances that can be dreamt up - there is even a control mode via a smart phone

    A number of the switches, daylight sensors, PIR's etc can be wireless to a series of wifi nodes doted about and cabled back to the "hub"

    Look for lighting over POE+ on the interweb thingy

    Regards

    Barney
    • CommentAuthorringi
    • CommentTimeDec 13th 2016
     
    But POE needs one wire for each light, a wireless mesh network could have let the light be connected wherever there is power (AC or DC), with the power cables being able to be connected to any nearby fitting that already has a power connection.
    • CommentAuthorwookey
    • CommentTimeDec 13th 2016 edited
     
    Posted By: barney

    The difference is due to a differing length of conductor depending on how you set the 2 way switches
    (draw it out and you should see a doubling/halving effect - which your measurements support)


    I did draw it out and the lengths are the same, only the signal ordering in the cable changes (with 'straight-through' wiring. See Ed's handy pic above - both 'offs' have the same cable lengths. If it was back-back then one wire swaps from the L to the S side, which I can see is likely to change the capacitance.

    2 - It expects proper workmanship etc so doesn't really predict long length of capacitive coupled cabling (the physical arrangement tends to mitigate this)


    But any switch-drop cable is a capacitively-coupled length, and that's hardly unusual. I guess there may be parts telling you not to make those 'too long', but then I'd expect a discussion of what 'too long' meant in terms of pf/m.

    Ed well done for deducing the wiring type from my message (And yes I should have used 'S' for switched not 'N' as it's not a neutral).
    • CommentAuthorbarney
    • CommentTimeDec 13th 2016
     
    OK - so a dedicated lighting power "bus" around the property then - perhaps similar in concept to commercial lighting and other bus bar systems

    Then totally Wi-Fi devices for control and command

    I'd see that as putting a lot of intelligence into each luminaire (which have a short life) - eg to unscramble commands from the ether and decide if it was meant for "me" - and if so "what should I do"

    I see POE as a flood wire system that would allow pretty well any thing to be moved, swapped, changed etc with little more than the effort of patching

    I suspect POE lighting in a domestic setting will be come the new normal as you get power, control and command in the same cable with a simple RJ45 connection - plus the interoperability to make it talk to heating and vent controls - so set back on heating in rooms with no lights on, or increase in ventilation in rooms that have lights on (as a result of occupancy)

    As long as it's "open protocol", then happy days

    Regards

    Barney
    • CommentAuthorbarney
    • CommentTimeDec 13th 2016
     
    OK Wookey, that's not what I'm seeing - if you have "conversion method" (the back to back) or conventional method (the straight through) and assuming you haven't wired it all in singles, then depending on the switch positions, either case increases or reduces the length of permanently live and switch live conductors in close proximity to each other

    OK - current practice for domestic lighting circuits would tend to loop both lines and neutrals via switches - so the "twin with earth" to the light is usually dead and with a permanently connected neutral to the luminaires - in older language it would be akin to "joint box method"

    Using those techniques tends to significantly shorten those cables that carry a permanent line and switched (off) line - the more conventional 3 plate systems will exacerbate the problems which manifests itself with CFL's and LED's

    Regards

    Barney
    • CommentAuthorringi
    • CommentTimeDec 13th 2016
     
    Posted By: barneyThen totally Wi-Fi devices for control and command


    More lickly ZigBee as it is built into very cheap chips, we can't continue with the daft way dimming of LED/CFL is done.....
    • CommentAuthorwookey
    • CommentTimeDec 18th 2016
     
    Well some more dicking about has produced a set-up that actually works. Thought I should report back.

    Adding 120pF capacitors (the smallest mains ones I had lying about) made no difference to the behaviour. Replacing the one remaining original lighting wire (no earth) in the system with some modern T&E made that lamp stop flickering (adding an earth the system in general had already stopped the other one).

    So, as already observed, earthing matters with low-power drivers and switch drops. Or at least these drivers. The offending cable was 4 or 5 tinned strands, 2 conductors ~1.5mm total CSA, so it's possible that the capacitance of tinned, stranded wire is higher than single-solid-core, but as both new and old cable flickered without an earth, I reckon it's mostly that having an earth limits the capacitance/voltage rise.

    Live and learn.
    • CommentAuthorringi
    • CommentTimeDec 18th 2016
     
    Have a earthed wire between the two plates of a capacitor does rather stop the capacitor working. (The L/N cable are the two sides of your unwanted capacitor.)
    • CommentAuthorEd Davies
    • CommentTimeDec 18th 2016
     
    Posted By: wookeyAdding 120pF capacitors (the smallest mains ones I had lying about) made no difference to the behaviour.
    Probably needed a bit more. At 100 pF/m wire capacitance that would only be “shorting out” a small part of the drop to the switch. You'd be wanting a substantially lower impedance than the wire's capacitive coupling so, as Barney suggested, about 10 nF or more rather than 0.12 nF.
    • CommentAuthorwookey
    • CommentTimeDec 19th 2016
     
    Oh yes: 100nF, not 100pF. Doh - should have checked. Don't think I can be arsed to take it down and try that again, interesting as it would be. (This project is impressively behind schedule and we'd quite like our bedroom back).
   
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