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  • I thought we were talking about the fuse to put in the ceiling lamp that moocher wants to plug in and what is an appropriate value for that. Since it is a ceiling lamp that is designed to be hardwired I assume it has a 6A rated flex, or maybe 5A if it is very old (but it probably isn't very old by the look of the sticker).

    Apparently you can buy 0.5 mm^2 2-core braided textile covered flex for the retro look. I'd like to think it isn't generally supplied with pendant lamps but perhaps it is with warnings stuck on it that are quickly discarded?

  • There wouldn't normally be any fuse for a ceiling lamp. I've never seen a ceiling rose that has a fuse although I'm sure there are some that have been made/fitted in the history of interior lighting.

    I think part of the confusion is the term fuse. Most people refer to the 'fuse' in the consumer unit as a breaker. These days the 'fuse' rating in the consumer unit should be decided by a qualified professional with the capacity to properly test the circuit.

    The assumption I had made was that he was converting it to use from a plug and the rating of the fuse was the question.

  • Yep.

    A Fuse, nowadays, is in a 13A plug only. There are 5A rated plugs to plug a light into a 6A rated lighting circuit but the don't have fuses in them. Bit specialist nowadays but handy for wall mounted fixtures that you want to swap to a stand alone lamp.

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