I'll preface this by saying that the builders the PO had in doing this extension were complete clowns and there are all sorts of idiotic things we keep finding around the place (example: laying an entire floor and then treading paint all over it and not bothering to clean it up), but this one seems like it might be worse than the others!
There are four downlights in a recently built (2021 I think?) flat roofed extension, one of these had gone so I pulled it out and the driver had a lovely hole in it where a resistor had melted through the casing. Took it out and ordered a couple of new ones with integrated drivers as one other had gone, wired it up and...oh hang on we have a problem.
The whole space for the fitting was just in a cut into the celotex which is resting directly on the plasterboard, so though I could just about get the connection block into the gap previously used for the driver + a connection block, the fitting isn't secure because the spring arms can't actually expand into position because there's insulation around it.
There *is* vertical clearance above the fitting to provide some cooling, but this obviously is not great and everything I can find says "you need 50mm clearance all sides". I can't work out how not great though between "shorter bulb life" and "massive hazard". If it's the second one, what's the best approach? Try and backfill the cavities in the insulation and switch to surface mounts?
PS just as a bonus, these four lights are 10+ years old because they moved them from the hallway to match with the rest already in the room. Why would you put 10 year old LED fittings in a new ceiling ffs.
There are four downlights in a recently built (2021 I think?) flat roofed extension, one of these had gone so I pulled it out and the driver had a lovely hole in it where a resistor had melted through the casing. Took it out and ordered a couple of new ones with integrated drivers as one other had gone, wired it up and...oh hang on we have a problem.
The whole space for the fitting was just in a cut into the celotex which is resting directly on the plasterboard, so though I could just about get the connection block into the gap previously used for the driver + a connection block, the fitting isn't secure because the spring arms can't actually expand into position because there's insulation around it.
There *is* vertical clearance above the fitting to provide some cooling, but this obviously is not great and everything I can find says "you need 50mm clearance all sides". I can't work out how not great though between "shorter bulb life" and "massive hazard". If it's the second one, what's the best approach? Try and backfill the cavities in the insulation and switch to surface mounts?
PS just as a bonus, these four lights are 10+ years old because they moved them from the hallway to match with the rest already in the room. Why would you put 10 year old LED fittings in a new ceiling ffs.