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Electricians Quote
 
            
                
                    anna.bloom                
                
                    Posts: 69 Forumite                
            
                        
            
                    really have no idea about this, and need answer asap.
Builder/Electrician putting 10 down lights in kitchen, dining area and i need to specify what our budget is.
How much would you expect to pay for that? I really have no idea.
                Builder/Electrician putting 10 down lights in kitchen, dining area and i need to specify what our budget is.
How much would you expect to pay for that? I really have no idea.
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            Comments
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            Is he providing the lights? or have you bought them?
 roughly £10 per light then labour
 which is around £20 p/h for a spark!:jIm going to be frugal:j:DIm going to be frugal:D;)Im going to be frugal;)Beetlejuice Beetlejuice...................:rotfl:0
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            anna.bloom wrote: »really have no idea about this, and need answer asap.
 Builder/Electrician putting 10 down lights in kitchen, dining area and i need to specify what our budget is.
 How much would you expect to pay for that? I really have no idea.
 Get him to give you a price and then negotiate.0
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            Labour should be 150 - 200 and the lights, as mumoffour sugests should be about £10 each. Screwfix often do packs of downlighters which work out qhite a bit cheaper.Eat vegetables and fear no creditors, rather than eat duck and hide.0
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            mumoffour77 wrote: »Is he providing the lights? or have you bought them?
 roughly £10 per light then labour
 which is around £20 p/h for a spark!
 You can get a basic mains voltage (GU10) halogen downlighter for around £3, or a 'fire rated' unit for around £10.
 Do think about using a dimmer switch if you can - I find that it increases the life expectancy of the bulbs significantly.0
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            Make sure if you use a dimmer switch,That if the downlighters are low voltage,The transformers are dimmable ones,There are diffrent types,Downlighters are a pain in the a~~e to fit!!OH THE JOYS OF BEING SELF-EMPLOYED!! Can Travel,Will Work For Free!0
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            I'd avoid the low voltage ones. Although the bulbs are cheaper tha the mains GU10's, you need a transformer, and that means there is more to go wrong with them. I have seen them fail more than mains ones, as on the low voltage side of the circuit you have a fair current flowing (over 4A) yet they tend to come with rather flimsy wires, and if they are not carefully wired you get hotspots at the terminal block where the output connects to the downlighter. Two that had failed in my house had the terminal block completely melted!For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple and wrong.0
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            I'd avoid the low voltage ones. Although the bulbs are cheaper tha the mains GU10's, you need a transformer, and that means there is more to go wrong with them. I have seen them fail more than mains ones, as on the low voltage side of the circuit you have a fair current flowing (over 4A) yet they tend to come with rather flimsy wires, and if they are not carefully wired you get hotspots at the terminal block where the output connects to the downlighter. Two that had failed in my house had the terminal block completely melted!
 That's generally down to bad workmanship / poor installation. Loose screws (or cheap connector block in budget fittings)
 You get what you pay forbaldly going on...0
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            baldelectrician wrote: »That's generally down to bad workmanship / poor installation. Loose screws (or cheap connector block in budget fittings)
 You get what you pay for
 Quite possibly, the installation did look rather bodged in places. With the much higher current the low voltage bulbs take, poor connections cause more heating so less room for error.For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple and wrong.0
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            I have changed over 100 (!) mains GU10 bulbs in my house over the last 2 years. Almost all have been downstairs, on normal switches.
 Upstairs, where I have dimmers, I have probably changed only about 5 bulbs in the same timeframe...0
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