Interior pir for lighting

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Discussion

Roger645

Original Poster:

1,730 posts

248 months

Tuesday 6th February 2018
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I’m just converting one of our bedrooms to a dressing room and have reached the point of thinking about lighting. Current set up is a single ceiling light and for some reason there is a bathroom style pull cord switch which has been there since we moved in. I would like to fit a pir to control the light but but wonders if I needed to retain a switch as well as having a pir? I would also like a discreet pir so any recommendations would be great, I will use LED so it needs to handle switching that if that makes any difference?

ADogg

1,349 posts

215 months

Tuesday 6th February 2018
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I’ve got led pir lightbulbs in my hallways (it’s a B&B) and they’re ace, I got them from amazon at about £8 each 18months ago.

B'stard Child

28,469 posts

247 months

Wednesday 7th February 2018
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Roger645 said:
I’m just converting one of our bedrooms to a dressing room and have reached the point of thinking about lighting. Current set up is a single ceiling light and for some reason there is a bathroom style pull cord switch which has been there since we moved in. I would like to fit a pir to control the light but but wonders if I needed to retain a switch as well as having a pir? I would also like a discreet pir so any recommendations would be great, I will use LED so it needs to handle switching that if that makes any difference?
I've done that in a downstairs toilet

However it isn't a direct replacement for a pull switch in needs a power feed too so you may need to run a live feed from the ceiling rose before it works

Alucidnation

16,810 posts

171 months

VEX

5,256 posts

247 months

Wednesday 7th February 2018
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Yes, done it in both cloak room and utility room.

From memory you need a live and neutral at the PIR, if you have access to the cabling from the loft above it should be easy enough to rewire.

Then it is just a case of setting the light level for it trigger time and how long you want it to run for after you have left.

V

Roger645

Original Poster:

1,730 posts

248 months

Wednesday 7th February 2018
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Thanks all for the responses, really helpful and have given me food for thought.

Herbs

4,916 posts

230 months

Wednesday 7th February 2018
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As mentioned, very easy to do - fit a ceiling on and splice it in.

With regards to the switch, I left mine in place as it was in a discreet place and a) i didn't have to repair or blank off the faceplate and b) you never know when you want to kill power to it to replace bits without resorting to pulling fuses.

Roger645

Original Poster:

1,730 posts

248 months

Wednesday 7th February 2018
quotequote all
Herbs said:
As mentioned, very easy to do - fit a ceiling on and splice it in.

With regards to the switch, I left mine in place as it was in a discreet place and a) i didn't have to repair or blank off the faceplate and b) you never know when you want to kill power to it to replace bits without resorting to pulling fuses.
Great, thanks for the response, that's useful

Herbs

4,916 posts

230 months

Wednesday 7th February 2018
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Roger645 said:
Great, thanks for the response, that's useful
The great thing with LED is you can be really creative with it so have a good think about what you want from it and do some plans first. In a dressing room you can have ceiling, plinth, mirror and inside hanging area's all lit. The correct lighting and something out of the ordinary can really add the wow factor with very little cost.

The one thing I would say is make sure you get a transformer and LED tape that is dimmable so can can adjust it to suit your needs.

When I will be doing my next one when we move, I will be going for 2 circuits of it so there is a soft warm light inset in hanging and either plinth or ceiling undecided yet which is dimmed. I'll then be fitting some discreetly hidden round a floor length mirror with a sensor pad light switch which hides behind the wall or glass which will be much brighter for appearance checking.

clockworks

5,398 posts

146 months

Wednesday 7th February 2018
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I bought some LED lamps with integrated PIR from eBay. BC10, so they fit into standard pendant lamp holders.
I've got one in the front porch, and two in the hallway. They aren't adjustable for sensitivity or duration (fixed at about 40 seconds), but are ideal for areas that you just pass through or where you are continually moving about.

wjwren

4,484 posts

136 months

Wednesday 7th February 2018
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Ive got them in the landing and bathroom. Sick to death of telling kids to turn lights off. Ive since purchased e27 bulbs with sensor in off ebay for kids bedroom. They were only £5 so similar price to normal led bulb.