Wall Lighting
  Home FAQ Contact Sign in
 
Advanced search
MATCHING GROUPS



more...
POPULAR GROUPS

more...

found 56977 articles for 0.675 sec
Montreal Canadiens "Scoreboard" Electric Wall Light I have for sale a Montreal Canadiens "Scoreboard" Electric Wall Light, made of metal, with on/off toggle switch. The Scoreboard Wall Light (with wall fastener on the back), measures 12"x 12"x 5"(deep) and features the Montreal Canadiens Team Logo (5 1/4" x 7 3/4"), Home 2, Visitors 1, Time 12:45 (all which lights up when light is turned on     

Group: rec.collecting.sport.hockey · Group Profile · Search for Wall Lighting in rec.collecting.sport.hockey
Author: J.R. Sinclair
Date: Jun 4, 2008 02:34

"John Rumm" <see.my.signature@nowhere.null> wrote in message news:S8KdnT0fna-i9rXVnZ2dnUVZ8s_inZ2d@posted.plusnet... bp wrote: I want to remove a wall light from a downstairs room. I do not want to replace it with any other form of lighting. Any advice on how I can make the wires safe once I remove the light? If you want an invisible solution (i.e. no visible blanking
Show full article (0.69Kb)
bp wrote: > I want to remove a wall light from a downstairs room. > > I do not want to replace it with any other form of lighting. > > Any advice on how I can make the wires safe once I remove the light? If you want an invisible solution (i.e. no visible blanking box etc), then you need to disconnect them from the supply (probably a ceiling rose or junction box). Once they are disconnected     

Group: uk.diy · Group Profile · Search for Wall Lighting in uk.diy
Author: ARWadworth
Date: May 12, 2008 12:06

On Mon, 12 May 2008 07:49:41 -0700 (PDT) someone who may be bp <bp_soni@yahoo.com> wrote this:- Hi I want to remove a wall light from a downstairs room. I do not want to replace it with any other form of lighting. Any advice on how I can make the wires safe once I remove the light? I have seen a wall plate type cover somewhere but that requires chopping in a pattress box
Show full article (0.88Kb) · Show article thread
bp wrote: > I want to remove a wall light from a downstairs room. > > I do not want to replace it with any other form of lighting. > > Any advice on how I can make the wires safe once I remove the light? > > I have seen a wall plate type cover somewhere but that requires > chopping in a pattress box - which is more work that I wanted to do so > I was wondering if there is any alternative     

Group: uk.diy · Group Profile · Search for Wall Lighting in uk.diy
Author: John Rumm
Date: May 12, 2008 09:07

Hi I want to remove a wall light from a downstairs room. I do not want to replace it with any other form of lighting. Any advice on how I can make the wires safe once I remove the light? I have seen a wall plate type cover somewhere but that requires chopping in a pattress box - which is more work that I wanted to do so I was wondering if there is any alternative Thanks Bhupe
Show full article (0.88Kb) · Show article thread
David Hansen wrote: > On Mon, 31 Mar 2008 16:36:17 +0100 someone who may be Styx > <spamtr@p.not.here> wrote this:- > >> Well, the plate is *definitely* designed to be horizontally mounted (as >> the glass doohickey attaches to it and could only go one way, and the >> lamp holder also determines the orientation). >> >> As to whether the plate is actually designed to be screwed directly to     

Group: uk.diy · Group Profile · Search for Wall Lighting in uk.diy
Author: David Hansen
Date: May 12, 2008 08:32

On Mon, 31 Mar 2008 16:36:17 +0100 someone who may be Styx <spamtr@p.not.here> wrote this:- Well, the plate is *definitely* designed to be horizontally mounted (as the glass doohickey attaches to it and could only go one way, and the lamp holder also determines the orientation). As to whether the plate is actually designed to be screwed directly to the wall or some (now missing)
Show full article (1.22Kb) · Show article thread
wank off the pope boy! "calberto22" <calberto22@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:1192902697.998043.36840@e9g2000prf.googlegroups.com... > hi i thought maybe someone on this group could help. i have several > concrete columns surrounding my house. they are about 150 to 200 feet > away from my house. i would lvoe to put some lights on the outside of > them, however, i've called several     

Group: uk.diy · Group Profile · Search for Wall Lighting in uk.diy
Author: Lobster
Date: May 12, 2008 07:58

Wireless? Talking about battery? Usually the battery light can light up about 2 hours with full charged (even you use a plug to charge in daytime). If u insisted to place lightings in columns, thinking about overhead or underground wirings (depended on actual environment). May be considerd to use gas (oil) lighting or etc? "calberto22" <calberto22@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:1192902697
Show full article (0.76Kb) · Show article thread
    

Group: uk.diy · Group Profile · Search for Wall Lighting in uk.diy
Author: bp
Date: May 12, 2008 07:49

Show full article (0.39Kb)
    

Group: uk.diy · Group Profile · Search for Wall Lighting in uk.diy
Author: Styx
Date: Mar 31, 2008 11:26

Show full article (2.32Kb) · Show article thread
    

Group: uk.diy · Group Profile · Search for Wall Lighting in uk.diy
Author: David Hansen
Date: Mar 31, 2008 09:17

Show full article (1.47Kb) · Show article thread
    

Group: alt.engineering.electrical · Group Profile · Search for Wall Lighting in alt.engineering.electrical
Author: Rubber Glover
Date: Oct 21, 2007 08:32

Show full article (0.93Kb) · Show article thread
    

Group: alt.engineering.electrical · Group Profile · Search for Wall Lighting in alt.engineering.electrical
Author: 3Cat
Date: Oct 21, 2007 02:20

Show full article (1.23Kb) · Show article thread
1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · 6 · 7 · 8 · 9 · next