I've made a small wooden table lamp, and would like some advice on wiring it to a 3 pin 240v plug in accordance with UK regulations.
My problem is, that with "normal table lamp" 0.75mm squared 2 core cable, the cable tends to be rather stiff when used with my very lightweight 10" tall table lamp. This lack of flexibility will easily cause the lamp to fall over. The lamp has an E14 bulb holder with just a 2 watt LED bulb. Obviously for such low wattage, 0.75 mm squared cable is substantial overkill, but my googling so far seems to be suggesting that I need to use this size cable as a minimum.
Legally, can I use thinner more flexible cable for this lamp, or do regulations require I use a minimum of 0.75mm squared? If so, I will need to fit some sort of lead weight into the base to help balance it.
Thanks in advance.
My problem is, that with "normal table lamp" 0.75mm squared 2 core cable, the cable tends to be rather stiff when used with my very lightweight 10" tall table lamp. This lack of flexibility will easily cause the lamp to fall over. The lamp has an E14 bulb holder with just a 2 watt LED bulb. Obviously for such low wattage, 0.75 mm squared cable is substantial overkill, but my googling so far seems to be suggesting that I need to use this size cable as a minimum.
Legally, can I use thinner more flexible cable for this lamp, or do regulations require I use a minimum of 0.75mm squared? If so, I will need to fit some sort of lead weight into the base to help balance it.
Thanks in advance.