Weatherproof outdoor sockets and lighting installed by CJA Electrical

CJA Electrical fits outdoor, garden, and security lighting across Snodland and the wider Tonbridge and Malling area. The brief on most jobs is straightforward — a PIR floodlight covering the driveway, low-voltage runs lighting up planting and steps in the back garden, an outbuilding circuit with weatherproof sockets, or all three on the same visit. All of it is wired safely to BS 7671 with proper IP-rated fittings, RCD protection, and outdoor-rated cabling that’ll outlast the fittings.

What Outdoor Lighting actually is

Outdoor lighting covers anything that has to live out in the weather — security floodlights, garden lights, path and driveway lighting, outbuilding power and lighting, pergola and soffit fittings, and the switching and timers that control them. Compared to indoor wiring, the install differences are: every fitting needs an appropriate IP rating, every circuit goes through a 30 mA RCD, every buried cable is mechanically protected, and every outdoor termination is properly weather- sealed. None of that is rocket science, but it’s the bit that separates an install that lasts from one that needs ripping out in three years.

When you need Outdoor Lighting in Snodland

The triggers we hear most from Snodland clients: “we keep fumbling with a torch on the dark drive”, “the side gate’s a weak point and we want a light that comes on automatically”, “we’ve finished landscaping the back garden and now we want to light it”, and “the outbuilding’s getting wired up so we might as well do the lighting around it at the same time”. All four are sensible drivers, and all four often run into the same install: a single new outdoor circuit from the consumer unit, RCD-protected, with multiple fittings hung off it on SWA or armoured-equivalent cable.

Fully labelled domestic consumer unit after EICR testing
Fully labelled domestic consumer unit after EICR testing

Standards and what compliance looks like

The legal framework is BS 7671. The technical requirements that apply to outdoor work specifically: RCD protection (30 mA, on every outdoor circuit, every outdoor socket); cable selection (SWA for buried runs, outdoor-rated cable in conduit above ground); IP ratings on fittings (matched to where the fitting goes); and weatherproof glands and terminations on every outdoor junction. The current edition is the 18th Edition with Amendment 2 (2022). Outdoor work is covered across several BS 7671 sections rather than a single chapter — the relevant references are 411 (RCD protection), 522 (cable routing and selection), 522.8 (mechanical protection of buried cables), and 712 (PV and outdoor systems where applicable).

Fittings and where they go

Most Snodland outdoor lighting jobs use a small mix of fitting types: a PIR-controlled floodlight or two for security, a handful of bollards or spike lights for path-level illumination, a couple of wall-mounted bulkheads or wall packs over doors and outbuildings, and (where the garden’s been landscaped) low-voltage uplighters and accent lights through planting. LED is the default — longer life, lower running cost, lower heat output, easier dimming. Tungsten-halogen floodlights are still around but increasingly uncommon on new installs. Smart fittings (Wi-Fi/Zigbee controlled) are an option where the customer wants central control via app — we wire those into the same outdoor circuit as conventional fittings, no different from the install side.

Smaller domestic consumer unit with each circuit clearly labelled
Smaller domestic consumer unit with each circuit clearly labelled

Why Snodland property owners book CJA Electrical

CJA Electrical is based in Rochester and covers outdoor lighting work across Tonbridge and Malling. Snodland sits within the 30 -minute working radius — close enough that a site visit before quoting is a non-issue and call-back for snagging or extensions is straightforward. The install side is what we get right: SWA cable on every buried run, IP-rated fittings matched to location, weatherproof glands on every junction, 30 mA RCD protection on every circuit. The fittings themselves are largely customer choice — we’ll spec to a budget, install what’s been chosen, and stand behind the install.

How the work runs

Step one — site visit to agree fitting positions, sight cable routes, check the consumer unit for spare ways, and confirm the brief. We’ll usually walk the property with the customer and mark up where each fitting goes. Step two — quote. Fixed price for most Snodland domestic outdoor lighting jobs, sent through within a working day. Includes fittings (where customer hasn’t specified their own), cable, accessories, install labour, and a test certificate for the new circuit. Step three — install. Usually a single day on site for a typical domestic scheme. We dig cable runs, fit fittings, terminate junctions, commission the circuit, and walk through operation with the customer.

What affects the price

The factors that move Snodland outdoor lighting pricing: cable run length (digging through a 30 m back garden takes longer than running along a 5 m drive), number of fittings, fitting quality (basic LED bulkheads vs spec’d fittings to match a landscape design), and any switching complexity (smart- controlled, multi-zone, programmable timers). Quotes are fixed-price for most domestic jobs — the variables are well enough understood after a site visit that we can commit to a number rather than running open-ended day rates. Larger schemes with significant trenching or multiple circuits may go to a capped quote with a milestone breakdown.

FAQs

Can PIR floodlights be controlled from a phone?

Yes — modern smart-controlled PIR floodlights run via the same Wi-Fi platforms as smart bulbs (Hue, Smart Life, Tuya, etc.) and can be triggered, scheduled, or overridden from an app. We can spec smart fittings or wire conventional fittings into a smart relay where central control matters. For most domestic jobs the built-in PIR sensor and a manual override switch is enough.

How bright should security floodlights be?

A 30 W LED floodlight (around 2,400 lumens) is enough for most domestic driveways and rear access in Snodland. Brighter than that and you start dazzling visitors and annoying neighbours — there’s no security gain from over-illumination. For wider coverage, two 30 W floodlights spaced apart give better light spread than a single 60 W on the same fitting position.

Will outdoor lighting affect my electricity bill noticeably?

LED outdoor lighting uses very little — a 30 W floodlight on for two hours an evening uses about 22 kWh a year, around £6 at current tariffs. Low-voltage garden lighting is even lower. Dusk-till-dawn fittings use more (running 8-10 hours a night) but still negligible at LED wattages.

Do you handle outbuilding electrics — sockets, lighting, supply?

Yes. Sheds, workshops, garden offices, and detached garages are common Snodland jobs — usually a SWA submain from the house consumer unit out to a small board in the outbuilding, with the lighting and sockets fed from there. The submain itself, the outbuilding board, and the circuits inside are all installed to BS 7671 with a test certificate covering the new work.

Can you light up trees and planting without damaging them?

Yes — uplighters mounted on adjustable spike or surface bases sit at the base of the tree pointing up, with the cable running along the soil surface (or shallow-buried if it’s a permanent install). No fixings into the tree, no cable wrapped around the trunk. The fitting can be repositioned seasonally if planting changes.

Related services in Snodland

Outdoor Lighting in nearby towns

Frequently asked questions

Can PIR floodlights be controlled from a phone?

Yes — modern smart-controlled PIR floodlights run via the same Wi-Fi platforms as smart bulbs (Hue, Smart Life, Tuya, etc.) and can be triggered, scheduled, or overridden from an app. We can spec smart fittings or wire conventional fittings into a smart relay where central control matters. For most domestic jobs the built-in PIR sensor and a manual override switch is enough.

How bright should security floodlights be?

A 30 W LED floodlight (around 2,400 lumens) is enough for most domestic driveways and rear access in Snodland. Brighter than that and you start dazzling visitors and annoying neighbours — there's no security gain from over-illumination. For wider coverage, two 30 W floodlights spaced apart give better light spread than a single 60 W on the same fitting position.

Will outdoor lighting affect my electricity bill noticeably?

LED outdoor lighting uses very little — a 30 W floodlight on for two hours an evening uses about 22 kWh a year, around £6 at current tariffs. Low-voltage garden lighting is even lower. Dusk-till-dawn fittings use more (running 8-10 hours a night) but still negligible at LED wattages.

Do you handle outbuilding electrics — sockets, lighting, supply?

Yes. Sheds, workshops, garden offices, and detached garages are common Snodland jobs — usually a SWA submain from the house consumer unit out to a small board in the outbuilding, with the lighting and sockets fed from there. The submain itself, the outbuilding board, and the circuits inside are all installed to BS 7671 with a test certificate covering the new work.

Can you light up trees and planting without damaging them?

Yes — uplighters mounted on adjustable spike or surface bases sit at the base of the tree pointing up, with the cable running along the soil surface (or shallow-buried if it's a permanent install). No fixings into the tree, no cable wrapped around the trunk. The fitting can be repositioned seasonally if planting changes.

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EICR detail (helps with the quote)

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