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My wife bought this chandelier online, and it came with a very brief instruction manual (in Chinese).

enter image description here

I’ve installed chandeliers before and they’ve been simple enough, but I got a bit stuck when I saw the 5 separate sets of 2 wires (black and brown) for each light, and even more so when I saw that were each loops, rather than stripped/prepared wires.

enter image description here

How would I go about connecting these to the main wire? I’ve thought about cutting each one and trying to reach the center one, but they honestly seem too short?

Lastly, I’ve got some additional parts that I honestly don’t understand, and aren’t showing the manual. Any ideas?

enter image description here

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    Loops don't make sense because it costs more to make a loop. Did you try tugging on the ends to see if there's a free end just tucked under? Commented Dec 16, 2023 at 22:50
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    The parts look like anchor bolts, to attach to drywall/cement. Good chance that only has a CE label and is not allowed to be used in US/CAN homes.
    – crip659
    Commented Dec 16, 2023 at 22:52
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    I feel dumb now. I had pulled on the wire but apparently the wrong end because the other end did end up coming out….
    – Eli
    Commented Dec 16, 2023 at 22:53
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    <pedantry> the bolt thingies are concrete anchors, not drywall </pedantry> Commented Dec 16, 2023 at 23:12
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    Would need an UL/CSA label on it. Because the instructions are only in Chinese, which UL also inspects, besides safety, the likely chance is close to zero. Any insurance claim would likely be denied, if this was found in the home.
    – crip659
    Commented Dec 16, 2023 at 23:24

2 Answers 2

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From my earlier comment:

Loops don't make sense because it costs more to make a loop. Try tugging on the ends to see if there's a free end just tucked under.

I'm unsure about the bolts. It looks like there's a few of them securing the mounting bracket at the top of the page, but I'm not seeing how it would work with only 3 of them.

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The proper thing to do with "electrical items that only have instructions in Chinese" if you are not in China is to return them whence they came before you burn your house down, get electrocuted, or otherwise discover the hard way why having electrical items listed by a Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory is essential for safety.

I very much doubt this one is, since the instructions are part of the listing process.

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