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Reviewed in the United States on May 13, 2025
They work great. I just ordered 1 more.
erick s.
Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2025
Great easy install
Barbara M.
Reviewed in the United States on March 31, 2025
Unas luces muy buenas con mucha duración se las recomiendo 100%
Kevin
Reviewed in the United States on March 24, 2025
I’ve taken a while to post this review, as I wanted to thoroughly test all of the features of this light in varying weather conditions. To date, the light has operated as advertised. I also tested all of the remotes functions and they once again worked as advertised.Construction wise, the body of the light is made of the same plastic that all solar lights are made of. It’s robust enough for its function while keeping the weight down. This becomes important if you're standing on a ladder while mounting the light as a one piece unit.The solar panel is capable of charging the batteries fully, after a full day of exposure to the sun, the batteries were partially charged when I took it out of the box. The batteries were capable of illuminating the LEDs for a full night in sensor mode one and two. I did not test the light in full illumination mode for the entire night to see if the batteries would last.The lights sensor was sensitive enough to detect me crossing the lights path at varying distances. In my situation a nearby tree blowing in the wind repeatedly triggered the light. I’m not worried about it as it’s not windy all the time.A challenge you may, or may not face is having the solar panel face the sun while at the same time illuminating the area you want. In my case I needed to mount the light vertically, versus the traditional horizontal orientation. Seems to be working so I’ll just leave it alone.One thing I can’t comment on is how well this product will last over time, as I simply haven’t used it for very long. Something I’ll be watching for is whether or not the solar panels start to get a milky film on them.No solar/battery combination lasts forever, as they all break down over time, yet I hope to get several years of service out of these lights before they get retired.
Skip Gundlach
Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2025
Not to make light of the matter, but:I chose a very different-from-typical use for my floodlight:I wanted to be able to light up the boat slip on my dock, as well as the platform for swimming (and the other side's walkway), so that guests at the VRBO it serves would be able to swim on a warm summer night.This accomplishes that handsomely.It came very compactly packaged, as seen in my pix. Those things subject to bumping risk were encased in foam. Well done on all that, in its tiny package.This streetlight comes with a variety of fasteners:The ones you'd put into masonry, which expand by pulling as you tighten a nut, and the more typical drywall-expanding-plug with screws.You could very well use the screws alone to mount this on a wood surface, such as a soffit. However...I used stainless steel 1/4-20x0.5" bolts, with a washer at the fixed end to extend the coverage on the plastic pole - though this streetlight is so lightweight, that's probably overkill - and a nylock nut (to prevent loosening) at the backside of the aluminum girder to which I mounted it, the installation went uneventfully.Currently, I have it set on full bright, which, even with a full day's solar charge, won't light for a full night. However, in actual use in warmer weather, with shorter nights and longer charge times, it might make it.But the included remote has the ability to choose a variety of illumination times, at whatever intensity you choose, and, after that time, to drop to a 30% level, only to come up to 100% on detection of motion. Given that the idea was to allow night swimming (and perhaps to illuminate the slip after a night-time ride on the boat not currently in the slip), any motion would cause it to be at full brilliance.Oh, and about that remote...It doesn't have batteries. That's of no issue to us, as we buy Amazon AAA and AA in hundred-lot boxes. But if you don't have a stock in hand, you'll want to acquire some before mounting this, so you don't have to be elevated to turn it on and off.To avoid annoying the neighbors with the brilliance all night, we'll set the timer for 3 hours (dark-on, ~midnight revert to motion), at 25% until it goes 'off' but back to full lumens on noted motion. For our purposes, it accomplishes all of our specified needs handsomely.The pictures of the lamps in an inside environment don't do it justice; my camera's light-adaptation intel makes it look a great deal more dim that it really is; see my outdoor illumination pix for the reality.And, back to the remote, it will let you set a wide variety of timer and motion settings before it goes to a low illumination and motion detection, with 3 and 5 hours for those, 4 hours and off, and full-dark or 25% illumination with motion sensing.At only 20 bux, we'll also do the lake-side entrance for returning with our boat, as once we're nose-near, the slip and sides will suddenly appear in full brilliance, and very soon after, the forward lamp I just installed will as well. And for late night swimmers, the 'boarding' (swim) ladder is well within that range, so any night swimmers will have full lighting for their comfort!
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