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Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2025
Great product
TR
Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2025
Great to use out doors or let charge and use during a power outage!
Kennsington Music
Reviewed in South Africa on September 19, 2024
Definitely would not recommend. Horrible.
Fairy girl
Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2024
I have been using them for almost a week. Out of the box were easy to assemble, to charge. No missing parts. It's a steady soft light, no flickering, no changing colors or the amount of light. They are a good size. Battery seems to hold till after this night owl goes to sleep 😴 Appears to be well made. Time will tell, again it's only been a week ish. Should they not hold a decent life expectancy and or start to fail i will update my review. For now I'm a happy girl 👍
Haywire
Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2024
Lights look good. Not sure on quality yet. Did have 2 lights that went out just after the return window closed. Went round and round with the seller who appears to be the same as the company listed as the manufacturer?? Something weird like that. When I mentioned getting in touch with the manufacturer, they didn't bother to tell me it would still be them, the seller. After some discussion, I did get the replacements.
Ersun Doğulu
Reviewed in Turkey on July 29, 2024
İstediğim gibi çıktı. Aydınlatma olarak çok iyi değiller ama görsellik olarak gayet güzel.
Whitelotos
Reviewed in Belgium on June 3, 2024
A reasonable price, easy set-up, and proper brightness.
jay gore
Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2024
I needed 10 of these for a garden border. I wasn't expecting them to last more than the summer season. These types of lights are usually made cheaply and have to be replaced quite often. To my surprise, these have lasted through the winter, snow covered and still light every night. Decently made stainless that is apparently long lasting. Ready to go through a 2nd winter. I still have a couple left over from my project that I had intended to use when one of the others failed, but since none have failed, they’re still in the box! I definitely would recommended these. 10X’s better than the cheap plastic Walmart specials you can buy for $1.29 each that you’re lucky if they last 6 weeks!
Fred Turgeston
Reviewed in the United States on December 16, 2024
On overcast days they don’t get as bright and even in direct sun all day they don’t seem to last more than 6 hours in the darkness before they’re gone. On overcast days maybe they last 3 hours if that
David Kutty
Reviewed in Australia on March 29, 2023
The solar lights are very dim
Marie Duffett
Reviewed in Canada on June 10, 2022
Beautiful solar lights for our backyard
Dee
Reviewed in the United States on December 8, 2020
::Update:: Several months later, through harsh winter subzero temps and being buried in snow, these lights still look great and illuminate nicely. Even with the extreme cold, still on the original set of NEW batteries that I installed upon receiving the lights, and they're working flawlessly. DEFINITELY a great value for the price! I have seen many reviews with the same complaint about these solar lights; they're too dim, stop working within days (or less); don't work at all. I'm sure they may be the rare exception.... but, in my case (actually 3 of them! a total of 36 lights), the light is perfectly fine 100% of the time!The flaw is not in the light, but in the included little basement-bargain green piece-of-shh..junk AAA rechargeable battery that was likely pre-installed 25 years ago! [sense the sarcasm, lol.... but seriously].I venture to say that is why they're so inexpensive... Well that, and, the construction is very simplistic; plastic and aluminum, less the 1" square glass solar panel. I'm certain that a single good quality rechargeable battery exceeds the value of the entire light.Bottom line: If you want to save on the lights themselves, like the small low-profile design, and are willing to invest the short time and money to swap out the junk batteries.... Invest in QUALITY, NEW rechargeable batteries, and enjoy pleasing accent-lighting along your pathways or landscaping. ..... Because let's face it... no matter how much you spend in solar lights, they're only as good as the power storage that's on board, and eventually batteries need replacing. I bought Energizer rechargeables, and now they're performing flawlessly every night.... Just as bright at 5am, as they are at 5pm when the sun goes down, even on cloudy days.👍🏻
Eibon
Reviewed in the United States on July 15, 2018
So the first issue with these is the workmanship. The solder joints on the LED legs are almost always weak and 'cold'. The LED itself is meant to be aimed straight down at the deflecting mirror at the base of the clear plastic cup. Often times when you attempt to bend the LED into proper position such that it is aimed straight down at the mirror you feel a 'snap' as the cold solder separates from the LED legs. So as a matter of practice in building the lighted nature trail in my large wooded back yard, I take apart every light and resolder the LED legs properly so they are nice and solid. Aiming the LEDs after doing that so they point straight down is easy and doesn't even come close to break the solder joint with my own work.The next issue is the AAA rechargeable battery. These lights come with a VERY weak 150mAh rated battery. So while I have the light taken apart to reflow the solder on the LEDs, I also replace the battery with an eneloop 2100 cycle 800mAh battery. I've been watching the difference each night and it is easily twice the brightness of the default battery lights, and stays on the entire night while the others dim out only a mere few hours into darkness. Now that's not to say it's just the battery being too weak, as there's one other issue with these lights:The solar panel. I believe the solar panel isn't providing sufficient amps to recharge the batteries during the day time. After I finish my testing with the 800mAh batteries and determining how long it takes before they start becoming dim due to the lack of solar power, and going to start hooking an extra solar cell from cannibalized light kits in parallel in order to double the solar collecting power, which should be more than enough to recharge the battery during a typical day.Unfortunately doing all these modifications makes these light no longer cheap. The eneloop batteries are expensive, and then the idea of using solar cells from a 'parts' set of lights means you're effectively tripling the cost of the light, but it will become powerful, reliable, and work the entire night. As an electronics hobbyist, I find this aspect fun to tinker around with, but as a product on its own, these lights are cheap for a reason...
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