Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have been looking for solar lights to attach to the side of the
garage in our garden but the only ones I can find are for putting in the ground on spikes. Does anyone know of anywhere that sells simple ones that can be attached to a wall?. Thank you, Diana |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ... I have been looking for solar lights to attach to the side of the garage in our garden but the only ones I can find are for putting in the ground on spikes. Does anyone know of anywhere that sells simple ones that can be attached to a wall?. Thank you, Diana I have seen some in B&Q W/House that have a spike and wall option in the same box.. They are like a hanging lantern, if that's any good. Steve -- For the most up to date information on police SpeedTrap equipment in the UK. Product tests, reviews and Legal Advice. "The UK SpeedTrap Guide" http://www.ukspeedtraps.co.uk "Weather Page" http://www.btinternet.com/~swarren/ |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote:
I have been looking for solar lights to attach to the side of the garage in our garden but the only ones I can find are for putting in the ground on spikes. Does anyone know of anywhere that sells simple ones that can be attached to a wall?. Thank you, Diana http://www.cat.org.uk do solar powered lights that attach to walls // Jim |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 02 Jun 2003 21:28:33 +0100 (BST), "Dave Liquorice"
wrote: On Mon, 02 Jun 2003 17:03:38 GMT, wrote: I have been looking for solar lights to attach to the side of the garage in our garden ... I hope you aren't expecting these things to a) produce more than a glimmer of light b) last all night in the winter. -- Cheers Dave. Remove "spam" for valid email. Yes I was Dave. There are some in the local Morrisons supermarket . On the box it advises to "charge" it up by sunlight for 8 hours or so. They are like a lantern but with a spike. Maybe I won't bother if they are as disapponting as you infer. Diana |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message ,
writes On Mon, 02 Jun 2003 21:28:33 +0100 (BST), "Dave Liquorice" wrote: On Mon, 02 Jun 2003 17:03:38 GMT, wrote: I have been looking for solar lights to attach to the side of the garage in our garden ... I hope you aren't expecting these things to a) produce more than a glimmer of light b) last all night in the winter. -- Cheers Dave. Remove "spam" for valid email. Yes I was Dave. There are some in the local Morrisons supermarket . On the box it advises to "charge" it up by sunlight for 8 hours or so. They are like a lantern but with a spike. Maybe I won't bother if they are as disapponting as you infer. Diana For the sort of solar lamps sold in supermarkets he was being optimistic. Given enough solar panel area you can do it, but it isn't remotely cost effective if mains power is available. Most are way under powered to cope with anything like UK weather. They might (just might) work all night in midsummer provided the daytime is fairly sunny. But cheap ones will murder their batteries all too quickly. Amusing novelty... -- Martin Brown |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 02 Jun 2003 21:28:33 +0100 (BST), "Dave Liquorice"
wrote: On Mon, 02 Jun 2003 17:03:38 GMT, wrote: I have been looking for solar lights to attach to the side of the garage in our garden ... I hope you aren't expecting these things to a) produce more than a glimmer of light b) last all night in the winter. -- Cheers Dave. Remove "spam" for valid email. Yes I was Dave. There are some in the local Morrisons supermarket . On the box it advises to "charge" it up by sunlight for 8 hours or so. They are like a lantern but with a spike. Maybe I won't bother if they are as disapponting as you infer. Diana |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 03 Jun 2003 17:08:25 GMT, wrote:
I hope you aren't expecting these things to a) produce more than a glimmer of light b) last all night in the winter. Yes I was Dave. There are some in the local Morrisons supermarket . On the box it advises to "charge" it up by sunlight for 8 hours or so. They are like a lantern but with a spike. Maybe I won't bother if they are as disapponting as you infer. Diana There are rather a lot of variables. Size of solar panel, exposure to direct sunlight, capacity of the batteries, effciency of the light generating element are the major factors. It's perfectly possible to build a solar power light that will run all night at moderate light levels in the middle of winter but it isn't going to have a small (few square inches) of solar panel, small batteries and cost =A39.99 in a supermarket. B-) They produce a enough light so that you won't walk into large things, provided you night vision is up and running after a few minutes outside. Just don't expect them to provide the same amount of light as even a 15W pygmy bulb... -- Cheers Dave. Remove "spam" for valid email. |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message ,
writes On Mon, 02 Jun 2003 21:28:33 +0100 (BST), "Dave Liquorice" wrote: On Mon, 02 Jun 2003 17:03:38 GMT, wrote: I have been looking for solar lights to attach to the side of the garage in our garden ... I hope you aren't expecting these things to a) produce more than a glimmer of light b) last all night in the winter. -- Cheers Dave. Remove "spam" for valid email. Yes I was Dave. There are some in the local Morrisons supermarket . On the box it advises to "charge" it up by sunlight for 8 hours or so. They are like a lantern but with a spike. Maybe I won't bother if they are as disapponting as you infer. Diana For the sort of solar lamps sold in supermarkets he was being optimistic. Given enough solar panel area you can do it, but it isn't remotely cost effective if mains power is available. Most are way under powered to cope with anything like UK weather. They might (just might) work all night in midsummer provided the daytime is fairly sunny. But cheap ones will murder their batteries all too quickly. Amusing novelty... -- Martin Brown |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , Martin Brown
writes For the sort of solar lamps sold in supermarkets he was being optimistic. Given enough solar panel area you can do it, but it isn't remotely cost effective if mains power is available. Most are way under powered to cope with anything like UK weather. They might (just might) work all night in midsummer provided the daytime is fairly sunny. But cheap ones will murder their batteries all too quickly. Amusing novelty... It does depend on how much light you want. Our local Co-op has a four pack solar light on a stick things for something like thirty quid. We bought a few. One of them didn't work so I took it apart to fix it. It uses a single ultrabright LED and two AA rechargeables. I was a bit taken aback that it was only one LED because the light intensity is much better than I had expected. I did a quick calc and thought 'bugger me ... that should last for ages on a full charge!" So I put it in a dark place and left it on. It not only stayed on through the night, but all the next day as well! I gave up waiting in the end and just thought 'that'll do for me' and stuck it in the garden. For £30 I'd give it a go! -- __________________________________________ Gareth Jones "Reality sucks - go watch a Star Trek" To email, remove the '_ns_' from __________________________________________ |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 9 Jun 2003 22:30:02 +0100, Gareth Jones wrote:
It does depend on how much light you want. That really is the clincher, as way markers they are fine. Just don't expect them to light an area to the level a 15W pygmy bulb would. I was a bit taken aback that it was only one LED because the light intensity is much better than I had expected. I did a quick calc and thought 'bugger me ... I'd rather not. Thank you. B-) ... that should last for ages on a full charge!" Yep just shows how ineffcient incandescant lamps really are. But the key is also "on a full charge" it's not likely to get a full charge during the short grey days of winter. -- Cheers Dave. Remove "spam" for valid email. |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article . network,
Dave Liquorice writes 'bugger me .. I'd rather not. Thank you. B-) Don't knock it till you've tried it big boy ;-) But the key is also "on a full charge" it's not likely to get a full charge during the short grey days of winter. True, but as a full 'May' charge seems to lasts at least 24hrs, I'd have hoped that the majority of winter days might give enough power to say last from 5 till 11pm or thereabouts. We'll just have to wait and see! And while I'd agree that you can't use them to 'light' an area like a bulb, these ones with a whiteish light do give off more than just marker illumination (as do some of the yellowish ones) and I can certainly see things within a meter or two. -- __________________________________________ Gareth Jones "Reality sucks - go watch a Star Trek" To email, remove the '_ns_' from __________________________________________ |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Solar Lighting | United Kingdom | |||
Solar lighting | United Kingdom | |||
Solar lighting | United Kingdom | |||
Solar lighting | United Kingdom | |||
Solar powered landscape lighting? | Lawns |