Solar Powered Night Lights

 by botronics
Do something useful with your solar powered garden light. Instead of lighting up the garden path at night for that opossium raiding the trash, bring the light into the house. Use it as a solar powered night light.

I mounted two garden lights on the roof with wire extensions of the leds brought into the house. Just the solar cell unit with built-in batteries are on the roof. The led (Light-Emitting-Diode) that makes the light is in the house. The solar lights are mounted on top of a swamp cooler on my roof with the wiring brought through the vent.
 
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Step 1: Mount the solar lights

Use 1 inch PVC tubing to make a holder for the lights. This is what the light holder looks like after construction and mounted on the cooler. But first, go get your saw and start cutting some tubing. The next step will show you how.
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wolfsingleton says: Jan 5, 2013. 1:26 PM
Love this concept, but made a couple of changes to fit my projects. Placed the solar panels inside my sun-facing window, at the very top behind the Venetian blind (so even if it is all the way up you can't see it). Put the battery pack just out of the sun and ran the wires to the closet door next to it and mounted the LEDs inside the door frame with a contact switch on the door. When the closet door is opened,lights pop on and together, the two are good enough for most days. Completely hassle-free.
storre says: Jun 16, 2011. 6:52 AM
I want to make garden led lights using those 12v LED strip lighting. The ones I have are waterproof and use 4.8W per meter. I want to use 1 meter per light. I need to do about 20 so want to keep the parts to a minimum but all have their independent solar panels and batteries. Can you suggest a cheap way to do this? The lights I already have rolls of. I get a good amount of sunlight and just want the lights on most of the night. Maybe an auto shut off at a certain voltage so to not totally discharge the batteries.

Thanks!
jontj2000 says: Apr 23, 2010. 12:49 PM
I have a solar panel on the  outside of the south wall that goes with a set of solar rocks for a pond. I ran the wire threw the wall and put the lights over the kitchen cabinets for night lights. Free night lightning      t l
flying pie says: Apr 18, 2010. 5:27 PM
im going to camp a i want light in a tent and to charge a ds and phone/ labtop also power a cfl
botronics (author) says: Feb 8, 2009. 2:59 PM
I was on my roof adjusting my home built UHF antenna (doesn't work for digital) for the switch over and took a look at my lighting system. The garden lights fell apart in my hands as I was removing the top. The sun has totally broken down the plastic. The black abs plastic part is still in good shape. Thats the part with the solar cells and electronics. I came up with a way of fitting the solar heads to glass canning jars. The solar head makes a nice power unit for jarred devices. Now I have a total of four broken lights with good solar heads. I wrote a blog at this link to share with the world.
lil27mike27big in reply to botronicsJun 6, 2009. 11:37 PM
Let me help you out With the plastic part here is what you need to do first is it on a stick or flat on the ground let me no then i can help you with the prob k (%)
botronics (author) in reply to lil27mike27bigDec 31, 2009. 6:34 PM
With the lights on the ground, the sun does not hit the plastic at low angles.  When mounted up high on a roof, the plastic gets exposed to UV more. Painting or covering the clear plastic helps with this problem.
doo da do says: Apr 29, 2009. 8:40 AM
First solar yard light I have seen with 2 batteries.
botronics (author) in reply to doo da doDec 31, 2009. 6:30 PM
The newer ones have a single cell powering a Joule Thief type of circuit. One advantage with single cells is no cell reversal during over discharge. A "C" cell would give more storage capacity without the cell deep discharging every night. Meaning longer life.
Hycro in reply to doo da doDec 31, 2009. 4:35 PM
The solar lights we have that are similar in look to those ones are two-battery setups...
lil27mike27big in reply to doo da doJun 6, 2009. 11:27 PM
Well i am making one solar yard light and i hooked 3 panels together and hooked all 3 lights up 2 lights to the one light and then now it works great & for the batterys i am using one C.battery.
Hycro says: Dec 31, 2009. 4:37 PM
Lol...I was about to say..."Awful big leads on that LED, don't you think it's overkill?" then you said the heat-shrink wasn't shrunk yet...
Hycro says: Dec 31, 2009. 4:33 PM
Now up here where I live, where we get colder winters (with ice, snow, all that stuff, though we're getting more rain than snow every year, but still have the icy coldness) it would be advisable to have just the solar cell and the photocell on the rooftop, though as a personal choice I would have the photocell inside, near where I have the night light, so that it would come on when I need it inside, which is usually before it's needed outside.
botronics (author) says: Sep 7, 2006. 8:41 PM
A "swampcooler " is an evaperative air cooler. very commonly seen on top of homes in mobile home parks. Invented in persia, thousands of years ago.

See the wikipedia explanation on how they work.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swamp_cooler

slim_jim in reply to botronicsJun 29, 2009. 11:03 PM
Mobile homes? Here in New Mexico, where it is very dry, everybody uses swamp coolers. The extremely low humidity makes them very efficient. Around here, a typical AC unit is called "refrigerated air," and is quite uncommon.
ianb505 in reply to slim_jimJul 30, 2009. 8:00 PM
yes jim, new mexico is stupid dry, i'm in albuquerque boing work for a plumbing company. Swamp coolers are 'replacment' air while ac use 'recycled' air. Since swamp coolers are drawing the air from outside, it's a good idea to leasve a window open to alow air to escape. While recycled air comes from inside where it is allready chilled so venting is counterproductive. almost all i've done this week is fix swampcoolers but more and more people a buying into AC.
botronics (author) says: Apr 11, 2008. 5:49 PM
Its been almost 2 years and it still works. To help fight corrosion on the battery connections, put some of that grease they use on aluminum electrical connections or that red stuff that is used on auto battery connections. Nicad batteries out gas corrosive vapors over time.
lil27mike27big in reply to botronicsJun 6, 2009. 11:54 PM
thats a good idea
omkar_hummer says: May 10, 2008. 7:08 AM
can this be used on a bicycle? what voltage does it gives
lil27mike27big in reply to omkar_hummerJun 6, 2009. 11:51 PM
yeah i just made me one for my bicycle and for night time or for when your walking in the woods at night time it works very good i hooked 3 panels up 2 lights & to 1 light hook it to the solar panel pop the battery up and now you have 3 in 1
botronics (author) in reply to omkar_hummerMay 10, 2008. 11:17 AM
You could use on a bicycle. Check and see how many AA nicads the night light has. You can put extra night lights in series for higher voltage. Thats 1.2v per cell.
alxram says: Dec 7, 2007. 12:15 AM
If you have a larger house and yard there are so many practical uses for this kind of setup. I'm sure you could hide the solar collectors in many places, and take care of all your night lighting needs. Thanks for this creative and efficient idea!
botronics (author) in reply to alxramDec 7, 2007. 9:00 AM
I have been having problems with the Hampton Bay plastic becoming brittle in the sun. In less than two years the plastic fell apart. Check my blog about this problem: http://botsmaker.blogspot.com/2007/11/dont-buy-hampton-bay-solar-lights.html
The solar lights are useful to power thing that have low power. I am using some to power a windharp that is broadcasting on internet radio by way of ShoutCast. Below is a link to my station. At my botsmaker blog site there is more detail how this can be done.
http://www.shoutcast.com/directory/?s=instrumental+wind+harp
digitalenigma in reply to botronicsMar 25, 2009. 1:00 AM
have you tried spray painting them white or silver to reflect some of the UV rays back out?
botronics (author) in reply to digitalenigmaMar 27, 2009. 11:12 AM
I had some silvered mylar and used that to wrap around the plastic.
hcold says: Aug 2, 2008. 2:03 AM
What's the possibility of keeping the LED with the lamp, and just using fibre optics to transfer the light into the house?
slchorne in reply to hcoldSep 4, 2008. 5:31 PM
Fibre optics would be far more expensive that a few feet of wire and some solder. you would also need a lens at the end of the fibre to disperse the light again.
hcold in reply to slchorneSep 4, 2008. 10:29 PM
According to the thing I read (sorry, this was a while ago, so I can't provide the link) they just had the end of the fibre optic in an transperant acrylic end, which had been scratched (can't think of a better word for it) so the light was diffused, rather than a lens.
botronics (author) in reply to slchorneSep 4, 2008. 9:10 PM
Plus you would loose some of the light from the fiber. It does not transmit 100%. Mine is still working, but the battery life is starting to fade.
lil27mike27big in reply to botronicsJun 6, 2009. 11:46 PM
here is the prob man i bet its the wire If its really long cuz the juice is running that far, so you just need a bigger battery so that it can run in that long wire & last longer to hope that helped you some (%)
hcold in reply to botronicsSep 4, 2008. 10:33 PM
Depends on the quality of the fibre you're using, doesn't it? And on how far it was going. Also, back to slchorne, you're aboslutely right about the price cost, the site I was just looking t was listing 20-30 British pounds for 2-3 metres of fibre optics, though this was telecoms grade.
GrumpyOldGoat in reply to hcoldDec 26, 2009. 8:45 PM
Call your local phone company and ask if they have some cut off pieces they will let you have.
The shortest piece I got so far is about 30' .  It has muti pairs, and rubbing alcohol cleans them up nicely.
Sunny124613 says: Jul 11, 2008. 2:18 PM
wow pretty impressive
doo da do says: Apr 15, 2008. 9:09 AM
I wired two of the solar panels together so there would be more miliamps sent to the batteries and the lights seem to last longer with a stronger charge
doo da do in reply to doo da doApr 15, 2008. 11:26 PM
parrell, if you use series the voltage would go up and that may be more than the battery should recieve
botronics (author) in reply to doo da doApr 15, 2008. 5:58 PM
Is that series or parallel?
charleeanna says: Apr 10, 2008. 4:40 PM
awesome!
doo da do says: Mar 15, 2008. 9:11 AM
I wired two solar panels from old solar yard lights in parrell and they seem to give the 1.2V battery a longer run time, a few more ma, you may want to give that a try. I do like the light inside part
bradleypowell says: Feb 14, 2008. 10:28 AM
There is a interesting article about using a microcontroller (atTiny11L) as a charge pump to drive LEDs in a flashlight in Nuts & Volts this month. It claims to be very efficient as it doesn't require resistors to do the current limiting. I'll tell you if it works...
Jack Daniels says: Sep 4, 2006. 3:11 PM
How many LED's do you think you can run off this Unit and get a good amount of Run time every night?
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