This is my second use of a distributed solar lighting system, where the panel can sit somewhere in the sun and send power to the lights that are in a shaded spot. I guess its kind of a half step between solar garden lights and wiring your home for solar power. The result in this case is a single panel mounted to a sunny spot on a wall that sends power to a string of glass bottles underneath a grape arbor.
At some point after I built my Solar Powered Walkway, my brother and his family came over for a visit. Everyone seemed quite impressed with the lights, especially his wife. Ted had just finished building a massively oversized grape arbor for the gigantic grapevine that's been cluttering up his backyard for the last several years, and Michelle asked if she could have a set of the lights to put under the arbor. I thought this was a great idea and told them that if they paid for the materials I'd be happy to build something for them.
Of course, since I'm never happy to just leave well enough alone I decided the original design could use some work. So, I started tweaking things, a little here, a little there, and soon enough the result was something quite different from my original design.
About halfway through building this I got to thinking about the fact that I never get my sister-in-law anything for birthdays and Christmas, as I'm never really sure what she'd like. I am awful at buying presents for people. However, here I'd been presented with something that I knew for certain she'd like, and her birthday was even coming up soon! I ended up finishing the build the week before her birthday, and presented it to her the weekend before her party so we'd have time to set it up in the arbor.
Remove these ads by
Signing UpStep 1Stuff you'll need
Most importantly, you'll need a set of solar powered Christmas lights. I used a set from dealextreme.com and then altered it to make it work for my purposes. If you don't feel like making some major changes to the electronics, I'd recommend you find a different brand. These were not the best quality, the brightness of the LEDs was somewhat disappointing, the battery they came with didn't work, and the solar panel wasn't able to charge any battery enough to run the lights for more than a few hours. That being said, I was able to make it bigger, better, and stronger with some work and extra parts.
If you go with a different brand of Christmas lights you may or may not need the following items, but if you go with the dealextreme lights you definitely will:
- A solar panel that puts out about 2v@600ma (I built one out of fractured panels from Electronics Goldmine)
- A pair of decent rechargeable NiMH or NiCd AA's, 1.2v@2500ma each
- Around 150-200' of light gauge speaker wire
- A 2xAA (or two 1xAA) battery holder wired in parallel, not in series (I hacked up some old electronic gadget and rewired it for this)
- Some sort of case to hold your new solar panel (I built mine out of . . . well, you'll see that in a future step)
- Some cedar boards (I used a single cedar fence picket)
You definitely will need:
- Epoxy
- Silicone sealant
- Paper towels
- Stiff wire
- Electrical tape
- Nails/screws
- Krylon clear matte spray
- Clear glass bottles/jars/vases (get them second hand)
As to tools, you'll need the usual assortment of modern tinkerer's tools:
- Dremel
- Hot glue gun
- Hammer
- Screw driver
- Wire cutters
- Pliers
- Soldering iron
| « Previous Step | Download PDFView All Steps | Next Step » |


























































Well done for the 'ible... very inspiring, we have a chain of shops in the UK called Poundland, everything is priced at one pound, and things like LED garden/christmas lights can be obtained here - very useful for us who make - do you have 1.59313 Dollarland I wonder?
Goodwill is just that, a national organization that accepts donations of old stuff and resells it. They use the proceeds for job training, job creation, and employing those with special needs. They're a pretty good organization all around!
We've got Dollar Tree here in the US, I imagine we must have lower quality stuff in our version, if a pound is currently going for $1.59! LED gizmos are fairly common, but very crappy. I've got a stack of their solar garden stakes in my shop, just looking for a project . . .
I assume that this project will be a one off project without understanding though, so I always strive for understanding so I can use the ideas in another project.
I went with electrical tape for a couple of reasons though. The ends are sealed inside the bottles, mainly you are insulating the wires from each other and don't have to worry about weather in this case. Their location in the neck of the bottle, near the top, should make them hard to see so appearance shouldn't matter too much. Also, electrical tape is cheaper and doesn't require a heat source to set up.
You are right though, in most circumstances heat shrink tubing is WAY better than electrical tape!
in this instructible, the new panel you made consist of more than 1 "crappy" panels right?
how many to be exact? the shapes seems "off" can you tell me more on that?
Take a closer look at step 5, there's a link to another instructable that I pilfered the idea from. Basically, there are several retailers that sell fractured solar panels for really cheap. All you have to do is properly wire them together and you end up with a nice solar panel for much less than you'd pay for it prebuilt.
Thanks for commenting and don't hesitate to ask if you have any other questions. Also, speaking as a person who's really into solar power, I'd love to see an instructable about how to go solar at home!
Fundamentally, in Malaysia, our general standard domestic voltage is 240V. bty changing to solar, I am looking at all 12VDC without any means of inverter as it is additional cost to me.
My plan is simple and will take up a long time to conceive (5 years)
STAGE 1.
By reducing the voltage to 12VDC, we will expect all equipment to have to utilize higher current (V=IR). Hence to avoid meltdown or cable fault. we decided to check all cables and finally stage 1 is already completed. all our cables are now 2.2mm instead of local developer standard of 1.2mm. this is an easy step.
STAGE 2. - Let there be light.
Lamp and all basic utilities are now running on 12VDC with the help of a little 12VDC power supply (inverter).
My staircase and night lamp is now consisted of 12V LED only!
STAGE 3 - Important appliances.
AIR-CONDITION UNITS (it is average 89F here year round!)
FRIDGES, WASHING MACHINE, Etc... All new machine will be checked before purchase. Only machines with 12VDC compatible is sought. That means, go for machines that runs on inverter, 12/24VDC is ok... It is just about when I will take off the inverters and run in DC. (This is almost complete except for our fridge and washing machine, which is quite new and I made a mistake purchase based on cost and not forward compatibilty)
STAGE 3 1/2 - Calculation.
STAGE 4 - Purchase of relevant power generation equipments.
STAGE 5 - Installation of the PG equipments and power up.
STAGE 6 - (5 years later) My solar home.. :-)
24 hours climate control and off-grid... yippee!!!
The cost may not be reduced, but the pain can be minimized.. LOL.
Handshake for a person that share the same thought as I am.
At this rate, I guess, not only Obama is going to screw up. My country is going backward. Yet, this is for another forum.
Let us be less depending on the grid and do our part for the earth.
@depot, thanks for being responsive! The pictures somewhat spoke for themselves, but they were mostly close-ups, so it wasn't clear what the big picture was. Much better now, with the extra pics and expanded description! Thank you.