Which garden solar lights are the most robust? – Which? News

2021-12-27 15:53:54 By : Ms. marry zhang

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Garden solar lights are a lovely way to brighten up an otherwise drab outside space, in preparation for some outdoor entertainment.

But when we asked the Which? Gardening Facebook group to tell us about their experience of using garden solar lights, we were hit with a barrage of complaints and negative comments about them.

“I love solar lights but they just don’t last, it’s not worth spending a lot as even the most expensive ones seldom last more than a season.”

But surely they’re not all that bad? We purchased 9 sets of fairy lights ranging in price from £7 to £70, and designed a range of durability tests to simulate the delights of a good old British winter. Read on to find out how they fared, and which are the most durable garden fairy lights.

The garden solar lights did prove to be harder to break than we originally thought. But by the time we’d finished only three out of nine lights were still working and showed no visible signs of wear and tear.

See the Best Buy barbecues we recommend.

The following  garden solar lights breezed through our tough durability tests, designed to mimic the toughest of British winters.

Availability update 23rd June 2021: The 200 string set that we tested is available for £65 from Powerbee, but it has temporarily sold out from Amazon. There is also a 100 string set available for £27 from Powerbee.

Key features: 200 lights, 20 metres long (2 metres to the first light and then 20 metres), claimed battery life of 8-12 hours in the summer and 3-10 hours in the winter, 8 light settings, white light.

Verdict: This is a very high quality set of garden solar lights. The lights passed all of the durability tests we could throw at them and they show no signs of wear and tear

This set also comes with a large solar panel, which is a little bigger than an A4 sheet of paper (twice as big as most others we tested). Powerbee says that this larger solar panel means that the lights should stay on for longer, and that they’ll even work over the winter, which not many solar lights claim.

You get 2 metres of cable before the first light, and then 200 LED lights over the next 20 metres of cable.

This is the best set of LED solar fairy lights that we tested, and based on how they fared in our tough tests, we think they’re durable enough to make it through even extreme winter conditions.

£70, available from The Solar Centre

Key features: 20 lights, 14.4 metres long (1.9 metres to the first light and then 14.4 metres with bulbs spaced at 80cm), USB chargeable as well as charging from the sun, claimed battery life of 12 nights from a full USB charge, 8 light settings, warm white light.

Verdict: While these garden solar lights are expensive, they’re durable, they look classy, and they’re the best garden solar lights with bulbs that we tested.

The traditional style plastic bulbs that encase the fairy lights within look very delicate and sophisticated, but that hides an inner steel. These lights survived five consecutive days of sub zero temperatures, a night in the deep freeze at -16, sustained bashing against a fence, firm tugs to the wiring, a five minute heavy deluge in a shower, and being fully submerged in a bucket of water for an hour.

After all of this, all of the lights still work and there are no visible signs of damage.

One nice design feature on these lights is a tiny hole drilled into the bottom of each of the bulbs, which allows any water ingress into the bulbs to drip out. Other lights we tested with bulbs tended to fill up with water over time.

The ability to charge these lights through a USB port is a welcome feature, and gives them a new lease of life over the darker winter months. One thing to watch out for is the relatively long distance between each of the lights (80cm), this might make them less suitable for some outside lighting projects. But they’re a nice looking and hard as nails set of lights that are well worth considering.

Below we’ve listed the other seven garden solar lights we tested alphabetically. Nearly all of them either broke completely during testing, or displayed some other signs of wear and tear that makes us think they wouldn’t last for many winters.

Not a good thing if they go dark the next time you’re in the hot tub, or you have the neighbours over to show off your new pizza oven.

£20, currently sold out at lights4fun.co.uk

Key features: 200 lights, 19.9 metres long (3 metres to the first light and then 19.9 metres), c laimed battery life of up to eight hours during the summer, It’s recommended you store the lights away over the winter, 8 light settings, warm white light.

Verdict: During the six weeks these lights spent outside, including a week of sub zero temperatures, they started to show visible signs of corrosion on the wire underneath the plastic coating, but they did still work.

They flew through our shower test, deep freeze test, wire tugging test and being roughly bashed against a fence. But they failed the tougher water resistance test where they were submerged in a bucket of water for an hour. Water is able to seep into the charging unit, pooling around the battery and internal wiring.

While these lights might shine brightly in your garden for a while, we suspect that many sets won’t last too a long time, and you’ll see visible signs of corrosion on the bulbs in only a few weeks of cold wet weather.

Key features: 200 lights, 10 metres long, b attery life is unstated, 2 light settings, warm white light

Verdict: We weren’t too impressed with these lights as soon as we got them out of the box. You could see that there was a small amount of exposed wire as it entered the solar charger. Despite this flaw, these lights did survive all of the durability tests, until we gave the wire a sharp tug, at which point the wires disconnected from the charger, breaking the lights.

Key features: 100 lights, 10 metres long (2 metres to the first light and then 10 metres), c laimed battery life not stated, 2 light settings, white light.

Verdict: These lights are cheap, and they look it. There’s no plastic coating in sight, just a long reel of copper wire that can be bent and twisted around any objects you’re hoping to illuminate.

The lights survived six weeks outside, including almost a week of sub zero temperatures, they also endured a night in the freezer at -16 degrees without breaking. But a few sharp tugs along the length of the wire dispatched these lights to the bin.

£30, available from The Solar Centre

Key features: 200 lights, 20 metres long (2 metres to the first light and then 20 metres of lights), USB chargeable as well as charging from the sun, claimed battery life of up to ten hours, 2 light settings, warm white light.

Verdict: These are a good set of lights that survived all of our tests.  But they don’t quite get our Editor’s Choice recommendation because despite surviving, there were some visible signs of corrosion at the end of our durability tests.

The plastic coating that surrounds the wire is green on these lights, not clear, so the corrosion is harder to spot, but it is there. Because of this, despite these lights still working and emitting a nice warm glow, we wouldn’t expect them to last as long as our two top picks, both of which showed no visible signs of wear and tear after testing.

Key features: 20 lights, 6 metres long (2 metres to the first light and then 6 metres), c laimed battery life not stated, 2 light settings, warm white light.

Verdict: These look pretty nice in the images used to market them online, and when it’s dark and they’re switched on, we think they’re nice too. But in the light of day, they look a bit cheap. Particularly when viewed next our top picks.

While these lights passed all of our durability assessments, one significant design flaw is that the bulbs don’t have a little hole in them that let’s any water ingress seep out. This means that they’ll gradually fill up with water over time. The length of cable is also a little stingy when compared to our top picks.

Key features: 30 lights, 7 metres long (1 metres to the first light and then 7 metres), c laimed battery life of 8-14 hours, 8 light settings, warm white light.

Verdict: To give these lights their due, they sailed through all of the durability tests we threw at them, and show no sign of any wear and tear.

However our gripe with these lights is that we were expecting more. Some of the images advertising the product showed a whole house adorned, and we neglected to spot the number of bulbs listed in the product description, so when they turned up we were a little disappointed.

That said, the light that they emit is nice, and it’s enough to tastefully illuminate the children’s playhouse in the picture above, but not much more than that.

Key features: 10 lights, 3.3 metres long, c laimed battery life unstated, 2 light settings, Orangey light.

Verdict: Despite our best efforts, the tough durability tests we put these lights through weren’t enough to dispatch of them. However, there were a few signs of significant wear and tear, including the little cages that surround the lights constantly pinging off, and a few signs of corrosion.

It’s also a very short string of lights, and they don’t give off much light, as you can see from the image above. Even though they’re cheap, because they’re so small they don’t have many practical uses in an outside garden space.

So you think your solar lights are broken? But before you throw them away it can pay to check if they haven’t just completely lost their charge, perhaps over the winter or a spell of poor weather.

You don’t need the sun to charge solar lights. Bring them inside and keep them under any light source in your home. The closer the better.

It can take up to 12 hours to fully recharge solar lights under artificial light, but 3 or 4 hours should be enough to find out if those lights are really dead after all.

How we tested solar garden lights

We know that these products have an issue with longevity. They just don’t last long enough, and too many end up in landfill, too quickly.

But we couldn’t test these products over three or four years like we might like to. Ultimately by the time we finished the test, none of them would be on sale anymore.

So we designed a really tough set of tests to simulate the type of conditions these types of lights might endure overa few really tough British winters.

Water ingress is one of the most common causes of failure. So not only did we subject each of these lights to a ten minute deluge in a shower, we also submerged them entirely in a bucket of water for an hour.

After each of the water ingress tests these lights were put dripping wet into a freezer overnight, at -16 degrees.

Before the tests even commenced in earnest, these lights were left outside in a garden for six weeks over the winter. During this period the country shivered in a cold snap and temperatures in the garden remained below zero for five consecutive days.

We often aren’t as gentle with our things as we should be. Untangling the lights, moving the lights, or even very windy weather can subject garden lights to quite a bit of a beating.

So we tied one end of each set of lights to a fence post and bashed it against a fence twenty times. We also gave the lights a tough tug along the length of the cable and where the cable enters the charging station.