top of page

How Solar Ceiling Lights Can Illuminate Your Home During Blackouts or Load Shedding

Writer's picture: Gav MagGav Mag

Updated: Sep 11, 2023

When the power goes out, it can plunge your home into darkness. Traditional flashlights and candles may help provide some light, but they are not ideal long-term solutions. Also not everyone can afford Solar or Inverter backups. This is where solar ceiling lights come in handy.

Solar ceiling lights are rechargeable lights that are installed on your ceiling. During the day, they charge using sunlight that enters through windows. Then, when night falls or a blackout occurs, they automatically turn on to illuminate your rooms.

Some key advantages of using solar ceiling lights during a blackout include:


Continuous light source: Once charged, they can provide light for hours without needing any other power source. This ensures your home is not completely dark during an extended outage.


Hands-free operation: Unlike candles or flashlights, you don't have to hold them or worry about leaving them on. The light is fixed to the ceiling so it illuminates the whole room.


Safety feature: They reduce tripping hazards compared to candles and make it easier to navigate your home safely in the dark. This can be important if there are elderly or young family members.


Affordability: While the upfront cost of a solar ceiling light may be high per unit, it pays for itself in no time by eliminating the need for candles or batteries. Over the long run, they prove much more cost-effective.


Eco-friendly: Being solar-powered, they are environmentally sustainable and do not contribute to carbon emissions like generators. Their maintenance and operation cost is also near zero.

While initial installation requires some wiring work, solar ceiling lights are quite easy to use thereafter. They provide reliable, green lighting during blackouts without burning a hole in your pocket. If you experience frequent power outages, consider investing in a few solar ceiling lights for your home. Taking the above into account though, I myself use them and have made my own DIY solution but simply placing the small panel on the roof and running the cable through the wall or window and sticking the light to the ceiling using very strong double sided tape.


7 views0 comments

Comments

Rated 0 out of 5 stars.
No ratings yet

Add a rating
bottom of page