Monday, January 24, 2011

Nokero solar bulb review!

The N200's light is just 13.5 lumens on the richly adjusting (a 60-watt light bulb is 850 lumens). That's very darken, but it is comparable a kerosene lamp. It is as well finer than the 8.5 lumens of the N100 bulb.
Nokero N200


The mercury records twelve degrees outdoor, only it feels alike minus two with the windchill. That's Fahrenheit--the counts are depressingly less in C here in Canada. All the same, as I attend Nokero's newly N200 bulb on a tree, it is solar cell reloads without a catch.

Denver-based Nokero debuted last yr with the N100 solar bulb. It freshly brought out an improved edition, the N200, and I had a chance to judge it out.

First of all, the Nokero bulbs are planned to replace homemade kerosene lamps, not standard bulbs. They are calculated at 100s of millions of mass in developing states who have little or no electricity. A lot of burn kerosene for light, which, apart from being profit, is aflame and air pollution hazard.


In the meantime, the N200 can live more than 6 hours on its low-intensity adjusting after a single-day charge in sunlight. The N100 was rated at 4 hours if charged in equatorial regions, where the sun is strongest. Nokero says typical kerosene lamp users burn their lamps for 1.5 hours every night.
















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