Do you want a solar powered water feature in your yard day or night? ...Let Lewisia solar power water pump do the work Upgraded with idling and blocking protection, when the pump idles for 15s or clogged, it will stop working. Water Flow Control with an adjustable switch. Note: Please turn ON the switch as the battery only charges in the "ON" position. Be patient with the solar pump & let it charge up for a couple of hours initially before first use. The pump works on battery, but it's not controlled by the switch. When you turn it off, LED/pump both turn off. But if you turn on the switch, LED/pump would NOT turn on immediately. It needs to charege for sometime as the battery voltage is low. Once charged, the voltage gets ok, it would work again. Q: You can feel the vibration of the pump motor, but only a low pressure trickle of water comes out. A: It may be clogged. There are four screws in the bottom corners then need to come out to check for filter clog. Q: Only works in bright sunshine, battery backup does not function at night A: The sunshine is not enough, let the solar panel charge in full sun for 8 hours Product Specification: Material: ABS Solar Panel: 10V/8W Pump input: DC 4.5-10V Battery: Li-ion 18650 7.4V/2400mAh Maximum quantity of flow: 53GPH / 200L/h Maximum water height: 2ft/0.6m Water Pump Cord Length: 10ft / 3m LED Light Cord Length: 9.84in Solar panel size: 10.4 * 7.3 inch Water Pump Size: 1.5"L x 1.42 " w x 1.5" h With on/off switch on the back of solar panal. 5-LED lights: IP68, Φ5mm, 48LM, 6500K Working time on full battery: 6-8 hours Package (As Picture) 1 x Solar Panel 1 x Ground Stake Mount 1 x Pump with LED Light1 x Filter Box 1 x Riser Tube 1 x Funnel Shaped Tube 5 x Fountain Heads
A**R
Don't give up... Mine is working like a charm! Update one year later...
Ok, I was skeptical. I'll admit that some of the comments were discouraging, but I've got to say, it is exceeding expectations today.When this arrived, it was rattling. I was told to look at the diagram to assemble--there was no diagram. Told to clean the pump regularly by removing the screws. Since it was rattling, I took out the screws (these are seriously horrible and the heads started to strip--one of my discouraged moments) to discover the screws are for an external box and the actual pump was inside. The cover had come off the working part of the pump, but it snaps right back in place; it's the way you get in to clean the pump. Put it back together, cursing the screws. I unplugged the pump from the solar panel and went outside to put it in the ground for at least a day to charge (of course, make sure the switch is on). Called my friend and told her to come the next day and we'd start the fountain experiment.Hilarity and blown theories later, we came up with the perfect combination of urn, support that prevented filling the entire urn with rocks (upside-down planter to narrow the space needing rocks but allow water to fill the base, pump on top of planter, upside-down plastic mesh basket over the pump to keep it from floating up (another discouragement) while being high enough up the urn to allow the light to shine up under the fountain part. After completely wearing ourselves out from emptying and refilling to find a solution, we couldn't get the pump to pump high enough to fill our spitter. We even opened the box again to make sure we hadn't gotten silt in the pump. This is when I got very inventive and wrapped the case in velcro cable wraps to avoid the screws ever being an issue again. Still wouldn't work and sounded like it was dying. We weren't about to empty the urn again, and I didn't want to encourage mosquitoes, so we scraped away the top rocks, took the spitter off, and let the pump gently circulate the water all night. Sighing and discouraged, she went home and I went to bed. This morning, however, I went out to clean up, and the pump was happily spraying water everywhere. Yesterday is sounded like it was straining; today it's silent. I quickly finished reassembling everything and now I have a cool fountain for my butterflies and bees. There is strong sun now, and it's even prettier than the picture below. I don't know what the problem was yesterday, but today it's fantastic. I'm considering getting another one for another remote area of my yard.*UPDATE* One week later (seemed like a failure point from other posts), and it's still going strong. Was a little cloudy today, but it ran all day. Still very pleased, and I will be ordering another.Further update: 9/5/17. Still going strong. I went out during our local visit from Tropical Storm Harvey, and even with the reduced sunlight, it was running! Then last night, at 11:30, after a nice sunny day, I went out to pick up some tools I left outside, and discovered the pump was STILL going strong and the little light was making the whole pond glow. I'll be putting in another pond and have now ordered a second pump, but unfortunately it will take a while to get here.Update, June 2018: I have both pumps going this summer in my little urn for butterflies and bees. I hooked up everything, turned on the pumps (of course, nothing happened because it needs a mo'), came back half an hour later, and everything was running. The water level got too low at one point, and it was several hours before I noticed, but I added water, turned the affected pump off and back on, and it started working in a couple of minutes. I can't say how pleased I am. If it's been a sunny day, they are running well into the night with the little led lights showing ripples and rocks. Very nice set.
J**N
A solid option, but not perfect
The media could not be loaded. I originally started with Lewisia 1.5W Outdoor Solar Fountain Pump Waterfall Decorative Submersible Kit . It was not a good option at all-- only ran in direct sun, the slightest shadow or cloud would cause it to shut off instantly, and it died after a week.I decided to try this one with the battery backup, and it is much, much more reliable for my needs (in a DIY birdbath/fountain). It will run in overcast/nighttime conditions-- but ONLY if the battery still has juice left.Mine will run after a mostly sunny day until approximately 2am before running out of juice, which is maybe a little long, but not a problem, it's nice for when we're sitting on the deck after a late evening.The problem, though, is that since it ran out at ~2am, it doesn't start back up until at least 9am generally (and that's if it's sunny-- if it's a cloudy/stormy morning/afternoon, it may not charge at all, and then won't run in the evening or night at all).I wish this had a timer, or more battery power. My ideal situation would have it run from ~5am (when the birds are getting up and tend to flock to my bird bath) to ~1am. (or, 24 hours would be just fine too). This is an option for people with electric plugs outdoors, but my apartment does not have them, so solar or battery power is my only option.The only other thing I can think to mention is that this pump is significantly taller than the other. I ended up having to swap out my bird bath plate (an ~18" terra cotta saucer) to a Bloem SDC24-42 Dura Cotta Plant Saucer, 22-Inch, Living Green , which has higher side walls to keep the pump submerged enough to run steadily. I'd personally suggest something at least 3" deep for it, but if this is for a bird bath, this is likely too deep for your birds so you will need to fill the basin halfway or more with rocks/stones so they do not drown (especially small birds like hummingbirds), and maybe even more rocks/pebbles if you want to make sure you don't end up drowning our friends the bees, which will often visit for drinks.The LED is a nice touch that I didn't think I'd care much about, but it's quite pretty when it catches the streams of water cascading down at night.All in all, this is a solid pump, but could be improved.Edit: still working a year later after storing away in the winter. Removing the fountain from its larger housing worked perfectly. Would buy again.
S**Z
Solid little fountain!
Over the years, I've had a number of solar fountains for my little pond (4 ft wide, 6 ft long, ~1 ft deep), but none have held up quite so well as this little guy! It even kicks on when it's cloudy, which is nice... and it's cool to see my little lit-up fountain at night. It doesn't run all night, but well enough into the evening to be enjoyed. I was a little suspicious when I first got it and it didn't work - you really do have to let it charge up for a couple of hours initially before first use (note - it only charges in the "on" position).If you are considering this fountain, you should know that the stem from the impeller motor to the fountain head is rather short. If your water feature has only a few inches of water in it, it works great - but if you have anything over four or so inches of water to overcome - in my case, anywhere between 8 and 12 inches of water - the stem will be way too short. What I did to solve this issue was take a mason jar, fill it with rocks and pond water, and rest it upside-down in the pond and surround it by bigger rocks. I then stuck the impeller base onto the bottom of the mason jar (the impeller has handy little suction cups!). It looks like my fountain is rising up out of a mound of rocks in my pond. I sometimes surprise myself... :)
J**N
Dubbioso
Il potere da la pompa non è forte ! Lo spruzzo non arriva molto in alto se non usa la cappa con in buchi finismmi!
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 days ago