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        <title>DIY Chinese street light kit.</title>
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        <description>This is actually sold as a complete product ready to go, but as with many of these things you really have to treat it as an unfinished product and do all the final bits yourself. It does offer very good value for the components though, and is an ideal base for many personal outdoor projects. I wonder where these are actually used in real life.  Do people install them as wall mounted alley lights in China or even as pole mounted lights for actual path or street lighting? Some afterthoughts... The screws that hold the LED panel onto the back of the housing were very short and two stripped their threads while being tightened without excess force.  Not sure the size, but an M3 screw wasn't a direct fit. The earth connection was the same screw and the same inadequate tapped hole as it often is.  The factories that make these don't seem to understand that attaching the earth is supposed to mean a solid electrical connection and not just to keep it loosely out the way. For those that will inevitably say that it will be grounded by the pole or wall bracket it's mounted on, there may not be a ground on that either.  Especially a wall bracket. If using this panel I'd downgrade the driver to 20W, attach the earth connection properly and check that the panel retention screws were holding it in place properly, replacing them if necessary. Other than that, the fitting is an interesting twist on the older units with classic 1W LED beads and discrete lenses.  The use of a traditional driver is interesting, as I was expecting it to be a DOB PCB (Driver On Board) using the simple current regulation chips. The seal on the front looks decent and theoretically the position of the flex entry hole should prevent water ingress while allowing the fitting to breathe. If you enjoy these videos you can help support the channel with a dollar for coffee, cookies and random gadgets for disassembly at:- http://www.bigclive.com/coffee.htm This also keeps the channel independent of YouTube's advertising algorithms allowing it to be a bit more dangerous and naughty.</description>
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