#1,033 in Tools & Home Improvement
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Reddit mentions of [15W 24LED] Spotlights Work Lights Outdoor Camping Lights, Built-in Rechargeable Lithium Batteries (With USB Ports to charge Mobile Devices)

Sentiment score: 4
Reddit mentions: 8

We found 8 Reddit mentions of [15W 24LED] Spotlights Work Lights Outdoor Camping Lights, Built-in Rechargeable Lithium Batteries (With USB Ports to charge Mobile Devices). Here are the top ones.

[15W 24LED] Spotlights Work Lights Outdoor Camping Lights, Built-in Rechargeable Lithium Batteries (With USB Ports to charge Mobile Devices)
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✅15W 24LED super bright LED work lights, bright enough.✅With 2 Blue and 2 Red Flashing LEDS,the best gear in a roadside emergency.✅Built in high quality lithium battery and with 2 USB port to charge the mobile devices.✅Portable and Lightweight work light,easy to carry or put onto the ground with the stand or hanging for camping,fishing,even if the back- up when it’s power cut.✅360° Rotating and waterproof durable outdoor spotlights to meet more requirements.
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Found 8 comments on [15W 24LED] Spotlights Work Lights Outdoor Camping Lights, Built-in Rechargeable Lithium Batteries (With USB Ports to charge Mobile Devices):

u/Grenzer17 · 9 pointsr/MTB

Personally, I use this ( https://www.amazon.com/dp/B015E6M23C/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_t1_cuOCAb6Y51VGP). It's not intended for mountain biking, but you can securely attach it to bars via bunje cords. It's extremely bright, casts a huge angle, and illuminates 30-50 feet ahead. I've been using it for group rides with my buddies, and it's powerful enough that if we stay close to each other it's the only light source we need. Certainly not the most practical solution though.

u/doubleplusunsigned · 4 pointsr/metalworking

First of all, thanks for sharing the video. I think metal casting is really interesting, and it's great to see how different people approach it.

> It's ok to be brutal.

Alright -

I really hate the music you used.

I'm also not a big fan of videos where that show the entire process at 10x playback (or whatever speed) - to me that indicates that you're showing too much. When I see videos like this, I click through around the timeline to find the interesting parts. Show the critical parts at regular speed and cut out the extra bits. Tell me (or show me) why something is a critical step.

Increase your lighting for better video. Do you have some work lights? Get two of them as close as possible to what you're working on at different angles and try filming like that (the closer you have a light source to a subject, the more even it appears. Far away lights appear as "points"). Set the white balance on your camera to account for the color temperature of the lights. Or if you have any kind of desk lamp, try pointing it at whatever you're filming. You'll have to experiment with what looks best with what you've got.

During the wax carving section, a huge portion of the frame felt wasted. You could have gotten much tighter on the actual carving, which would have drawn me in more than looking at a 90% static shot. Again, slowing down here and showing why you make certain carving decisions would have been more interesting. For instance, why did you carve out the middle then re-fill it? I had no idea what was going on there.

I felt bad for the clippers you used to get the wax out of the can. They look like flush cut electronics clippers, which usually say something like "For Copper Only". This indicates that using them on harder metal (like a can) will damage the cutting surface. But they're your tools.

From a PPE perspective, I would strongly consider wearing leather boots while pouring molten metal. But I can be clumsy at inopportune times and I like my toes.

u/Kardolf · 1 pointr/flashlight

I was given a light for my birthday earlier this year by someone who uses them for work. It's available through Amazon as the 15W 24LED Spotlights Work Lights Outdoor Camping Lights, Built-in Rechargeable Lithium Batteries With USB Ports to charge Mobile Devices. I haven't used mine a lot, and it's got some funky blinking red/blue lights that I have no need for at all, but it works pretty well for under the hood, or other darkish places. This does have the battery, and it's not super bright, but for the cost, you can pick up several of them, and have really good coverage of an area without any problems.

u/kknallay · 1 pointr/buildapc

You can get cheap headlamps just about anywhere. Or depending on what you do around your house, it's worth investing in a work light with a tripod/stand.

u/MagiicHat · 1 pointr/DIY

Good screwdrivers are nice, but you really need 6-8 sizes, and that's over $20.

A wonder bar is probably one of my favorites:
http://www.amazon.com/Stanley-55-515-12-3-4-inch-Wonderbar/dp/B00002X1XT

Although not technically a tool, a nice LED work light is amazing. With a bit of patience, you can find one with 1000+ lumens near the $20 mark. This one is more, but I needed an example before my bathroom break was over
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B015E6M23C/ref=cm_sw_r_other_awd_nIMOwbPB7M5NY

u/noideawhatimdoing8 · 1 pointr/Septemberbumpers2017

Deep breaths - one day at a time, just divide little things to do and tackle them one at a time. Maybe in the meantime you could get your son some LED battery-powered lights like these, this, this, or this. It's not the same as running some electrical in, but it will do if he wants a little bit of time to himself reading before bed.