JoJo D—January 22, 2026✓ Verified purchase
I bought this 12‑pack of 4‑foot LED lights to brighten up my 20’ x 20’ garage, and they’ve been a fantastic upgrade. The kit includes several connection options, which makes it easy to tailor the setup to your space. I went with the short pigtail connectors to link the lights together, and they worked perfectly for my layout. I wired three ceiling receptacles to feed three rows of four lights each (about 16 feet per row). To keep everything looking clean and organized, I added white pigtail plugs (Also purchased on Amazon) I purchased separately, and they really helped tidy up the installation. Mounting the lights was straightforward. Each fixture snaps into small metal clips that slide along a full‑length track, so positioning them exactly where you want is simple. Once installed, the lights fired right up and have been performing great so far. They put out plenty of brightness, easily illuminating the entire garage. Only time will tell how long they last, but given the design, replacing a single unit should be quick if one ever fails. For under $100 to fully light a two‑car garage, this setup is an excellent value. I’m very happy with the results and highly recommend these lights to anyone looking for an affordable, effective lighting solution. Read more


Mike Dorough—December 14, 2018✓ Verified purchase
I was looking for lighting options for my new shop (30'x60' Metal building) and having built a few shops in my life I knew that I wanted a good bit of light which also usually means spending a good bit of money. I poured my slab and erected the Red Iron portion of my shop and had a guy come in and install the insulation and the metal sheeting, as I had never done this before so I felt more comfortable paying someone that does it for a living to do it right and not worry about leaks. When he began installing the insulation and metal I asked him if he knew what type of lighting might be best for my building? he told me that he built another shop for a friend of his and that he had used LED lighting "which I knew from research was pretty costly" He went on to say that his friend told him it was very cheap and the lighting was excellent so he purchased a 12 pack of these lights for his own building and was surprised to see how well they worked, so with that being said I asked him to send me the information for the lighting...I was very skeptical about the lighting when it arrived even tho it had a lot of good reviews, but they were mostly reviews from people who had installed one or 2 in their houses with low ceiling heights "my shop walls are 12' tall with a max height of 15' in the middle and I had planned to install the lights directly to the perlins at about 13'. Upon receipt of the first 12 pack that I ordered all of the lights appeared to be in great shape and had all the hardware with them... They are VERY light weight. Upon instillation of the first 12 lights I plugged them in and WOW they were Much better than I expected, but because of my personal lighting requirements I decided to order some more, but ING had stopped selling the 12 pack bundles so I ordered 2 packs of 8 each for a total of 16 extra lights, when in reality I only needed 6 more to complete the celing lighting but figured I would just get a few extra to go on the walls also and to have a few extra if any of mine went out.... The 18 total lights that I have on the roof are more than enough lighting to illuminate my 30'x60' Shop which is 1800 SF.... I highly recommend these little lights for all your lighting needs. If you had to go out and buy new florecent fixtures from your local box store you would have to spend about $20 minimum per fixture plus cost of bulbs and would need about the same amount of fixtures and bulbs so you would be right at about $500 after tax for bulbs and fixtures and the lighting would not be as clean or as bright. The LED fixtures are the best Value for your dollar in terms of light output, ease of install and clean looks. Read more

W. C. Greer—March 6, 2023✓ Verified purchase
I'm impressed with the amount and quality of light these produce. I gave them a double-take when I opened the package, but I plugged one in and it was bright enough that I wanted to install them. They are extremely light weight, you could wield one around like a toy light sabre, and are easy enough to install, just screw in a couple of clips, and snap the light into the clips, plug it in and you are on your way. I have a 12 x 24 storage building/work shop. I put two over the work bench, the remaining 6 spaced out through the building and is enough to well light the building. (see photo) The set comes with a nice variety of clips, connectors, screws, extension cords, etc, that should be more than enough for nearly any installation. I really don't know about the grounding other reviewers are talking about. There are two connectors included that is meant for hard-wiring into a junction box, or perhaps a self made wire hookup, which is the only connection that has a ground wire to it, however I don't know what you would ground this to anyway. The light assembly is mostly plastic, so I don't know what you would ground anything to in the first place. Each of the LED sections must have some type of minimum internal power supply which powers the LED's which by the way, are all sold state devices. That's it. What are you wanting to ground? I don't remember the last time I've even had a laptop that had a ground plug on the power pack, there's no point in it as far as I can see, not the mention these draw very little power, 22 watts each. Which brings me to my last point, connecting multiple units. Each of these are inter-connectible with each other and can be added to, and added to, for how many sections? Each section (per listed spec data) is 22 watts, if you add 10 sections, that's 220 watts which is about 2 amps of power. The first connection will be handling the load for the entire length of what you have added down the line. I wouldn't get too carried away with adding multiple units, as per the sellers images/description states you can connect all 8 of these together, and that seems very reasonable, but I would give some thought to connecting more than say 8 or 10 of these, and while it may work, it might be pushing the limit of what the wiring or the LED sections can safely handle, and that's never a good idea. (Edit: Update) Click on the 'see all customer images' and find the images and a 1 star review with burned connectors after adding 16 of these (16 x 22 watts = 352 watts or 3 amps) and you'll see what I'm talking about. Edit: I've added a photo to show these in real life. (no smirking at my messy workbench). This showing just how well these lit up my entire work space. Overall, I like 'em. Read more
