They look good. Ive lost count the number of boards Ive gone trough, or lent never to see againTired of our lovely weather killing trailer lights.
Could keep these safe and dry indoors between uses on my domestic twin Axle trailer.
Anyone using them, are they any good?
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After nearly getting rear ended on a French motorway one dark rainy night (by a GB plate Rangerover, no less) a few years back I replaced the pitiful stock BMW single bulb tail light with some LED trailer lights, off Amazon.As said, easy to steal & from experience have a habit of falling off onto the road as the magnets are not strong enough, especially at that price.
A set of LED trailer lights wired in properly will last for years.
Hadn't even considered the question of having a separate stalkI am now on second set. First set they glue/resin broke down as previously mentioned & on same journey the stalk between magnet & rear of light broke. I had used them about 8x before that happened though. They are easy to use & charge by by usb cable plugged in rear wich is covered with rubber grommets. I ended up making a square steel box that these fit into bolted to the trailer, with a rubber cyclist light retaining band to ensure they don`t bounce out. My first set had an antennae on the rear of the plug, but my second set don`t, but still work fine.
i l;ost loads of lighting boards or bust them i made a steel frame round my trailer lights it served 2 purposes it stiffened the trailer up when the tailgate was removed and lights behind it been on 30 years now no damageI make substantial steel light protection frames when building or modifying a trailer, lights recessed so they can't be easily damaged. Then a decent waterproof junction box. A holder to secure the plug when not in use. All works faultlessly for years. Different story if you don't actually own what you're using and don't give a **Language** about it.