Sunday, 2 June 2013

World Of Solar Your Online Eco Store

In comparison to the standard lights for security, solar lighting is simple to install. All one would need to do is to attach the light to a wall or on a roof edge, making sure that the position of the light is high enough above the ground so that is cannot be reached by vandals or thieves, making sure also that its position is exactly where you might want to detect the kind of movement that may be deemed as intrusive and would be where a prowler would be lurking.

You may also want to position a security light that is solar powered in the vicinity of any ground floor windows as these are the areas most favored by opportunist thieves when attempting to break into a premises or cause damage to the property.

Solar powered security lighting does have one issue that may be regarded as not within its favour; when positioning solar lighting it should always face in a direction where the sun shines longest. Usually this means positioning the solar panel so that it faces south. This is obviously going to be problematic if your reception entrance or the windows you want to keep a security light beamed on, are facing in the wrong direction for solar powered security lighting.

One of the more common places where solar lighting is being positioned is in the sheds located in people's back gardens. Shed thieving has become a very common target for night prowlers and robbers who need to make a quick buck out of something that might have value within your shed.

Houses have become more and more secure in recent years with the introduction of double glazed windows and doors and burglaries are being deterred by a resolute public, making a break in to any home far more difficult than it was 30 or 40 years ago. It is for this reason that sheds have become a common target for thieves as breaking into here means nobody is likely to be at home (unless someone has been sent out of the house and into the shed for night), there can often be items of value in there and few people are likely to hear you as you are not actually entering the home or the property itself.

Some of the more common items that are targeted by thieves in sheds are lawnmowers, power tools, and expensive sets of shears, tool sets, socket sets, drills and drill parts. Often the shed is a place where kids may park their bicycles in at night. All of these items are sold on by thieves and used to turn into cold hard cash. All the time a thief is operating inside your shed, he or she does so under the cover of darkness; that is of course unless you get a solar powered security light positioned right outside the shed.

Read more about eco lights.