Solar Light Bulbs from Recycled Bottles

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Solar Light Bulbs from Recycled Bottles

The 2-liter plastic bottle solar light bulb is an genius way to light up a room while reducing the amount of power you consume through creative recycling. Recently, a group from Manila called Isang Litrong Liwanag (A Liter of Light) got together to build and install solar lightbulbs in a 500 house pilot program. Not only do they get better lighting, but they can spend the money they save on other, more important expenses. It’s amazing what a little sunlight can do. [via NTD]

72 thoughts on “Solar Light Bulbs from Recycled Bottles

  1. Joe S says:

    Maximum solar flux on Earth is about 1 kw/m^2, and there are about 1500 square inches per square meter.  So the rule of thumb would be .67 watts per square inch of bottle cross section facing the sun on a sunny mid-day.  

    1. VRAndy says:

      When you’re talking casually about light-bulbs “watts” sometimes means light equivalent to an old-fashioned incandescant bulb using that many watts.

      (That’s how we get “60 watt” CFL bulbs that consume about about 10 watts. )

      So when he says “about 55 watts” he means “As bright as a moderately bright lamp.”

    2. VRAndy says:

      When you’re talking casually about light-bulbs “watts” sometimes means light equivalent to an old-fashioned incandescant bulb using that many watts.

      (That’s how we get “60 watt” CFL bulbs that consume about about 10 watts. )

      So when he says “about 55 watts” he means “As bright as a moderately bright lamp.”

  2. Gian Carlo M. says:

    great project
    this kind of lamp was invented back in 2002 from a brazilian called Alfredo Moser
    you can watch what I believe was his first interview here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kqJdLYhzbTo

    1. Adam Flaherty says:

      Yep. I included a link to an earlier post that included a video of Alfredo showing off his invention.

  3. MadGravity says:

    Well hot dang that’s simple :)

  4. Kyle Reed says:

    Light bulb is a little misleading

    1. Adam Flaherty says:

      It is a bulb of light, is it not?

      1. John Gomm says:

        Nope, it’s a sun diffuser. it generates no light, merely passes it through. Nice idea tho’, and the headline is definitely eyecatching, but misleading given the expectations associated with the phrases “light bulb” and “solar powered”. “Water bottle skylight” is more immediately understood.

        1. Adam Flaherty says:

          Well, that’s what everyone has been calling it. I was thinking the same thing, BTW, and came to the conclusion that we need to make it an actual lightbulb. One idea I had to remedy this would be to create a little solar charged superbright LED screw cap that would put out light after the sun went down. This could easily be fabbed up from a surplus solar garden light on a MakerBot. This would be particularly useful in places like Africa where they have limited infrastructure and a need for good lighting.

          1. Anonymous says:

            Sams club sells some solar garden lights that would work very well for this purpose..

          2. VRAndy says:

            Not really.  I’ve owned wristwatches that cast more light than a garden light.

            They’ve got crumby batteries that cost more to produce than the cost of the energy they’ll store over their entire lifetime, and they’ve got some of the least efficient solar cells available.

            I won’t argue with someone for having wasteful garden decorations, I waste plenty of resources myself in different ways. But the technology in those solar garden lamps would be completely inappropriate for this sort of third world poverty situation.

          3. Anonymous says:

            While i would generally agree with you about most garden lights the Sams Club version uses a 3.2v lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4) battery not the usual cheep NiCad’s most garden lights use. It also has a high output LED.  and is very bright.http://www.samsclub.com/sams/shop/product.jsp?productId=prod1831547&navAction=push#desc

          4. Anonymous says:

            While i would generally agree with you about most garden lights the Sams Club version uses a 3.2v lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4) battery not the usual cheep NiCad’s most garden lights use. It also has a high output LED.  and is very bright.http://www.samsclub.com/sams/shop/product.jsp?productId=prod1831547&navAction=push#desc

          5. Anonymous says:

            While i would generally agree with you about most garden lights the Sams Club version uses a 3.2v lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4) battery not the usual cheep NiCad’s most garden lights use. It also has a high output LED.  and is very bright.http://www.samsclub.com/sams/shop/product.jsp?productId=prod1831547&navAction=push#desc

  5. Kyle Reed says:

    Light bulb is a little misleading

  6. Jordan Czajka says:

    This is just like glass deck prisms on old wooden ships

    1. VRAndy says:

      Aha. “Deck Prisms” thank you.   I’d been trying to remember what those were called.

  7. Adam Eyring says:

    Great idea! If my garage roof wasn’t so thick, I’d give it a try with a few bottles to see if I can avoid the need to use electricity for shop lights. Of course, this is similar to having solar tubes.

    1. Adam Flaherty says:

      I think this is a really cool project. Recently, I installed a couple of fancy sun tubes in my living room and it completely changed the place. It went from dark and dank to bright and sunny. It’s amazing how much light comes in that room. And the light feels different. We had used standard lighting, which always felt a little weird. The natural sun coming in makes the place feel so much nicer.

  8. Adam Eyring says:

    Great idea! If my garage roof wasn’t so thick, I’d give it a try with a few bottles to see if I can avoid the need to use electricity for shop lights. Of course, this is similar to having solar tubes.

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  10. Anonymous says:

    It’s a skylight, Very effective. 

    I assume the bleach is to keep anything from growing in the bottle..

  11. Sarita Newson says:

    Ingenious! I would be interested to see the figures of how much electricity these lights help people save! Now lets find out a way of keeping them glowing when the sun goes down!!!

  12. Sarita Newson says:

    Ingenious! I would be interested to see the figures of how much electricity these lights help people save! Now lets find out a way of keeping them glowing when the sun goes down!!!

  13. Capt.tagon says:

    Kind of like the deck prisms that the old sailing ships had to illuminate cabins, etc under the upper deck. Neat.

  14. Capt.tagon says:

    Kind of like the deck prisms that the old sailing ships had to illuminate cabins, etc under the upper deck. Neat.

  15. Anonymous says:

    fgfffff 

  16. Joseph Vincent says:

    I hate to burst the man’s bubble who said it wasn’t a light bulb because it was just passing the light the sun gave off, but everything passes the light the sun gave off one way or another. Dinosaurs and Prehistoric plants got their energy from sunlight which we now harness through fossil fuels. The light you see in your lightbulb is the result of the sun being alive millions of years ago. AWESOME NONETHELESS!

  17. hemant khadake says:

    which bleach they usein it? it’s not shown pls give detail of it

  18. jrendeiro says:

    Sweet Jesus, instead of adding a hole in the roof, a plastic bottle, mastic, etc. why not SUBSTITUTE a sheet of opaque fiberglass in place of the steel galvanized sheet. (lightbulb lights over my head)

  19. Florentina Rochenstire says:

    Light bulbs are at the top of our energy efficiency list. There is a big drive to encourage people to stop using the old incandescent bulbs, which waste a large percentage of electricity burned in heat, and replace them with more energy efficient bulbs. CFLs have been promoted as the solution. Compact fluorescent bulbs use less energy and last longer than the old light bulb, but they have one serious drawback. They contain mercury.

  20. jagerfoods says:

    Great concept. How can you use this on a larger or practical scale? Living in central Minnesota with a roof that contains shingles, insulation, etc. this would probably not work.

  21. Vinit says:

    Granted that the above idea is wonderful, it might not be a feasible idea for someone who live in apartments, in which case there’s always the good old solar lamp to replace the conventional light bulbs. I myself have been using a solar lamp of NIMH Technolinks(http://www.nimh.in/) from the past 7 months and i am quite surprised by the difference in electricity consumption. Mark my words fellas, Solar energy is the next big thing !!!

  22. keamoore says:

    Want to learn I..it

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