After I unpacked them, I was initially very impressed by the optics. Where can I find funny design, because the lamp is (as just a Teelichtglas) open at the top. While it may not rain water on the electrical system, but when it rains, the water is in the glass naturally gather. Which means that you first have to dump out the water after a summer rain. When a lamp is certainly no problem. If you have but there are several lamps in the garden, so this can sometimes be quite a burden. It may of course be that the effect looks pretty with illuminated water. I have not tried.
To the lamp but to activate first, you have to charge it for a day in the sun. An "on-off" switch should be set to OFF for. That would be no problem if you would just like to come to this switch.
For this purpose one must first turn around the glass and remove the ground, at the same time secured the solar module. Here ripped my already a first fingernails.
Then you have to solve the plate of the solar module from the rest, and the point I had to give up completely. After the plate was fixed to the ground that I could not solve, and had to ask a man to help.
Although this had more power, but still problems to solve the plate. When the plate is then triggered, ripped directly from a cable is glued. Fortunately, the cable was actually just glued and had seemingly no other meaning, but is just starting off.
We could then set the switch to "on" and the lamp went on. The battery is included and is located in the module.
In addition, two rods are provided, which can be either nesting or to use (like me) only a rod and then infected them with the help of an end piece in the ground. Of course it's nice to have the glass (which is made of plastic, incidentally) can be easily solved by the rod and it simply puts on de table during the summer.
The visuals are really nice, but the handling not.