Jabra Bluetooth800 A210 BT500 Scala600/700 Car Charger Strain Relief And
Jabra Bluetooth800 A210 BT500 Scala600/700 Car Charger Strain Relief And Durable Coil Cord New
- Jabra Bluetooth800,A210,BT500,Scala600/700 Car Charger
- Smart Motorola IC chip will recognize a full battery and automatically switch to a battery saver, powering the Bluetooth unit directly while in the charging cradle.
- Car charger plug never overcharges the battery; CLA has Short circuit protection too.
- Strain relief and durable coil cord make this CLA cord last and last.
- Buyer must charge a 20% restocking fee for return item.
Great for charging Jabra Bluetooth headset batteries via the cradle while traveling. LED colored charging indicator. Jabra Factory original one year warranty applies! This Jabra CLA quickly plugs into your car 12 Volt DC cigarette lighter adapter, and into the Jabra charging cradle, for a rapid battery charge of your Jabra A110/ A320/ A320s/ BT110/ BT130/ BT150/ BT160/ BT210/ BT350/ BT500/ BT620s/ BT800/ JX10 head-set/ Jabra A210 speaker-phone/ Jabra A210 Bluetooth adapter and Cardo Scala 600/ Scala 700.
List Price: $ 41.52
Price: $ 18.26
Durapro Megabrite Self-powered Super-bright Led Flashlight & Emergency Flasher 2 Pack
- Revolutionay self-powered technology — Never needs batteries
- Recharge over and over simply by winding up the handle
- Up to 45 minutes of usage per charge (1 minute)
- Super-bright LED lights never need replacing (3 LED per flashlight)
Product Description:
Features:
Revolutionay self-powered technology — Never needs batteries
Recharge over and over simply by winding up the handle
Up to 45 minutes of usage per charge (1 minute)
Super-bright LED lights never need replacing (3 LED per flashlight)
Lifetime warranty from manufacture
Great for power outages, emergencies, camping and more
No batteries (just wind to charge)
No bulbs (super bright LED technology)
Emergency flasher mode
Compact size always ready to use
Rugged super bright ergonomic;
List Price: $ 69.99
Price: $ 15.00
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Comments are closed.
Just what I’d hoped it would be,
When I first saw a similar product on a shop-at-home show, I was intrigued. We went through a period of frequent power outages, and our emergency lighting solutions weren’t great. I really liked the fact that this would be ready to go without worrying about fresh batteries–that would be a great safety item for both the home and car.
Of course, if it seems too good to be true… I figured the catch would be that, while winding for one minute sounds easy enough on TV, in real life it would be too much of a pain. Wrong! If anything, I’m overwinding (which I’ll have to stop now that I’m reading reviews saying that overwinding might not be good for the battery).
The only thing that’s hard about winding it is that the fold-out winding handle doesn’t lock into the open position, so it wants to collapse/fold as you’re winding. You have to find a position to hold it so you’re putting pressure down on it as you turn.
Other than that, the only thing I don’t like is the flash mode: first because you have to cycle through it every time you try to turn it off, and second because it’s just not practical. It would make sense if the white beam stayed on while the side/red lights flashed. That would be a safety feature to make you more visible while you were using the light to change a tire or walk the dog at night, etc. But as it is the white light also flashes, so it’s completely useless as a flashlight in that mode.
Not a huge deal, though. Overall it’s what I’d hoped it would be, and it puts out a respectable amount of light.
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The Inside Story,
I bought a two-pack at Costco ($20), and so far they seem fine. There have been some reports of lights with short lifespan, so I opened mine up to see what’s in there.
I was surprised at how much of the internal space is taken up by the gear train to run the generator. And, contrary to some advertising, there is a battery — a rechargeable LiIon coin cell LIR2450. Some quick research indicates it’s rated for about 100 mAh at 3.6V. If that battery is defective, or fails, it will hold a charge for only a short time.
The battery is reasonably accessible once the unit is disassembled, so a little work with a soldering iron can replace it.
So far, I’m pleased with the lights. They’re plenty bright for emergency use around the house, and small enough to keep in the drawer.
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