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24" 120w CREE LED 4WD Light Bar + Roof Bracket + Bullbar Bracket - $34.90 + Free Shipping @ Outbax Camping

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True bargain, reduced to below cost and free shipping to anywhere in Australia included.

Roadwarrior 24 Inch 120W CREE LED 4WD Light Bar - Flood & Spot - Roof + Bullbar bracket

Brave the outdoors with this tough and reliable LED lamp. You can use this on different situations and in different locations. It has diecast aluminium casing that can last for years. It comes with an adjustable mounting bracket that can be easily attached on different platforms. You can put this on your pickup, truck, ute, 4WD or caravan.

Provide lighting to your campsite, farm or any remote area you go with this LED Light Bar. It comes with lenses made of high-quality and durable quartz. Designed for outdoorsmen, this LED Light Bar is built according to IP 68 standard regulations which ensures the product is water- and dustproof. You can also use this for long hours without having to worry about overheating or the LED light burning out.

Get more out of your outdoor trips with this LED Light Bar. It can provide up to 10,000 lumens of light and can last for up to 50,000 hours. In addition, it has a built-in feature that allows the use of spot or flood lights. Call Outbaxcamping today to order!

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  • +3

    Same one in your eBay store on sale is $29.61 after discount.
    http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/122387889783

    • Beat me to it by 20 seconds, seems like a great buy for under $30.

    • +1

      Also a great deal for that one, also on clearance.. however that is a different model with no bull-bar bracket.

      • Is this model in your Ebay store? I assume the difference is the two round brackets that are shown in the images but not listed in the specifications: see - https://outbaxcamping.com.au/media/catalog/product/cache/1/t….

        I was wondering how big the brackets are and if they would fit a 2013 Pajero nudge bar?
        The offer issue is your Ebay store does not list the SKU, so I am unable to compare or search easily. Just some feedback.

        • Hi @Suckerzpayretail
          The one we linked above also includes the bull bar attachment, further to the standard bracket which is also included.
          Yes, will fit a standard Pajero nudge bar.

        • +1

          @Outbaxcamping: Thanks for the prompt response. Is the one you linked above, with the bull bar attachment, on your ebay store?

        • @Suckerzpayretail: I think it is already removed. We are selling the last batch remaining via website.

  • This is a good deal considering you pay ~$51 for a 22in lightbar from the 4wd supacentre

  • +1

    Any one know the cost of getting the electrics wired up, not too confident doing that myself.

    • +2

      You can buy LED light wiring harnesses (approx $17), that should include all the wires, fuse, relay and switches (many LED lights come with the harness, but I guess this one is super cheap).

      With the kit, what you need to do is plug into the headlight socket, attach the harness to your battery and run the switch into the inside of the car - if you have some DIY skills it's not too hard, otherwise it will cost more than the light cost to have someone else do it for you.

    • +1

      Try an advertisement on Airtasker see if you get any bites.

  • Why advertise this as having CREE LED's when it clearly doesn't?
    It's not exactly a marketing buzzword its a brand/manufacturer of LED's.

    Looks to be cheap low grade Chinese LED's. Unless the pictures aren't of the actual product?

    • Good question. OP's status is Online Now, so perhaps you will get an answer.

      • Looked into this and our item specs from supplier says CREE xlamp. Hope this helps.

        • specs from supplier says CREE xlamp

          But are they telling the truth …

          40 Pieces 3W High-Intensity Cree LEDs

          … because this needs to be factually correct, does it not? Can you provide some further assurance, please?

        • I have already contacted supplier for further comment. For assurance, if it truly turns out to be incorrect we can take it back for a full refund.

        • @PJC: Not Cree. Too cheap. Every reseller in China just says Cree when they arent.

        • @Outbaxcamping: Fair enough. There's a reasonable chance your supplier is being less than honest with you.

        • @Third_Gear: As I suspected, which puts OP in an awkward position. You're not really Associated for this vendor, are you?

        • @PJC: er sorry no. Not sure how I ticked associated by accident.

        • @Third_Gear: Thank you.

        • The Chinese have successfully copied Cree emitters too, in everything but performance.

          That and to make an LED emitter its a bit hit and miss. The way they are made means they need to test them all at the end of a batch and BIN them accordingly. This is why LEDs have BIN values. Only a few emitters from every 100 make the best BINS, rest fall into the various other BINs, some of which are awful. The best BINs sell for reasonable money, while the junk BINS can be had real cheap, as in a few cents per emitter. So an item might be dirt cheap, and it might have real Cree emitters in it. But they still arent what youre expecting just the same.

          Its fair to say that the fake Crees I mentioned first, would be stupid cheap in garbage BINS. Pun intended.

          Cree, its a shame they became the buzzword as they are awesome chip makers and much of what they do well is lost in the garbage of marketing of China product. Theres so much more to an LED emitter than the brand.

        • +1

          @Tuba: If you look at the emitters in one of the zoomed pics. These aren't even CREE clones. They are cheap as crap Chinese LED's.
          CREE has never used a package like that, if it were some crap 3watt CREE emitter that was outdated it would likely be an XR-E or XP-E.
          These are definitely not.

        • @AmperSand: Never said they were.

    • Note also that: "Operating Voltage: 10-30V DC"
      As with most similar rated lightbars, it's usually going to be installed in car and run at 12V, which - if you cared to measure - means it will not approach the 120W claimed output.

      While it's a good price - just a few years ago something like this would have been $100's - it's also now essentially obsolete, with newer, brighter similar products with 'genuine' chips costing not that much more … hence I presume the below-cost clearance of this product. However, if you need them, the bullbar mounts are usually ~$15, so that makes the light a real bargain.

      • At 12v, it might draw 10 amps making 120w. If its fed 24v, it would draw 5 amps, still 120w. Just doing the maths, not speaking for the light itself.

        • Some (probably all) LED lightbars advertised as 500W+ are supplied with a 30A fuse & relay to run on your 12V car … yet the vendor will assure you that the fuse/relay rating is fine … that's the sort of math's I'm talking about.

        • @Wolfy: Thats because they take the number of LEDs and multiply it by the manufacturers theoretical max running watts (or more accurately amps x volts) of the LED. So 20 3 watt LEDs is 60 watts etc, although each of the LEDs are getting under the 3w But the Chinese get away with the total potential consumption of the LEDs, and salesman in Aus (and the planet) have little understanding of whats not written on the spec sheet.

          Ill leave out that wattage is a stupid means of comparing anything to do with output anyway. Its a measure of consumption, not output. Think about how loud 100w spotlights are, or how bright 100w speakers are. Its stupid, but there you go, its how its all sold.

        • Yes, but my point was that advertising a 'knowingly incorrect' wattage value is equally as bad as advertising the product as "CREE LED".

          I have a few similar products and find them 'amazingly stupidly bright' which is about the only measure I need to use. :)

  • Would this be good in a market stall for lighting? I presume it runs off a 12v battery. How long would it last?

    • +1

      If you want to blind your customers, sure, but there are easier ways to make sales…

      • I guess 120W would seem excessive. More for the kitchen area to see what is being cooked :)

        • Waaaaay overkill for lighting a market stall. You'd be far better off just buying LED strip lighting. Lower power yet still decent brightness and would last far longer on a 12V battery. If the Kitchen still needed more light then you could just add a couple of basic 12V spotlights…something like these: http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/10W-Flood-Light-LED-12V-Spot-Cool…

  • I got this one off ebay for $50 but claims just under 3 times the power @336 watt and with a free wiring kit, but no bracket. Though i dont need it as its going on the bullbar

    • plug it in, measure the voltage and current, then report back here.
      I very much doubt it will be pulling the 28A required to be 336W at 12V

  • I don't have a bull bar or nudge bar. Is this thing mountable to something like a Kia Carnival or Kia Sorento? I assume it would need to mount to the bumper bar, but is that robust enough?

    • Hi DeapDreamer.
      Includes mounting brackets for mounting on any metal surface or better yet, a roof rack.
      I wouldn't recommend to mount it on any plastic bumper.

      • Thanks. I can see that I can buy brackets that mount onto the number plate bracket, but they don't look wide enough.

        Regarding roof racks is there enough wiring to get from the roof rack down to the headlights?

        • This one doesn't include wiring.

        • +1

          If you mount it on your roof rack, you'll get a lot of unwanted attention from the police. At least in QLD it's not legal to have any lights higher than the driver's eyes, probably the same in other states. The reason is that if you're going over a hill, and another car is coming over the hill towards you, you'll be blinding them long before you see their headlights and turn off your lamp. Similarly if you catch up with someone when cresting a hill, you'll be blinding them before you see their tail lights.

          http://4x4earth.com/forum/index.php?threads/nsw-adr-roof-mou…
          https://practicalmotoring.com.au/car-advice/where-can-you-le…

  • Not Cree. Specs obvious lies. Retailer pretends not to notice.

    • Hi Manic,

      Are you saying this due to the price?
      We are actually selling this so much below our cost.

      If we find that they are not Cree, we will be taking quick action, which includes changing the ads. We are waiting for response from our supplier.

      Greg

      • +2

        If you are in the business, you should know that such dishonesty is common, and it is up to you if you want to check, or pretend to believe the claims.
        All the signs are there, incl. no detailed specs (which Cree?) no close-up photos of the emitter.

        So, $249 reduced to $35 eh? Sounds totally legit to me.

        It comes with lenses made of high-quality and durable quartz.

        Seriously? Do you even read this stuff? There are no lenses in the photos, but reflectors.

        • Completely understand where you are coming from regarding dishonesty being common. We don't take part.
          Although it might not be reflecting, or visible, the lightbar definitely has a lens.

        • +1

          @Outbaxcamping:

          On reflection, they may be referring to the tiny lens that is built into the emitter.

          Also, people sometimes incorrectly call the clear cover a lens , e.g. sunglasses. But that is not quartz on your lights. Would make no sense.

        • @manic: I'd say there is a big rectangular "lens" that covers the reflectors to keep it waterproof, They probably shouldn't have made it a plural. Likely what they are referring to.

        • @AmperSand:
          But that it not quartz. Quartz is the "glass" used in small halogen bulbs.

  • +1

    Bought a couple off your eBay store as I don't need the bullbar mounts.

  • Note that additional lights on a car when on, like DRLs, marginally increase fuel consumption.

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