AEO WP40SP10 Solar Panel & Water Pump KIT is special designed for your DIY garden projects like solar fountains, pond circulation, aquariums, aquaculture, greenhouses, solar education, boating, bilge substitute or any off-grid/remote water pumping applications, etc. The WP40SP10 KIT includes one AEO-WP401209 DC pump and a 10-watt solar panel; It come with proprietary 2pin waterproof connector, set the solar panel under the sun and place the water pump under water, then simply plug in to turn it on. The pump No wiring required. Water Pump fully submersible in fresh or salt water, it can generate up to 200-gallon water flow per hour under full daylight. The 10-watt polycrystalline solar panel made with durable aluminum frame and includes a ground stake. The extra-long (16ft) cord allows great flexibility for placement of pump and panel. Contents: 1 x 10 Watt Solar Panel with Ground Spikes 1 x AEO-WP401209 Water Pump 1 x User manual Specification: Solar Panel Power: 10 Watt Solar Panel Nominal Voltage: 18V Maximum flow rate: 610LpH / 161GpH Maximum pump head: 1.7M / 5.6FT Cable length: 16.4ft One Year Limited Manufacturer Warranty
Product Features
- Complete set for Solar Powered Water Pump Solution. Set and Connect to turn it on. No Wiring required
- 10-watt Polycrystalline Solar panel protected with durable aluminum frame
- Water Pump Oil-free design prevents water contamination
- Brushless Motor is designed for 24/7 operation for more than 20000 hours
- 1 Year Limited Manufacturer Warranty
An impressive little pump when paired with the right panel. An impressive little pump. I’m unsure of it’s longevity, but out of the box it’s great. I see a 10 watt panel recommended but I would go with the “ACOPOWER® 15Watt 15W Polycrystalline Photovoltaic PV Solar Panel Module 12v Battery Charging ” panel. It produces 22v and the pump can take 24 so your getting a much higher performance. It has a higher amp output as well so the pump will start more easily. Saying that, paired with that panel it needs a fair amount of sun (slight…
Small but so far so good… So far so good as long as your not expecting or trying to do to much. I’m trying my first solar panel system, didn’t want to burn another electric line, sometimes I’m no sure if I should have just done it but this has been interesting and fun. Ok, so I’m trying to power a “small” fountain, believe this 410 gph pump isn’t going to do a whole lot, and I have to assume those #’s are based on the 24 volt side of things, my 30 watt panel barely…
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