Best Selling Video Games and Game Gear

Ontel #HANDYS-CD6 Wireless Light Switch


List Price: $14.99
Now Only: $12.49
You Save: $ 2.50 ( 17% )
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Average Customer Rating:
Manufacturer: ONTEL PRODUCTS CORP


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Brand: ONTEL PRODUCTS CORP
EAN: 0754502021154
Label: ONTEL PRODUCTS CORP
Manufacturer: ONTEL PRODUCTS CORP
Model: HANDYS-CD6

Features
Ontel #HANDYS-CD6 Wireless Light Switch
ONTEL PRODUCTS CORP

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Editorial Reviews:

Wireless Light Switch, Works Up To 60 Feet, Control Any Lamp, From Anywhere, In Any Room, No Tool, No Wiring, No Mess, Remote Control Switch, As Seen On TV.


User Comments about the Ontel #HANDYS-CD6 Wireless Light Switch

it cost much less and works great. I looked it up on google and brought it from amazon. I was going to have to hire an electrician to do what I wanted to do. then I saw this product on tv. I highly recommend it.



I took it apart to see if I could repair it. Turns out, the whole thing was a bad soldering job. One switch worked perfectly well. Some wires were hardly intact. I took the other one apart too and saw that it, too, was badly soldered. The other stopped working after about a year. I re-soldered the non-working one and they both work now, but I'm a little disappointed in the quality here.



So, I give it a perfect score/rating.According to the instructions, this product works on regular lamps and standard voltage. Since I got it, it's been working like a charm. In other words, It does not work on anything other than that, such as CD player or television set. Best of all, the commercial and ad actually match up my real-life experience with the product. The other advantage is that there is a maximum of 60-foot distance between the receiver unit and the switch. And it only requires one 12V battery Size 23 A for the switch to work. I need it for the accent lighting in my living room.


Everything works as advertised. (As shown in the picture that I submitted).By following the clearly stated instructions, I plugged the lamp into the "receiver unit" and left it "on." Whenever I turn on the switch that's 10 feet away, the light goes on. Whenever I turn off the switch, the light goes off. I am honestly happy with the product.


So that is good. I would not buy one online as I can't stand Billy May, "extremely irritating" one of the reasons I have a dish network dvr, so I can bypass his and other commericials. I came downstairs, went out thru my front door and walked about 60 feet and it worked, I walked about another thirty or forty feet and it still worked. Please comment. I have the receiver unit in an upstairs hallway. Thank you. My only concern is that the only information I could find on battery life was in their advertisement stating the battery would last 2 years, however I could not find anything about once you turn on the light does the swich keep using battery power until you turn the switch off or does it emit another radio wave to turn your receiver off.


Does anyone know. I just purchased the Handy Switch today for $7.49 at a local store, so the price is good compared to others listed here. I put some school glue on the spring and got it tacky enough to place the battery in and the switch worked fine. I had a hard time getting the switch out of the package, pulled the battery tab out, but when I reinserted the battery the spring that holds the negative side broke clean off. Where the spring sits and the plastic battery holder sits are uneven, so when you put pressure on the battery to snap it in place it is very easy to break off the spring. If everything works ok and the battery lasts, I would probably by more and give it a better more informed rating.


But my intended us was for a florescent fixture, and the florescent bulbs don't come on when they're plugged into the module. Sticking an AC voltmeter into the module outlet when it's "on" shows the right voltage. I asked an electrical engineer friend about this, and he muttered about electronic switches changing the "phase angle" or some such, and told me that the solution was to buy a more expensive unit. The unit works, as far as it goes. Test it with an ordinary bulb lamp and it comes on and goes off just like it should. So buyer beware - it's Greek to me, but it's real, and the EE type didn't seem surprised by what happened.






 


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