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VisionScape
Flagpole Warehouse The Gallegos Corp
Mutt Mitts Geobrugg
Stone Decorative Waterwall Rainwater

Put Your Best Foot Forward with Solar Caps




Next-Gen has recently become the exclusive United States based Master distributor of Solar-cap solar powered LED landscape paver lights. Seen here is a residential installation with Blue Puck Lights. The product has been sold all over the world the last 10 years, but is relatively brand new to America.


Solar-Cap lights solves numerous landscape lighting problems and helps landscape contractors in many ways. Not the least of which is the time involved in installing conventional in ground hard wired lighting. A set of 16 Next-Gen lights can be installed in a fraction of the time as a wired system.

Simply replace an existing 4”x4”, 4”x8” or 8”x8” paver light, secure with silicone or mortar, and you're done. Or they can be installed in freshly poured concrete without the concern of conduit or wiring limitations. They are a true green product, solving the obvious problem of energy costs.

Landscape contractors can provide pathway lighting to an existing pathway by simply core drilling a 2" or 4" hole into the walkway, and securing the light with silicone. Imagine the challenge of installing a hard wired lighting system to an existing walkway that needs some basic pathway or security lighting where there is no power source or a place to hide wire.

These lights use patented ultra capacitor technology instead of batteries. Conventional battery powered solar lights are rated for 1000 charge cycles, as compared to 100,000 charge cycles. There are no wires, no transformers, no switches, no conduit, and no electric charges.

With Solar-cap lights, there is no problem: drill, set, secure and it’s done. Landscape contractors now have a new revenue stream potential with the ability to install pathway lighting to places that were once impossible, impractical or cost prohibitive to do so. For more information you can visit www.solarcap-lighting.com – Courtesy of Next-Gen

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June 19, 2013, 1:13 am EST

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