- Brand: Hykolity
- Color: 5000k-white
- Material: Steel
- Style: Modern
- Light fixture form: Pendant
- β High Quality – ETL certified for better quality, safety and reliability. This long-lasting LED shop light provides up to 50,000 hours of light before any maintenance is required.
- β Linkable – 4ft linkable shop light use plug connection to connect up to 4 pcs together in your garages, workshops, workbench areas, storage areas, warehouses, basements, equipment rooms, etc.
- β Easy Installation – Plug & Play. Come with 59″ power cord and other small accessories. You can hanging it with the included hanging chains or flush mounted with the included mounting screws.
- “β Our Warranty – All our’s shop lights are confidently guaranteed for 5 years! We aim for quality followed up with quality customer service directly provided by manufacturer. “



























Verified Customer –
Warning: You will receive whatever random LED shop light they have. I have ordered this four pack twice and received two very different sets of lights. The review below is for the second set ordered August 2022.LISTING: These were marked as Intertek ETL listed and the number on mine matched the listing. If a luminaire is not listed you should not install it.MOUNT: There is no good option for mounting these lights. You can hang them from chain, but that is not a good idea unless they are 20+ feet up. I solved this two different ways. The first, mounting with screws, was to use a screw smaller than the mounting hole and slide a locking tab in from the side. The second requires access above the light and is simply to drill a hole in your mounting surface, slide a nut in the side hole of the light, and bolt down through the surface and into that nut, and then tightening it from above.SIZE: Very small ~3″ by ~47.5″, you can fit them just about anywhere. If you are looking to mount lights 20+ feet up you should consider more powerful luminaires. I am using these between joists at 8ft and it’s perfect, any brighter and the light reflecting off the floor would be hard to look at.MAINS: The lights came marked as 0-277v. I tested and confirmed function on 240V, which should not be surprising as most electronics sold worldwide are also made to work just about anywhere which is pretty cheap and easy to do for what is ultimately a DC load. If you do decide to use these on a standard US “two hot” branch circuit as a line-to-line load you cannot use the cord and plug provided.GFCI: Remember that every single place you would plug in lights like this requires GFCI. I deleted the plug and integral receptacle and hardwired the lights, you will probably not be doing this.Porches, carports, hangars, garages, sheds, leantos, basements, bathrooms, laundry rooms, mud rooms, crawl spaces, and anywhere else that is an outdoor, wet, or damp location must be ground-fault protected.
JD –
These are fine for the approximately ten dollars per unit, but may not be suitable for all your applications. I needed and inexpensive solution to add multiple work lights in a large attic space. I needed lights, but they obviously will be used infrequently and be out-of-sight to everyone but me and contractors doing work in this attic space. So for my specific purpose, Iβm satisfied. However, if I were installing lighting in my garage or other interior space that was visible to others or used frequently, I would spend the extra money to purchase a different product that had a metal frame and was sturdier. This product is mostly plastic and I can see that it would warp over time if used a lot given the heat given off by the bulbs if used for hours at a time. Hope this helps you see the pros & cons. For my purposes, it was the best choice.
John Baker –
All parts to hang by chain or screws are included. The 120 watt equivalent may be two bright for some. Ours are mounted higher in a barn, so are ok. For a garage, Iβd get the 45w equivalent. Note: You can only link up to three in a chain. Must be a limitation of the internal wiring. Pull chain is nice for turning off individual lights in the chain. 3 prong plug is nice.
Jerry –
Iβll be honest, I wasnβt very impressed when I opened the box, but once I got one hung I was a happy camper! Seems to be brighter than the fluorescent fixtures I was replacing. My shop isnβt heated and I really appreciate the instant light when I flip them on. The fluorescents took a minute to warm up. Definitely recommend these lights.
K –
I have 24 of these lights mounted in chains of six lights each and have had no issues with them. They’re light weight and easy to mount, very bright, and extremely cost effective. They do feel cheap and flimsy, but I have dropped these onto concrete or had them fall over prior to mounting and they were not affected in the least. I have zero concerns about the durability of these lights.Each light comes with screws, hooks, plastic anchors and two chains. Mounting by chain is OK and allows for the height to be adjusted which came in handy hanging them between floor joists. The instructions give measurements to space the screws if using the keyholes on the back of the lights, but I have no time for that and simply drill a 9/64″ hole on either end of the back plate in between the bulbs. That’s a perfect size for #6 or #8 drywall screws and gets the light mounted in under a minute without needing to measure or fiddle about trying to align holes.For the price these lights can’t be beat and I’ll be getting another 20 or 24 to replace the lighting in my workshop and garages.
Biscuit Eater –
The back half of my garage was adequately lit but the front half was not. There was no lighting over the roll up garage door space. I installed this four pack of LED shop lights over the roll up garage door space and was very pleased with how well these lights lit up approximately 200 square feet (When the garage door is down of course).I mounted my lights to 4″x 56″ plywood strips (I cut the strips from 5/8″ thick plywood because it’s what I had on hand. Thinner plywood would work fine.)When the lights were centered on the 56″ long plywood strips, there was a 5″ inch tail of plywood at each end. I ran a single 3″ flathead wood screw through these tails, the sheetrock, and into the rafters. I preferred this method of flush mounting as compared to the key hole mounting slots that are precut on the topside of the fixtures. The key hole setup seems a bit fiddley to me.I mounted the lights to the plywood by drilling two 3/16″ holes into the sheet metal between the tubular bulbs on each fixture (One hole at each end) and mounted the lights to the plywood strips through these 3/16″ holes with #8 3/4″ pan head screws. See attached pictures.I’m controlling my lights with a remote controlled wall socket kit that I bought at Harbor Freight. The kit comes with three receptacles and a remote with three buttons. The four lights are ‘daisy chained’ across the ceiling all terminating in a single Harbor Freight remote wall receptacle. Push one button on the remote and all four lights come on. Push the same button again and all four lights go off. Over and over it goes.