カラー | ソーラーパネル |
---|---|
付属機能 | 防水 |
電池付属 | いいえ |
電池使用 | いいえ |
ブランド名 | アーロ(Arlo) |
メーカー | アーロ(Arlo) |
製品型番 | VMA4600-10000S |
発売年 | 2017 |
対応OS | not_machine_specific |
製品サイズ | 11.5 x 20.1 x 2.2 cm; 816.47 g |
商品重量 | 1.8 ポンド |
【Arlo 純正品】Arlo Pro用 充電用ソーラーパネル VMA4600-10000S
- Alro Pro/Arlo Goカメラ専用の充電用ソーラーパネル。
- カメラに太陽光で充電でき、経済的且つ非常時にも安心。ソーラーパネルに接続されたカメラに電源を供給します。
- ポート数:2
- 対応OS:not_machine_specific
- カメラへの永久的な電源供給を保証するものではありません (天候や使用頻度により、カメラのバッテリー残量がなくなることがあります)。
- 防水仕様
- 1年保証
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商品の情報
詳細情報
登録情報
商品モデル番号 | VMA4600-10000S |
---|---|
ASIN | B0721PJYTY |
発売日 | 2020/10/1 |
Amazon.co.jp での取り扱い開始日 | 2017/10/24 |
おすすめ度 |
5つ星のうち4.2 |
Amazon 売れ筋ランキング | - 538,677位家電&カメラ (家電&カメラの売れ筋ランキングを見る) - 621位携帯電話・スマートフォン用ソーラーチャージャー - 2,900位防犯カメラ (家電&カメラ) |
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メーカーによる説明


Arlo Pro ネットワークセキュリティカメラ (型番:VMS4230-100JPS)

Arloは使い方色々!
家族の見守りから、ビジネスのセキュリティー対策まで。様々な用途に合わせてArloは活躍します。
- ガレージの車やバイクをいたずらする人を監視
- 塀に落書きする人を監視
- ベランダの洗濯物を盗む人を監視
- ゴミ出しルールを守らない人を見つける
- 留守番中のペット、子供見守り
- 子供が帰宅したことをチェック
- 夜不在となるオフィスや店舗、クリニックのセキュリティカメラ
- 普段不在となる別荘を監視
Arlo Pro (アーロプロ) ハイビジョン100%ワイヤレス ネットワークセキュリティカメラ
どこにいても、そばにいる。24時間365日見張るネットワークカメラ
Arlo Proカメラ2台 + ベースステーション (無線親機) セット
Arlo Pro (アーロプロ) は、工事不要で、どなたでも手軽にホームセキュリティシステムを構築できる本格的なネットワークカメラです。
電源コードが不要な100%ワイヤレスなArlo Proのカメラなら、内蔵バッテリーとWiFiで動作し、電源コンセントの無い場所や屋外にも設置可能。
外出先や職場、旅行先から、スマートフォンのArloアプリで家の様子を確認することができ、怪しい動きや音を検知したらスマートフォンに通知します。
録画データはArloが用意した無料で使えるクラウドストレージ*に保存されるため、カメラを盗まれたり壊されたりしても証拠データが失われません。
*7日間、カメラ5台、最大1GBの保存を無料でお使いいただけます。


特定の情報をお探しですか?
商品の説明
Arloソーラーパネルをお使いのArlo Pro/Arlo Pro 2 カメラに接続すれば、バッテリーを充電する必要がなくなります。太陽光で発電するArloソーラーパネルに直接日光を数時間当てるだけで、Arlo Pro/Arlo Pro 2のバッテリーが充電されます。本体は防水仕様で、調整可能な取り付け具により簡単に取り付けられます。動作温度: 0~45 °C
イメージ付きのレビュー

-
トップレビュー
上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
14時~17時ぐらいしか日の当たらないところにつけてみましたが、その時間で25%充電してくれました。
日当たりのいい場所ならもっと充電してもらえると思います。
想像以上の充電力だったのでこれからの活躍に期待です。
-追記-
使用を始めて1週間ほど経ちました。
充電の性能は期待以上で、天気がいい日は30%ほど充電してくれます。
(前にも書いてある通り昼から夕方までしか日の当たらないところに設置しています)
夕方~朝まではもちろん日が出ていないので充電されませんが、バッテリーの減りは10%もいかないくらいです。
なので半永久的に人間の方で充電することはないのでは?と思います。
曇りの日でも頑張って充電してくれます。私の環境では15%程度でした。
1日中雨の日は5%も充電してくれないですね。
Arlo使用者でコンセントにつなぐのが面倒or届かない&屋外でしたらこれを持っておくべきだと思います。
とてもいい商品でした!


しっかり充電はできています。耐久性は、いまのところ問題ないようです。
このソーラーパネルでの給電で、気を付けなければならない点は、コンセントからの給電ではないため、アクティビティゾーンを有効にすることができないという点です。これは、残念ですね。せっかくのArloの機能ですので、ソーラー給電でも利用できればよかったのですが。
ーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーーー
Arlo Pro2のカメラを2か所取り付けていますが、1か所は外にあるコンセントから常時給電し、もう一か所は電源が近くに無かったので、バッテリーのみでの運用をしていました。ちょっと値段的には高い気もしますが、毎回、カメラを取り外しての充電が面倒なので、ソーラー充電に挑戦してみました。
90%から100%に充電されるまで、晴天で2時間かかったかどうかですので、満足の給電力です。購入して良かったと思います。太陽光線にさらされますので、耐久性は今後判明すると思われますが、初期動作としては満足です。
カメラへの取り付けに当たり、初めからカメラに付いているコネクタの防水キャップを引き抜かなくてはなりません。ちょっと気がひけますが、取り外さないと本製品のコネクタを接続できません。引き抜いたところで、特に問題はありませんので、思い切って引き抜いてください。後日、本製品を使用しなくなった場合に備えて、予備の防水キャップが同梱されていました。
他の国からのトップレビュー




With the winter sun lower in the sky, the solar panel on the north side of the house was not getting enough light to charge. So, I replaced the standard mount with an Acetaken Arlo Mounting Bracket mount, a 23" long mount that allows me to extend the Arlo Solar panel over the roofline to face south from a north-facing garage.
When I plugged everything back in, I got the dreaded "Charging Fault" error telling me that the Arlo Solar Panel was not compatible with the Arlo Pro camera. I went through all the troubleshooting steps, including: remove the battery, wait 10 minutes, re-insert the battery; remove the camera from the Arlo App and set it up as a new camera; reset the entire Arlo network; reset my modem. Nothing worked. I was just about to give up and call technical support but decided to do one more thing.
We had just had an enormous winter thunderstorm come through the area, so wondered if there was a problem with the electronics in the camera, like, perhaps, some moisture got inside. I brought the camera inside, replaced the battery with another freshly charged battery, then let the camera sit inside for a day.
Not sure which of my activities did the trick, but the camera is mounted, operating, and again charging with the Arlo Solar Panel. The problem seems to have been with the camera battery, not the solar panel. All five of the Arlo Solar Panels in my security network remain operational after eight months of testing; so, the Arlo Solar Panel keeps its five-star rating from me.
6 MONTH UPDATE: ONE MORE PANEL, ALL GOOD
After six months of testing and gradually installing one Arlo Solar Panel at a time, I just installed my fifth solar panel. I now have an Arlo solar panel powering each of my perimeter cameras, and all continue to work flawlessly. As before, I installed this final panel on a battery that had been entirely drained. After one hour, the battery is 20% charged and will be fully charged by tomorrow.
Considering a 100% success rate with six Arlo Solar panels after six months of testing, I’m increasingly puzzled by the negative reviews. Maybe people are not removing the plastic protective barriers, installing the panels in the shade, or not securing the plugs into the camera. Anyway, initially skeptical, I am a strong advocate of the Arlo Solar Panel for anyone tired of climbing the ladder every few months to charge their cameras.
I’ve decided to NOT buy solar panels for the six Arlo lights I have on the property. After five months of operation, they remain fully charged while lighting the path whenever they are approached. Thank you, LED technology, super-bright with almost no energy. Cool.
Because of all the warnings and negative reviews, I held off on buying the Arlo Solar Panel, hoping to find a viable alternative. Ironically, the other options proved less viable, so I took a slow approach to deploy Arlo panels. After four months of testing one installation at a time, I’m happy with the results and wondering why others have had so many problems.
SEPTEMBER UPDATE: DO NEGATIVE REVIEWS SAY MORE ABOUT THE USERS THAN THE PRODUCT?
Four months ago, I bought one and installed it with the Arlo Pro camera over the garage door. Installation was easy, and it worked like I would expect it to work.
Testing one of the common complaints that the solar panel drains the battery, I plugged the panel into a camera with a depleted battery. Not only did the panel keep the camera operating while the sun was shining, it fully charged the battery over two days, and has flawlessly worked for four months. The only maintenance has been to brush it with a broom to remove spider webs lightly.
After a month of operation, I bought a second Arlo to mount with the Arlo Pro camera monitoring our back yard. Same results. Easy installation, easy setup, zero maintenance.
——-
With another month of successful testing, I bought a third Arlo Solar Panel for the Arlo Pro camera monitoring the side gate. This one triggered the well-reported error of an incompatible power source. I thought this might be the end of the test, with the worst and most common complaint confirmed: the Arlo Pro Solar Panel is not compatible with the Arlo cameras it is made to power. Fortunately, the solution was easy: I made sure the cables were securely connected and reset the Arlo Pro Base station. Since then, two months now, everything has worked flawlessly.
With another month of successful testing, I bought a fourth Arlo Solar Panel for the camera monitoring the front door. Same results, flawless operation.
One slight problem on the front door unit: the cord is too short. All of the other panels are installed next to their respective cameras with the extra cable stuffed under roof tiles. With the front door camera mounted above the door and the solar panel on the side of the house, the wire has to stretch across an open area over the front door to reach the camera, not attractive. I am now in the market for an extension cable so I can tack the cable to the wall rather than have it hanging over the open area between the column and the door.
As with the other three Panels, I’m also testing the fourth panel with a depleted camera. With today’s sun, it’s charging at a rate of about 10 percent per hour.
——-
With four months of successful testing on four units resulting in a flawlessly operating, no maintenance video monitoring system around the property, I’m wondering why others are having problems.
I’m in Phoenix, Valley of the Sun, so have substantial exposure all day every day. I saw a picture in one of the negative reviews that showed the solar panel mounted on a tree. Solar means sun, folks — no solar no charge. Mounting a panel in the shade of a tree or in an area that does not have direct exposure to the sun will not work. For a couple of the panels, I bought a special mount that is about a foot long that allows it to reach around or over the house so the panel can get optimum southern exposure, even from the north and east sides of the house. Other reported issues may be fixed by making sure the connections are secure and resetting the base station.
Occasionally, I get so much sun that the cameras shut down because they overheat. This seems to have been resolved by removing the black rubber protectors from the problematic cameras but may result in my moving the cameras under the shade roof rather than on the exposed side of the house. But, even when our temps hit 118 F, the solar panels have remained operational.
I’ll keep testing to see if I can confirm the warnings and fears from those with the negative review. Meanwhile, four months of gradual deployment and testing of four Arlo Solar Panels has resulted in smooth operation and low maintenance for me.


2019年8月17日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済み
With the winter sun lower in the sky, the solar panel on the north side of the house was not getting enough light to charge. So, I replaced the standard mount with an Acetaken Arlo Mounting Bracket mount, a 23" long mount that allows me to extend the Arlo Solar panel over the roofline to face south from a north-facing garage.
When I plugged everything back in, I got the dreaded "Charging Fault" error telling me that the Arlo Solar Panel was not compatible with the Arlo Pro camera. I went through all the troubleshooting steps, including: remove the battery, wait 10 minutes, re-insert the battery; remove the camera from the Arlo App and set it up as a new camera; reset the entire Arlo network; reset my modem. Nothing worked. I was just about to give up and call technical support but decided to do one more thing.
We had just had an enormous winter thunderstorm come through the area, so wondered if there was a problem with the electronics in the camera, like, perhaps, some moisture got inside. I brought the camera inside, replaced the battery with another freshly charged battery, then let the camera sit inside for a day.
Not sure which of my activities did the trick, but the camera is mounted, operating, and again charging with the Arlo Solar Panel. The problem seems to have been with the camera battery, not the solar panel. All five of the Arlo Solar Panels in my security network remain operational after eight months of testing; so, the Arlo Solar Panel keeps its five-star rating from me.
6 MONTH UPDATE: ONE MORE PANEL, ALL GOOD
After six months of testing and gradually installing one Arlo Solar Panel at a time, I just installed my fifth solar panel. I now have an Arlo solar panel powering each of my perimeter cameras, and all continue to work flawlessly. As before, I installed this final panel on a battery that had been entirely drained. After one hour, the battery is 20% charged and will be fully charged by tomorrow.
Considering a 100% success rate with six Arlo Solar panels after six months of testing, I’m increasingly puzzled by the negative reviews. Maybe people are not removing the plastic protective barriers, installing the panels in the shade, or not securing the plugs into the camera. Anyway, initially skeptical, I am a strong advocate of the Arlo Solar Panel for anyone tired of climbing the ladder every few months to charge their cameras.
I’ve decided to NOT buy solar panels for the six Arlo lights I have on the property. After five months of operation, they remain fully charged while lighting the path whenever they are approached. Thank you, LED technology, super-bright with almost no energy. Cool.
Because of all the warnings and negative reviews, I held off on buying the Arlo Solar Panel, hoping to find a viable alternative. Ironically, the other options proved less viable, so I took a slow approach to deploy Arlo panels. After four months of testing one installation at a time, I’m happy with the results and wondering why others have had so many problems.
SEPTEMBER UPDATE: DO NEGATIVE REVIEWS SAY MORE ABOUT THE USERS THAN THE PRODUCT?
Four months ago, I bought one and installed it with the Arlo Pro camera over the garage door. Installation was easy, and it worked like I would expect it to work.
Testing one of the common complaints that the solar panel drains the battery, I plugged the panel into a camera with a depleted battery. Not only did the panel keep the camera operating while the sun was shining, it fully charged the battery over two days, and has flawlessly worked for four months. The only maintenance has been to brush it with a broom to remove spider webs lightly.
After a month of operation, I bought a second Arlo to mount with the Arlo Pro camera monitoring our back yard. Same results. Easy installation, easy setup, zero maintenance.
——-
With another month of successful testing, I bought a third Arlo Solar Panel for the Arlo Pro camera monitoring the side gate. This one triggered the well-reported error of an incompatible power source. I thought this might be the end of the test, with the worst and most common complaint confirmed: the Arlo Pro Solar Panel is not compatible with the Arlo cameras it is made to power. Fortunately, the solution was easy: I made sure the cables were securely connected and reset the Arlo Pro Base station. Since then, two months now, everything has worked flawlessly.
With another month of successful testing, I bought a fourth Arlo Solar Panel for the camera monitoring the front door. Same results, flawless operation.
One slight problem on the front door unit: the cord is too short. All of the other panels are installed next to their respective cameras with the extra cable stuffed under roof tiles. With the front door camera mounted above the door and the solar panel on the side of the house, the wire has to stretch across an open area over the front door to reach the camera, not attractive. I am now in the market for an extension cable so I can tack the cable to the wall rather than have it hanging over the open area between the column and the door.
As with the other three Panels, I’m also testing the fourth panel with a depleted camera. With today’s sun, it’s charging at a rate of about 10 percent per hour.
——-
With four months of successful testing on four units resulting in a flawlessly operating, no maintenance video monitoring system around the property, I’m wondering why others are having problems.
I’m in Phoenix, Valley of the Sun, so have substantial exposure all day every day. I saw a picture in one of the negative reviews that showed the solar panel mounted on a tree. Solar means sun, folks — no solar no charge. Mounting a panel in the shade of a tree or in an area that does not have direct exposure to the sun will not work. For a couple of the panels, I bought a special mount that is about a foot long that allows it to reach around or over the house so the panel can get optimum southern exposure, even from the north and east sides of the house. Other reported issues may be fixed by making sure the connections are secure and resetting the base station.
Occasionally, I get so much sun that the cameras shut down because they overheat. This seems to have been resolved by removing the black rubber protectors from the problematic cameras but may result in my moving the cameras under the shade roof rather than on the exposed side of the house. But, even when our temps hit 118 F, the solar panels have remained operational.
I’ll keep testing to see if I can confirm the warnings and fears from those with the negative review. Meanwhile, four months of gradual deployment and testing of four Arlo Solar Panels has resulted in smooth operation and low maintenance for me.






- Bought 3 of these and use them with Arlo Pro cameras.
- Been using them for 1 & a half years or so.
- Live in a sunny climate so sun almost all year round, a little less in winter.
- Solar panel charges to100% by 0900 in the morning.
- I get around 30 activations a day depending on the sensitivity setting on the camera and still get a 100% charge rate.
- Charge drops to around 95% at night.
- Used an app called ‘Simply Solar’ (as recommended in the Arlo manual) to set the exact angle of the panel.
- Make sure you allow for the distance between the panel and your camera determined by the length of the panel cable.
- Has worked in rain, wind and 36c sun, even a little hail in winter.
- Recommend putting a cable cover over the solar panel cable to protect it from the elements.
Don’t know how long they will last but it’s great not to have to get up on a high ladder and fiddle around with batteries every so often especially with 3 cameras.
And of course no electricity used, a little pricey purchase but for me definitely worth it.
You may struggle a bit if you don’t set it up properly as it will not achieve it’s full charging capability but easily done with the app mentioned above.
I got a much much better charge when I later adjusted their position.
So far extremely pleased with them.


2020年7月27日に英国でレビュー済み
- Bought 3 of these and use them with Arlo Pro cameras.
- Been using them for 1 & a half years or so.
- Live in a sunny climate so sun almost all year round, a little less in winter.
- Solar panel charges to100% by 0900 in the morning.
- I get around 30 activations a day depending on the sensitivity setting on the camera and still get a 100% charge rate.
- Charge drops to around 95% at night.
- Used an app called ‘Simply Solar’ (as recommended in the Arlo manual) to set the exact angle of the panel.
- Make sure you allow for the distance between the panel and your camera determined by the length of the panel cable.
- Has worked in rain, wind and 36c sun, even a little hail in winter.
- Recommend putting a cable cover over the solar panel cable to protect it from the elements.
Don’t know how long they will last but it’s great not to have to get up on a high ladder and fiddle around with batteries every so often especially with 3 cameras.
And of course no electricity used, a little pricey purchase but for me definitely worth it.
You may struggle a bit if you don’t set it up properly as it will not achieve it’s full charging capability but easily done with the app mentioned above.
I got a much much better charge when I later adjusted their position.
So far extremely pleased with them.

