Arlo has two different versions of the solar panel—here we’re just covering the Arlo solar panel with the magnetic connections, which is currently compatible with the Ultra Pro 4 and the Ultra 2 cameras. Every battery eventually dies, especially if you have your cameras up really high. I know that some of you have commented that you want to put your cameras up high in a tree or on the second story of your house, somewhere not easily accessible, so that’s another reason to be interested in getting this solar panel. One of my first questions was does the solar panel work with certain features that require AC power? For example, activity zones and the 3-second look back function. Both of those require the cameras to be plugged in, so how will that work with this solar panel? Before we get to the details, let’s start with the design. If we look inside the box, it really just comes with two things: the panel itself and an 8-foot charging cable. We’ve got the magnetic mount on the other side. It also comes with a wall mount. This is a heavy-duty wall mount, not like the one that came with the camera, which seemed to be pretty cheap and plastic. This one is all metal and a lot heavier duty. And go on and smash that notification bell to get updates whenever we put out a new video. Let’s actually go outside and find out. I have a camera above my front door on the side of the house that gets the most shade. I would say it currently gets about three hours of sun a day. I mounted the solar panel on this side of my house, hooked it up to the camera, and recorded the performance throughout over time. You can see all that in the video. I’m happy to say that after testing it, the Arlo Solar Panel took on enough sun, even on this shady side of the house, to keep the camera topped off. In fact, there’s enough residual light in the area that it is actually still providing some power to the camera even though it is in the shade, which I was really impressed to see. Granted, it is probably a very small trickle, but at least the panel is getting something. When I started this test, the camera had been up for about six weeks, and the battery was all the way down to 53%. Within the first day of testing I got a 13% bump in battery life, and it took a total of three days to get this camera all the way up to 100% with three hours of sunny day. I loved seeing that. What I ended up doing because of the storm was actually just turning that camera off. I was tired of getting all the notifications, and I knew that was just draining the battery. Once the sun came back out and the storm was gone, I turned the camera back on, and it took about two days to fully charge the battery in the backyard. Keep in mind if you’re dealing with a storm or windy weather, you may have to turn the camera off just to prevent it from just going completely dead. The answer unfortunately is no, and I talked to Arlo about it and asked if maybe there was just something wrong with my setup. Arlo said that unfortunately this does not provide enough power to be able to turn on the feature for activity zones or that 3-second look back, so don’t count on those features using the solar panel. Other than the storm I mentioned above, I haven’t had any issue with them. They’ve been awesome at keeping everything powered up. I’m happy with them, but without the AC-only features, I’m not sure they’re worth $108 each. What do you think?