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September
27
2007

7:57 pm

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You’re on a cross-country trip, trying to read a map, and you hold the map way up to the car’s lights on the ceiling – which, in turn, makes the map unreadable. Or, you hold the map down on your lap, and your head keeps blocking out the light as you lean forward over it, kind of like a tiny solar eclipse. Hate it when that happens.

So did the guy who invented the Seat Belt Light. The Seat Belt Light is a handy little gadget that attaches to any standard car seat belt, and provides interior lighting (without drawing power from the car’s battery) for reading or finding anything you need. Because it clips to the seat belt extension, the Seat Belt Light is hands-free, and lets you read or look at a map without losing one hand in order to hold the light.

Powered by 3 AAA batteries, the Seat Belt Light uses 4 LED lights, which are adjustable to 2 different brightness levels. The LED lights provide bright, focused light in a tight beam that doesn’t shed a lot of glare in the rest of the car, so that you can look at your map or read a book (preferably, you should be the passenger in that last example, not the driver) while everyone else sleeps (again, this should never apply to the driver).

The Seat Belt Light can be affixed anywhere on a car’s seat belt or seat belt extender, and you can adjust the light to just the right placement, leaving it there while you pull out the map to prove to your husband that he is, in fact, lost. And what could be more satisfying than that?

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