Adafruit
NeoPixel LED Outdoor Netting - 80 x 20 LEDs - 1x4 Meter Sizing
· MPN: ADA6165
Create large-scale LED displays without piecing together individual strips. This ready-to-use NeoPixel outdoor netting arranges 1,600 RGB LEDs in a 20 × 80 g...
Create large-scale LED displays without piecing together individual strips. This ready-to-use NeoPixel outdoor netting arranges 1,600 RGB LEDs in a 20 × 80 grid across a 1 × 4 metre flexible net — all driven from a single data pin using standard SK6812/WS2812/NeoPixel protocol.
Mount it on walls, fences, stages, or ceilings using the built-in plastic rings and wire loops, and tile multiple nets together for even larger installations.
Key Features
- 1,600 RGB LEDs – 20 × 80 grid with 50 mm (2″) pixel spacing in a zig-zag pattern
- Single Data Pin – SK6812/WS2812/NeoPixel compatible at 5 V logic level
- 12 V Powered – Requires 12 V DC supply; a 12 V / 10 A supply is sufficient for most use cases
- Power Draw – 30 mA per LED at full brightness (48 A max theoretical)
- 1 × 4 Metre Net – Flexible mesh with multiple mounting points
- Tileable – Connect multiple nets side-by-side for larger displays
- Mounting Points – Plastic rings on top and bottom edges; plastic-coated wire loops on the sides
Ideal For
- Stage and event lighting installations
- Holiday and seasonal decorations
- Dynamic light art and interactive displays
- Architectural and building-facade lighting
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- LED
- A light-emitting diode is a small electronic component that lights up when current flows through it in the correct direction. In this kit, LEDs create the flashing effect, so polarity and correct soldering matter for the project to work.
- NeoPixel
- A type of addressable LED system where colour data is sent along a single digital data line from one LED or controller to the next. Compatibility matters because the timing and signal format must match for the lights or driver board to respond correctly.
- RGB
- Short for red, green and blue, usually referring to an LED that can mix those three colours. It matters because controlling an RGB LED teaches how separate outputs combine to create different colours.
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