Astarexin AT7 Red Light Therapy Panel Review

1 month ago
7

Astarexin AT7 Red Light Therapy Panel Review
https://youtu.be/61Wx0iZwF4Y

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I have been using a range of red light therapy products over the last year or so and with mixed results. In some areas the results have been noticeable and good - mild knee and hand arthritis, the skin on my hands, and gum disease. In other areas no noticeable improvement - hair loss, weight, general health. I am not going to comment here on how well this particular device works from a health standpoint as this would have to be a subjective judgement made over weeks if not months. I will look at the build quality, construction and operation of the device.

I have two other red light panels, which both feature heavy metal casings, large LEDs together with noisy and powerful cooling fans. I once tried out a cheap panel from AliExpress, which I ended up binning due to high EMF levels, and so I hope this new $99 budget priced panel will be better.

Initial impressions were good. In the box, I received the AT7 panel,
detachable stand, user manual, eye protection goggles, and the power supply unit. Although light in weight at just 871g, the build quality seems fine and that coupled with the up market packaging ensures this does not give the impression of being a low priced item.

Looking at the unit we see on the front the array of 225 small sized LEDs with below it the control panel and small LED status display. On one side is the USB-C power input socket and on the back the cooling vents and mount for the magnetic kickstand.

The small sized LEDs have a light frequency output of 660 (Red) & 850 nm (near Infra Red). We are not told the power output of each LED bead but since the whole array seems to light up I assume each bead is dual mode rather than using separate beads for the two frequencies. The other similarly sized panel I own uses 60- much larger beads and employs a noisy fan to prevent overheating. I would suppose this panel uses a newer and more power efficient technology which runs cooler or has a lower power output. I cannot hear any fan noise and the casing is too shallow to employ a normal fan. The LEDs can be set to always on (controlled by a timer), or to pulse at 10Hz or 40Hz.

As regards power consumption the penal is rated at 90w peak, running at up to 50w although my tests showed it running at a budget friendly 30w. Take note that although the power adapter will operate at any voltage between 110 and 240 volts, it comes with a fixed two pin USA format plug. I used it with a holiday plug adapter here in the UK and it worked fine. I also tested the EMF output levels and they are as I expected and within acceptable limits.

The unit features a large and easy to use control panel on the front with buttons for Power/Pulse Mode, OutPut: Red, NIR, Red+NIR, Brightness Level: 1-4, Timer: 5/10/20/30 mins. The control panel also features a small LED display showing the current operating mode and timer.

That is it really. This red light therapy panel is compact sized, light in weight and is easy to use. Although we are not told and I do not have the facilities to test the light output and frequencies I have no reason to doubt that they are comparable to other similar devices. I have seen nothing that would put me off buying it at this price point and I think this budget priced unit would be a good first buy when entering the world of Red Light Therapy.

Music: YouTube Audio Library: Between The Spaces - The Soundlings

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