
TruLight vs Generic / DIY Permanent Lights: What Salt Lake City Homeowners Need to Know
You can buy a roll of permanent house lights off Amazon for about $80. The lights themselves might even look almost identical to ours. We just sat down for a side-by-side breakdown of TruLight against the generic stuff coming out of Amazon, Temu, and dozens of small DIY dealers, and the result wasn't what most homeowners expect. The lights are not the part you should care about. The app is.
This post breaks down what we found in the video, point by point, with timestamps so you can jump to any part you want to see for yourself.
What Are Generic or DIY Permanent Lights, Anyway?
Generic permanent lights are the lights you find when you type "permanent holiday lights" into Amazon and skip past the brand names. A roll of 200 feet usually runs around $80. Most of them ship with a small controller box, a single line of data running to the lights, and a free app called SurpLife. The hardware can look surprisingly close to a premium system from the outside. The puck shape, the aluminum track, the wiring, all of it.
The catch is what you do not see. The chip inside the LED is almost always a WS2811, an 8-bit RGB chip with no dedicated white LED. The controller is a single-port box, meaning every light has to chain off one line of data. And the app is a generic third-party platform that runs cabinet lights, bulb strips, and roof lights all from the same code base. None of those choices are wrong for a $30 cabinet light. They become a problem when you put them on a $3,000 install across the front of a Draper or Sandy home.
Why Is the App More Important Than the Light?
The app matters more than the light because the app is what you use every single day. You see the light. You touch the app. With permanent lighting, the experience of owning the system is the experience of using the app, and a free generic platform cannot deliver the experience a custom-built one can.
Think about laptops. A $350 entry-level laptop and a $2,500 workstation both have a screen, a keyboard, and a trackpad. The hardware looks similar from the outside. What separates them is the technology inside, the software, the polish. Permanent lighting works the same way. We have invested over half a million dollars into building the TruLight app from the ground up, just for permanent outdoor lighting on homes. That investment is what gives you 144+ patterns, true zoning, motion sensor integration, and an animated house preview. None of that comes from the LED.
Putting a premium light behind a free, generic app is like putting race-car tires on a minivan. You paid for hardware that the software cannot use. See this argument at 3:17 in the video.
What Is SurpLife and Why Does It Matter?
SurpLife is a third-party LED app that runs on hundreds of unrelated products. Cabinet lights. Bulb strips. Garage lights. Generic permanent lights. It is what the lighting industry calls a white-label app, which means anyone can pay SurpLife to skin it with their own logo and brand. So you might download what looks like a custom-branded lighting app, open it up, and find out it is just SurpLife with new colors.
That is not a problem for a $30 cabinet light. It is a problem when the same generic platform is asked to run a permanent lighting install on a real home. The features inside SurpLife have to work for cabinet lights and strip lights and bulbs all at the same time, so they stay generic. There is no roadmap for permanent-outdoor-lighting features like real zoning, motion sensors, or an animated house preview. Even if you wanted those features added, the small dealer who sold you the lights does not own the app and cannot push them.
If you are buying generic lights and the dealer hands you a SurpLife app, you are paying for permanent-lighting hardware to run on a cabinet-light platform.
How Many Patterns Should a Permanent Lighting App Have?
A real permanent lighting app should have at least 100 motion patterns and an animated house preview that lets you see each one before you turn the lights on. SurpLife ships with about 5 effects, and the closest thing to a preview is an icon on a Christmas-tree graphic, which is not very helpful when you are picking lights for a 4,500-square-foot home in Cottonwood Heights.
TruLight has 144+ motion patterns built in. Every pattern shows up on an animated roofline preview before you commit, so you can see how dense the effect is, how fast it moves, and how it flows around the corners of your home. We also include density control, which lets you tune any pattern from one-on-two-off, to two-on-three-off, to fully packed. See the pattern walkthrough at 14:50 in the video.
| Feature | TruLight | Generic / SurpLife |
|---|---|---|
| Motion patterns | 144+ | About 5 |
| Animated house preview | Yes | No |
| Density control | Yes | No |
| True zoning | Yes | No |
| Motion sensors | Yes | No |
| Per-zone music sync | Yes | No |
| LED chip | UCS7604 (RGBW, 16-bit) | WS2811 (RGB, 8-bit) |
| Warranty | Lifetime, transferable | Varies, often none |
True Zoning vs Light Grouping
Zoning is the single biggest feature most homeowners have never heard about, and it is the foundation under almost every other feature people care about. True zoning means you can split your lighting system into independent groups, where each group runs its own colors, patterns, and effects at the same time. The front of your home runs a Christmas chase. The pergola in the backyard runs warm white over the patio. The dog run by the side gate flips on with a motion sensor. All at once.
SurpLife cannot do real zoning. It can group lights or let you select individual ones, but it cannot run independent zones in parallel. That gap matters because zoning is what gates everything else. If you cannot zone, you cannot have motion sensors that trigger only one section. You cannot tie in landscape lights as their own zone. You cannot keep the front yard quiet while the backyard plays music.
For Salt Lake City homeowners, this matters more than it might sound. A Sandy or Holladay backyard with a covered deck and a hot tub gets used a lot of the year. A Cottonwood Heights yard backing up to the canyon trail wants security lighting that does not blast the front of the house at the same time. Real zoning is what makes those scenes possible.
The 48-Volt Question and Why Generic Systems Cap Out
TruLight runs at a real 48 volts. Most generic systems run at 5, 12, or 24 volts. The numbers themselves do not matter to most homeowners, but what they translate to does. At 48 volts, a single power injection point can drive a longer run of lights with brighter output, which means fewer controllers buried in your soffits and a cleaner install with less drilling. At 12 volts you need a power injection point roughly every 100 feet to keep brightness even, which means more boxes mounted to your home and more cost on the install side.
It is the same wattage difference you see in our 48-volt deep dive, but the practical effect on a generic system is that lots of small dealers cap their installs at the front of the house because going further gets expensive. With a 48-volt system, you can light the front, a backyard pergola, and a dog run from one well-placed controller.
Why Single-Port Systems Limit Your Install
Generic SurpLife controllers ship with a single port. One line of data comes out of the box, and every light has to chain off that one line. On a real home with multiple roof sections, that means the line zig-zags up and down between eaves, then loops back. The flow of the lights ends up looking choppy when you run a chase pattern.
TruLight controllers run up to 4 separate lines of data. We can start two ports in opposite corners and have them meet in the middle, run the front separately from the back, or reverse the direction on a specific leg so the chase flows the way you want. Multiple ports also matter on the install side. Lower current per leg, fewer power injection points needed, and a cleaner run of track below the fascia or soffit. See the multi-port breakdown at 10:47 in the video.
Per-Zone Music Sync That Actually Makes Sense
SurpLife has music sync, but it can only play music on the entire system at once. If you turn on music mode, every light on your house starts dancing. That is fine for one quick demo. It gets old fast, and your neighbors are not going to love it either.
TruLight ties music sync to your zones. Pick the backyard. Pick the pergola. Pick both. The music plays only on the zones you choose, while the rest of the home stays in whatever scene you set. You are out back grilling and you want the lights to dance with the playlist? Done. The front yard stays clean and quiet while you do it. We also have around 20 music-specific effects compared to about 3 in SurpLife.
Want to see what real zoning and a custom app look like on your home?
How Do TruLight and SurpLife LED Chips Compare?
The TruLight chip is a UCS7604, a 4-in-1 RGBW chip with 16-bit color depth and a dedicated warm white LED baked in. SurpLife systems almost always use a WS2811, a 3-in-1 RGB chip with 8-bit color depth. The practical difference is 65,536 grayscale levels per channel versus 256, plus a real warm white instead of one mixed from RGB.
You do not need to take our word for it. Google "WS2811 vs UCS7604" yourself and read what comes up. Google describes the UCS7604 as a high-fidelity protocol for professional installations, and the WS2811 as a budget-friendly chip ideal for holiday displays. The tools are designed for different jobs.
Will Your System Still Work for You in Two Years?
Most homeowners start out wanting holiday lights for the front of the house. A year later they want backyard lighting for grilling. The year after that they want a motion sensor by the side gate, then the pergola on its own zone. Each of those upgrades is easy on a TruLight system because the technology was built for it from day one.
On a SurpLife system, those upgrades are usually a wall. The app cannot zone. The controller cannot drive motion sensors. There is no roadmap for new features specific to permanent outdoor lighting. The dealer who sold you the lights cannot push updates because they do not own the app.
This is why we have personally pulled hundreds of generic systems off Salt Lake County homes where the homeowner thought they were saving money up front. The replacement cost ends up far higher than just buying right the first time. See the full side-by-side comparison for every spec we cover in this article.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is SurpLife a real lighting company?
SurpLife is not a permanent lighting company. It is a generic third-party app platform that licenses its software to many different LED hardware sellers. The same app runs cabinet lights, bulb strips, and roof lights from dozens of unrelated brands. So when a small dealer sells you "their" permanent lights with "their" app, the app is almost always SurpLife with a custom logo on top.
Can I save money buying generic permanent lights from Amazon?
You can save money on the hardware up front. A 200-foot Amazon roll runs about $80, plus a generic controller. The savings disappear quickly once you factor in the install. Single-port controllers force more drilling, more power injection points, and more zigzag layout. And if you ever want to add zones, motion sensors, or per-zone music down the road, the system cannot grow with you and has to be replaced.
What is the best permanent lighting app for Salt Lake City homes?
For Salt Lake City and the surrounding Wasatch Front, the best permanent lighting app is one built from the ground up for outdoor permanent lighting on homes, with real zoning, an animated house preview, motion sensor integration, and per-zone music sync. The TruLight app is the only platform we know of that delivers all of those features in one place. Generic SurpLife-based apps cover basic color changes and a handful of effects, but cap out as soon as you want to do anything beyond holiday lights on the front of the house.
How long does a generic permanent lighting system last?
Generic permanent lights typically claim 50,000 hours but rarely have a strong warranty behind that number. TruLight is rated at 100,000 hours and carries a lifetime, transferable warranty that follows the home if you sell it. Cheap LEDs and waterproofing fail much faster than the chip itself, and that is where most generic systems fall apart in real Wasatch winters.
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