DIY Ghetto Flashlight Holder Project.
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DIY Ghetto Flashlight Holder Project.
Here's mine. After wasting $12 for a TwoFish Cycleblock only to find out it's a cheaply made collection of .50 cents worth of materials that didn't fit my flashlight, I decided to try something on my own. And the velcro straps cause the flashlight to bounce around a lot when you ride anyway.
Basically, I sacrificed an old incandescent Schwinn 4AA Bike light to mount the flashlight to. This incandescent light had a lousy on/off switch that never cleanly turned the light exactly on or off. The one good thing about it was that it had a pretty solid handlebar mount that snaps the unit firmly into place and the light was easy to remove.
So I opened up the Schwinn light, removed the light bulb lens assembly, removed the batteries, ripped out the wires, and then used a pair of pliers to bend and twist out all the plastic stuff inside the bottom half of the light. Basically, I gutted out the bottom half of the light so that I was left with a hollow plastic shell that could still attach to the handlebars and be easily removed.
Now I can permanently attach the flashlight to it with a metal clamp. The metal clamp affixes the flashlight very tightly to the plastic bottom. The whole thing took about 10 minutes and it works perfectly with no bouncing while riding. The flashlight snaps firmly in place and is easy to remove so it won't get stolen.
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Basically, I sacrificed an old incandescent Schwinn 4AA Bike light to mount the flashlight to. This incandescent light had a lousy on/off switch that never cleanly turned the light exactly on or off. The one good thing about it was that it had a pretty solid handlebar mount that snaps the unit firmly into place and the light was easy to remove.
So I opened up the Schwinn light, removed the light bulb lens assembly, removed the batteries, ripped out the wires, and then used a pair of pliers to bend and twist out all the plastic stuff inside the bottom half of the light. Basically, I gutted out the bottom half of the light so that I was left with a hollow plastic shell that could still attach to the handlebars and be easily removed.
Now I can permanently attach the flashlight to it with a metal clamp. The metal clamp affixes the flashlight very tightly to the plastic bottom. The whole thing took about 10 minutes and it works perfectly with no bouncing while riding. The flashlight snaps firmly in place and is easy to remove so it won't get stolen.
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