Headlight
#51
Senior Member

Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 4,681
Likes: 253
From: Minnesota
Bikes: N+1=5
Some of us disagree with you and it's great to have options. And it's crazy stupid to have weak lights on rural roads if you want to live to a ripe old age.
Being that a cyclist is more vulnerable than a car, then it's even more appropriate to have lighting equivalent to other vehicles. So far, I have had nothing but positive comments from drivers and law enforcement officers about my lights.
J.
#52
Senior Member

Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 4,681
Likes: 253
From: Minnesota
Bikes: N+1=5
LOL.... believe what you want .... I have a cheap Chinese Cree that looks like a magicshine with 3 lamps and is as strong as a Volvo bus' headlights on bright, and I have a £30 Cygolite Hotshot that works very well and that can be seen from 1/2 a mile away in the dark .... I always shop wisely but look at all options..... I'm very careful how I spend my money
J.
#53
Senior Member
Joined: Nov 2015
Posts: 1,667
Likes: 29
From: Cambridge UK
Bikes: Trek Emonda SL6 .... Miyata One Thousand
not joking .... this light is bright. I only use it on the low setting, and even on low, it's bright. I have had it for a while, and commute on very dark back roads 5 times a week. So far so good (for the £16 that I paid) ... if it packs up, I will buy another of these
6200LM 3x CREE T6 LED Bicycle Bike Light Headlight Flashlight+Battery+Charger UK | eBay

Dimensions: 49mm: L: ×74mm: W: × 41mm(H)
Weight: 130 g (Without battery pack)
LED: 3×CREE XM-L T6 extra white LED
Output 3 x XM-L T6 white LED bright can come to 6600 lumens
Battery: 4×18650 battery pack
Circuit: Digital CC circuit, power indicator system, Low-voltage alarming system.
4 Mode: Low-Mid-High, hidden Strobe
Dimming: Electronic pushbutton switch
Lumens: 6600Lums
Runtime: (8400mah) 1h40min -2h40min
Material: Aluminum alloy
Lens: Impact-resistant optical lens with AR coating
Reflector: Metal reflector
Waterproof: IPX-7, unable to support dive use.
Head & Tail: Aluminum alloy bezel ring
Mark: LED and mode are optional on your preference.
Internal wiring applies the high efficient booster circuit, working voltage is wide and can utilize the batteries in the largest extent.
Waterproofing design.
Aluminum alloy structure with wear-resistant anodized finish, deep heat sink finish.
High-performance electronic switch
Slightly click the switch to turn ON/Off the light.
Slightly click the switch to change the brightness modes, Low-Mid-high.
Long-press the switch for more than one second to access strobe mode.
Power indicator system:
Power > 80%.. three indicating LED on.
50%< Power < 80% , two indicating LED on.
100v-240v Battery Charger. ( LED indication for Power On / Charging / Full charge )
Model of Battery required: 1 x 8.4v 8400mAh Battery Pack
Package Content:
1 x Bicycle Light Black color
2 x Spare O-ring
1 x 8400mah Battery Pack
1 x Charger (EU plug), UK plug adaptor will be sent for free
1 x HeadBand as showed in picture
6200LM 3x CREE T6 LED Bicycle Bike Light Headlight Flashlight+Battery+Charger UK | eBay
Dimensions: 49mm: L: ×74mm: W: × 41mm(H)
Weight: 130 g (Without battery pack)
LED: 3×CREE XM-L T6 extra white LED
Output 3 x XM-L T6 white LED bright can come to 6600 lumens
Battery: 4×18650 battery pack
Circuit: Digital CC circuit, power indicator system, Low-voltage alarming system.
4 Mode: Low-Mid-High, hidden Strobe
Dimming: Electronic pushbutton switch
Lumens: 6600Lums
Runtime: (8400mah) 1h40min -2h40min
Material: Aluminum alloy
Lens: Impact-resistant optical lens with AR coating
Reflector: Metal reflector
Waterproof: IPX-7, unable to support dive use.
Head & Tail: Aluminum alloy bezel ring
Mark: LED and mode are optional on your preference.
Internal wiring applies the high efficient booster circuit, working voltage is wide and can utilize the batteries in the largest extent.
Waterproofing design.
Aluminum alloy structure with wear-resistant anodized finish, deep heat sink finish.
High-performance electronic switch
Slightly click the switch to turn ON/Off the light.
Slightly click the switch to change the brightness modes, Low-Mid-high.
Long-press the switch for more than one second to access strobe mode.
Power indicator system:
Power > 80%.. three indicating LED on.
50%< Power < 80% , two indicating LED on.
100v-240v Battery Charger. ( LED indication for Power On / Charging / Full charge )
Model of Battery required: 1 x 8.4v 8400mAh Battery Pack
Package Content:
1 x Bicycle Light Black color
2 x Spare O-ring
1 x 8400mah Battery Pack
1 x Charger (EU plug), UK plug adaptor will be sent for free
1 x HeadBand as showed in picture
Remark:Please kindly do the battery charge for 3-5 hours at first time use. The power of battery may auto eliminated after long time delivered.Please do not run the strong mode for the whole time, the light overheat may eliminate the lifespan of light.
#54
Senior Member

Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 4,681
Likes: 253
From: Minnesota
Bikes: N+1=5
not joking .... this light is bright. I only use it on the low setting, and even on low, it's bright. I have had it for a while, and commute on very dark back roads 5 times a week. So far so good (for the £16 that I paid) ... if it packs up, I will buy another of these
6200LM 3x CREE T6 LED Bicycle Bike Light Headlight Flashlight+Battery+Charger UK | eBay
Dimensions: 49mm: L: ×74mm: W: × 41mm(H)
Weight: 130 g (Without battery pack)
LED: 3×CREE XM-L T6 extra white LED
Output 3 x XM-L T6 white LED bright can come to 6600 lumens
Battery: 4×18650 battery pack
Circuit: Digital CC circuit, power indicator system, Low-voltage alarming system.
4 Mode: Low-Mid-High, hidden Strobe
Dimming: Electronic pushbutton switch
Lumens: 6600Lums
Runtime: (8400mah) 1h40min -2h40min
Material: Aluminum alloy
Lens: Impact-resistant optical lens with AR coating
Reflector: Metal reflector
Waterproof: IPX-7, unable to support dive use.
Head & Tail: Aluminum alloy bezel ring
Mark: LED and mode are optional on your preference.
Internal wiring applies the high efficient booster circuit, working voltage is wide and can utilize the batteries in the largest extent.
Waterproofing design.
Aluminum alloy structure with wear-resistant anodized finish, deep heat sink finish.
High-performance electronic switch
Slightly click the switch to turn ON/Off the light.
Slightly click the switch to change the brightness modes, Low-Mid-high.
Long-press the switch for more than one second to access strobe mode.
Power indicator system:
Power > 80%.. three indicating LED on.
50%< Power < 80% , two indicating LED on.
100v-240v Battery Charger. ( LED indication for Power On / Charging / Full charge )
Model of Battery required: 1 x 8.4v 8400mAh Battery Pack
Package Content:
1 x Bicycle Light Black color
2 x Spare O-ring
1 x 8400mah Battery Pack
1 x Charger (EU plug), UK plug adaptor will be sent for free
1 x HeadBand as showed in picture
6200LM 3x CREE T6 LED Bicycle Bike Light Headlight Flashlight+Battery+Charger UK | eBay
Dimensions: 49mm: L: ×74mm: W: × 41mm(H)
Weight: 130 g (Without battery pack)
LED: 3×CREE XM-L T6 extra white LED
Output 3 x XM-L T6 white LED bright can come to 6600 lumens
Battery: 4×18650 battery pack
Circuit: Digital CC circuit, power indicator system, Low-voltage alarming system.
4 Mode: Low-Mid-High, hidden Strobe
Dimming: Electronic pushbutton switch
Lumens: 6600Lums
Runtime: (8400mah) 1h40min -2h40min
Material: Aluminum alloy
Lens: Impact-resistant optical lens with AR coating
Reflector: Metal reflector
Waterproof: IPX-7, unable to support dive use.
Head & Tail: Aluminum alloy bezel ring
Mark: LED and mode are optional on your preference.
Internal wiring applies the high efficient booster circuit, working voltage is wide and can utilize the batteries in the largest extent.
Waterproofing design.
Aluminum alloy structure with wear-resistant anodized finish, deep heat sink finish.
High-performance electronic switch
Slightly click the switch to turn ON/Off the light.
Slightly click the switch to change the brightness modes, Low-Mid-high.
Long-press the switch for more than one second to access strobe mode.
Power indicator system:
Power > 80%.. three indicating LED on.
50%< Power < 80% , two indicating LED on.
100v-240v Battery Charger. ( LED indication for Power On / Charging / Full charge )
Model of Battery required: 1 x 8.4v 8400mAh Battery Pack
Package Content:
1 x Bicycle Light Black color
2 x Spare O-ring
1 x 8400mah Battery Pack
1 x Charger (EU plug), UK plug adaptor will be sent for free
1 x HeadBand as showed in picture
Remark:Please kindly do the battery charge for 3-5 hours at first time use. The power of battery may auto eliminated after long time delivered.Please do not run the strong mode for the whole time, the light overheat may eliminate the lifespan of light.
Also, there have been warnings about the battery packs that Solarstorm has used on some of their lights. So you might want to take precautions when charging the battery.
This from your description above is telling:
Please do not run the strong mode for the whole time, the light overheat may eliminate the lifespan of light.
Pretty classic Chinese light spec game playing and reliability issues. As always, you get what you pay for. In this case, they have taken out any thermal management, use cut rate (maybe factory reject) Li-ion cells in non-protected packs and charge them with a cut rate charger that may not have any protection whatsoever. All of those things would take cost out of the device and reduce the long and short term reliability and safety.
J.
Last edited by JohnJ80; 03-28-16 at 02:48 PM.
#55
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 5,331
Likes: 12
From: Kent Wa.
Bikes: 2005 Gazelle Golfo, 1935 Raleigh Sport, 1970 Robin Hood sport, 1974 Schwinn Continental, 1984 Ross MTB/porteur, 2013 Flying Piegon path racer, 2014 Gazelle Toer Populair T8
Then don't. Pretty simple solution.
Some of us disagree with you and it's great to have options. And it's crazy stupid to have weak lights on rural roads if you want to live to a ripe old age.
Being that a cyclist is more vulnerable than a car, then it's even more appropriate to have lighting equivalent to other vehicles. So far, I have had nothing but positive comments from drivers and law enforcement officers about my lights.
J.
Some of us disagree with you and it's great to have options. And it's crazy stupid to have weak lights on rural roads if you want to live to a ripe old age.
Being that a cyclist is more vulnerable than a car, then it's even more appropriate to have lighting equivalent to other vehicles. So far, I have had nothing but positive comments from drivers and law enforcement officers about my lights.
J.
#56
Senior Member
Joined: Nov 2015
Posts: 1,667
Likes: 29
From: Cambridge UK
Bikes: Trek Emonda SL6 .... Miyata One Thousand
Looking at the Cree XML datasheet, I think you'd be very lucky to be getting 1800 lumens out of the LEDs at full bright not including losses in the lens and reflector (substantially less) or less than ideal performance by the LEDs due to electronics (if there even are any).
Also, there have been warnings about the battery packs that Solarstorm has used on some of their lights. So you might want to take precautions when charging the battery.
This from your description above is telling:
That tells me that almost certainly there is no thermal control of the light. Run this thing too hot and it's going to burn out - or worse - run it on bright for any length of time and it's going to burn out. You can run it too hot running by running it on full bright or if you were using it in other modes and it was hot out and you were not moving (airflow). This thing is probably just direct connected to the battery. All of these things are bad (awful) for reliability.
Pretty classic Chinese light spec game playing and reliability issues. As always, you get what you pay for. In this case, they have taken out any thermal management, use cut rate (maybe factory reject) Li-ion cells in non-protected packs and charge them with a cut rate charger that may not have any protection whatsoever. All of those things would take cost out of the device and reduce the long and short term reliability and safety.
J.
Also, there have been warnings about the battery packs that Solarstorm has used on some of their lights. So you might want to take precautions when charging the battery.
This from your description above is telling:
That tells me that almost certainly there is no thermal control of the light. Run this thing too hot and it's going to burn out - or worse - run it on bright for any length of time and it's going to burn out. You can run it too hot running by running it on full bright or if you were using it in other modes and it was hot out and you were not moving (airflow). This thing is probably just direct connected to the battery. All of these things are bad (awful) for reliability.
Pretty classic Chinese light spec game playing and reliability issues. As always, you get what you pay for. In this case, they have taken out any thermal management, use cut rate (maybe factory reject) Li-ion cells in non-protected packs and charge them with a cut rate charger that may not have any protection whatsoever. All of those things would take cost out of the device and reduce the long and short term reliability and safety.
J.
a few more days and it will still be light at 10pm here so I won't be needing a light. It cost pennies, and has served me very well. If it packs up, I will just buy another next year, but I won't be paying hundreds of pounds though, and most probably will buy another Solar Storm
back light is a different story though.... I opted for a Cygolite Hotshot which I'm very happy with ... I looked at the Dinotte but was not prepared to pay the high price as the Cygolite Hotshot does the job fine. That with a Proviz Reflect 360 Hi-Viz jacket is all that is needed IMHO
#57
Senior Member

Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 4,681
Likes: 253
From: Minnesota
Bikes: N+1=5
I think if you rode where I do you'd have an entirely different opinion.
J.
#58
Senior Member

Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 4,681
Likes: 253
From: Minnesota
Bikes: N+1=5
well, it has lasted most of winter.... so, job done
a few more days and it will still be light at 10pm here so I won't be needing a light. It cost pennies, and has served me very well. If it packs up, I will just buy another next year, but I won't be paying hundreds of pounds though, and most probably will buy another Solar Storm
back light is a different story though.... I opted for a Cygolite Hotshot which I'm very happy with ... I looked at the Dinotte but was not prepared to pay the high price as the Cygolite Hotshot does the job fine. That with a Proviz Reflect 360 Hi-Viz jacket is all that is needed IMHO
a few more days and it will still be light at 10pm here so I won't be needing a light. It cost pennies, and has served me very well. If it packs up, I will just buy another next year, but I won't be paying hundreds of pounds though, and most probably will buy another Solar Storm
back light is a different story though.... I opted for a Cygolite Hotshot which I'm very happy with ... I looked at the Dinotte but was not prepared to pay the high price as the Cygolite Hotshot does the job fine. That with a Proviz Reflect 360 Hi-Viz jacket is all that is needed IMHO
I would also be concerned about the relative safety of their battery packs. There are other brand name cheap lots that don't have that sort of a reputation. Do note too, that Magicshine - one of the first Chinese lights - put a US online retailer/distributor (Geoman) out of business over safety issues with batteries that caught fire. Magic shine then pulled back to Chinese protection and forced the retailer to do the safety recall, which put them out of business.
J.
#59
Senior Member
Joined: Nov 2015
Posts: 1,667
Likes: 29
From: Cambridge UK
Bikes: Trek Emonda SL6 .... Miyata One Thousand
Point here is that it isn't what it's claimed to be. You can't compare this Solarstorm light to the Lupine lights that are noted for accurate specifications, high reliability and safety. All of those things cost money. What you bought is not a 5000 lumen light for 20 pounds.
I would also be concerned about the relative safety of their battery packs. There are other brand name cheap lots that don't have that sort of a reputation. Do note too, that Magicshine - one of the first Chinese lights - put a US online retailer/distributor (Geoman) out of business over safety issues with batteries that caught fire. Magic shine then pulled back to Chinese protection and forced the retailer to do the safety recall, which put them out of business.
J.
I would also be concerned about the relative safety of their battery packs. There are other brand name cheap lots that don't have that sort of a reputation. Do note too, that Magicshine - one of the first Chinese lights - put a US online retailer/distributor (Geoman) out of business over safety issues with batteries that caught fire. Magic shine then pulled back to Chinese protection and forced the retailer to do the safety recall, which put them out of business.
J.
battery lasts me 3 days before I need to re-charge. (approx 2hrs 10 min ride time)... it still has charge after 3 days, but I re-charge the battery. I use it on the headband and it has not fried my brain
so, if it does blow up next year, I will just buy another Solar Storm.... it's a bargain at £16 and I have not seen any head light with this power for the same price. People who have bought this Solar Storm off ebay give positive remarks/feedback
#60
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 5,331
Likes: 12
From: Kent Wa.
Bikes: 2005 Gazelle Golfo, 1935 Raleigh Sport, 1970 Robin Hood sport, 1974 Schwinn Continental, 1984 Ross MTB/porteur, 2013 Flying Piegon path racer, 2014 Gazelle Toer Populair T8
I live in a rural area, and have see a 5000 lumen lupine flashlight in action. Anything above its 3rd or 4th power level is far brighter than any vehicle headlight, and IMO negligence to use above that in the presence of other road users. Fortunately I only encounter people with such poor judgment maybe once a year.
#61
Senior Member

Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 4,681
Likes: 253
From: Minnesota
Bikes: N+1=5
I live in a rural area, and have see a 5000 lumen lupine flashlight in action. Anything above its 3rd or 4th power level is far brighter than any vehicle headlight, and IMO negligence to use above that in the presence of other road users. Fortunately I only encounter people with such poor judgment maybe once a year.
You probably don't want to ride here at night because you'll just be offended by my light that everyone else tells me is great and how well they could see me. There are enough car/bike collisions around here already and I don't plan on being part of that statistic.
Unfortunately, I encounter quite frequently cyclists with poor judgment who don't have sufficient lighting.
J.
#62
Señior Member
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 13,748
Likes: 10
From: Michigan
Bikes: Windsor Fens, Giant Seek 0 (2014, Alfine 8 + discs)
I use a circular pattern light, but it's very spotty, then fix a beam widening lens on it. The result is a moderate cutoff when I aim it properly, and a ton of light on the road.
I live in a rural area so I know people I see driving on the road, and I've asked a few of them later if my light bothered them, and nobody was bothered.
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Work: the 8 hours that separates bike rides.
Work: the 8 hours that separates bike rides.
#63
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 5,331
Likes: 12
From: Kent Wa.
Bikes: 2005 Gazelle Golfo, 1935 Raleigh Sport, 1970 Robin Hood sport, 1974 Schwinn Continental, 1984 Ross MTB/porteur, 2013 Flying Piegon path racer, 2014 Gazelle Toer Populair T8
Except those same laws restrict maximum brightness. I've tried some German lights, and though the beam pattern is nice, they're not bright enough for my rides. For the few days I used them before returning them, I had to ride the brakes all the way down the hills with rough road that are on my route. With cheap eBay lights (600 or so lumens) I can bomb them full speed.
I use a circular pattern light, but it's very spotty, then fix a beam widening lens on it. The result is a moderate cutoff when I aim it properly, and a ton of light on the road.
I live in a rural area so I know people I see driving on the road, and I've asked a few of them later if my light bothered them, and nobody was bothered.
I use a circular pattern light, but it's very spotty, then fix a beam widening lens on it. The result is a moderate cutoff when I aim it properly, and a ton of light on the road.
I live in a rural area so I know people I see driving on the road, and I've asked a few of them later if my light bothered them, and nobody was bothered.
Now that the new EU standards allow battery lights, I suspect we will see significantly brighter battery lights that function like true headlights.
I too desire bicycle lights that can stand with other vehicle lights on the road, I'm just not willing to do that at the expense of others ability to see the road. Fortunately with a combined output equivalent of 1700 lumen between the IQ-X, and Specialized flux expert I have all the light I could possibly need for any condition, and do it responsibly.
Last edited by kickstart; 03-28-16 at 09:38 PM.
#64
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 5,331
Likes: 12
From: Kent Wa.
Bikes: 2005 Gazelle Golfo, 1935 Raleigh Sport, 1970 Robin Hood sport, 1974 Schwinn Continental, 1984 Ross MTB/porteur, 2013 Flying Piegon path racer, 2014 Gazelle Toer Populair T8
Thankfully, with some thought and effort its possible to not be either "that guy".
#65
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2010
Posts: 6,341
Likes: 326
From: Mountain View, CA USA and Golden, CO USA
Bikes: 97 Litespeed, 50-39-30x13-26 10 cogs, Campagnolo Ultrashift, retroreflective rims on SON28/PowerTap hubs
There are no laws restricting maximum brightness.
StVZO only requires that when the middle of the beam is aimed to reach half the mounting height 5 meters from the bike, at 10 meters 3.4 degrees above the brightest spot must not measure over 2.0 lux.
E-code HID projection headlamps in cars are astonishingly bright in spite of a being allowed only 1.0 lux at that inclination and 25 meters.
Which ones? Newer ones with better reflectors put twice the light on the road with longer run times.
StVZO only requires that when the middle of the beam is aimed to reach half the mounting height 5 meters from the bike, at 10 meters 3.4 degrees above the brightest spot must not measure over 2.0 lux.
E-code HID projection headlamps in cars are astonishingly bright in spite of a being allowed only 1.0 lux at that inclination and 25 meters.
I've tried some German lights, and though the beam pattern is nice, they're not bright enough for my rides.
#66
aka Tom Reingold




Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 44,171
Likes: 6,390
From: New York, NY, and High Falls, NY, USA
Bikes: 1962 Rudge Sports, 1971 Raleigh Super Course, 1971 Raleigh Pro Track, 1974 Raleigh International, 1975 Viscount Fixie, 1982 McLean, 1996 Lemond (Ti), 2002 Burley Zydeco tandem
Oh come on, doesn't that effectively restrict output?
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Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
#67
FLIR Kitten to 0.05C
Joined: Sep 2014
Posts: 5,331
Likes: 409
From: Lincoln, Nebraska
Bikes: Roadie: Seven Axiom Race Ti w/Chorus 11s. CX/Adventure: Carver Gravel Grinder w/ Di2
There are no laws restricting maximum brightness.
StVZO only requires that when the middle of the beam is aimed to reach half the mounting height 5 meters from the bike, at 10 meters 3.4 degrees above the brightest spot must not measure over 2.0 lux.
E-code HID projection headlamps in cars are astonishingly bright in spite of a being allowed only 1.0 lux at that inclination and 25 meters.
Which ones? Newer ones with better reflectors put twice the light on the road with longer run times.
StVZO only requires that when the middle of the beam is aimed to reach half the mounting height 5 meters from the bike, at 10 meters 3.4 degrees above the brightest spot must not measure over 2.0 lux.
E-code HID projection headlamps in cars are astonishingly bright in spite of a being allowed only 1.0 lux at that inclination and 25 meters.
Which ones? Newer ones with better reflectors put twice the light on the road with longer run times.
In the UK a law in the 1980s addressed it...but those limits are stated in electrical wattage and not lumenosity or flux....which well a 55W incandescent headlight from the 80s is magnitudes less bright than a 55W LED array or HID.
#68
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2010
Posts: 6,341
Likes: 326
From: Mountain View, CA USA and Golden, CO USA
Bikes: 97 Litespeed, 50-39-30x13-26 10 cogs, Campagnolo Ultrashift, retroreflective rims on SON28/PowerTap hubs
No.
Replacing my 1998 Audi A4 US DOT headlights with 1999 E-code European parts satisfying those restrictions subjectively put at least 3X more light on the road in spite of the sharp cut-off and using the same bulbs.
It does mandate larger reflectors and housings (~2 inches in diameter not walnut sized) to provide both brightness and beam control.
Replacing my 1998 Audi A4 US DOT headlights with 1999 E-code European parts satisfying those restrictions subjectively put at least 3X more light on the road in spite of the sharp cut-off and using the same bulbs.
It does mandate larger reflectors and housings (~2 inches in diameter not walnut sized) to provide both brightness and beam control.
Last edited by Drew Eckhardt; 03-29-16 at 02:06 PM.
#69
Señior Member
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 13,748
Likes: 10
From: Michigan
Bikes: Windsor Fens, Giant Seek 0 (2014, Alfine 8 + discs)
At this point I'm really not inclined to waste any more money trying to replace a light that I love and that doesn't bother other road users.
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Work: the 8 hours that separates bike rides.
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#70
Senior Member

Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 3,816
Likes: 23
I used to have the light that dim posted in #53 for quite a while. One day it suddenly shut off during the ride. It didn't break, just the charge was running out. After recharging, it's on again, but I didn't want to risk it shutting off without warning. It didn't go dimmer and dimmer first, just went from normal bright to completely off. The light itself was great, and very lightweight. Now I just use super bright flashlight that runs on 18650s, so that I can replace the batteries easily. By the way, wonder if anyone want to try this for 88 bucks: (let us know how bright it is if you do
)
)
#71
Galveston County Texas
Joined: Nov 2007
Posts: 33,335
Likes: 1,285
From: In The Wind
Bikes: 02 GTO, 2011 Magnum
Great 6 Cell Battery Pack for your T-6 or Dinotte lights.
Heavy Duty Cable Connector
4-6 Weeks to arrive. I now have 4 of them. Planning for century nite rides.
https://www.gearbest.com/chargers/pp_180249.html
Heavy Duty Cable Connector
4-6 Weeks to arrive. I now have 4 of them. Planning for century nite rides.
https://www.gearbest.com/chargers/pp_180249.html
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Fred "The Real Fred"
Fred "The Real Fred"
#72
Senior Member

Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 3,816
Likes: 23
Great 6 Cell Battery Pack for your T-6 or Dinotte lights.
Heavy Duty Cable Connector
4-6 Weeks to arrive. I now have 4 of them. Planning for century nite rides.
8.4V 3900mAh 6 x 18650 Portable Rechargeable Water - resistant Battery Pack-13.18 and Free Shipping| GearBest.com
Heavy Duty Cable Connector
4-6 Weeks to arrive. I now have 4 of them. Planning for century nite rides.
8.4V 3900mAh 6 x 18650 Portable Rechargeable Water - resistant Battery Pack-13.18 and Free Shipping| GearBest.com
#73
Senior Member


Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 39,897
Likes: 3,865
From: New Rochelle, NY
Bikes: too many bikes from 1967 10s (5x2)Frejus to a Sumitomo Ti/Chorus aluminum 10s (10x2), plus one non-susp mtn bike I use as my commuter
LED light circuits are designed to produce maximum brightness at the design voltage. They get dimmer if the voltage is dropped, but excess voltage not only doesn't help, it can overload and damage the circuit.
It's sort of like playing blackjack. 21 wins the hand, and getting close below that is OK but not as good. However 22 is bust.
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FB
Chain-L site
An ounce of diagnosis is worth a pound of cure.
Just because I'm tired of arguing, doesn't mean you're right.
“One accurate measurement is worth a thousand expert opinions” - Adm Grace Murray Hopper - USN
WARNING, I'm from New York. Thin skinned people should maintain safe distance.
FB
Chain-L site
An ounce of diagnosis is worth a pound of cure.
Just because I'm tired of arguing, doesn't mean you're right.
“One accurate measurement is worth a thousand expert opinions” - Adm Grace Murray Hopper - USN
WARNING, I'm from New York. Thin skinned people should maintain safe distance.
#74
Zoom zoom zoom zoom bonk

Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 4,922
Likes: 979
From: New Zealand
Bikes: Giant Defy, Trek 1.7c, BMC GF02, Trek Marlin 6, Scott Sub 35, Kona Rove, Trek Verve+2
Great 6 Cell Battery Pack for your T-6 or Dinotte lights.
Heavy Duty Cable Connector
4-6 Weeks to arrive. I now have 4 of them. Planning for century nite rides.
8.4V 3900mAh 6 x 18650 Portable Rechargeable Water - resistant Battery Pack-13.18 and Free Shipping| GearBest.com
Heavy Duty Cable Connector
4-6 Weeks to arrive. I now have 4 of them. Planning for century nite rides.
8.4V 3900mAh 6 x 18650 Portable Rechargeable Water - resistant Battery Pack-13.18 and Free Shipping| GearBest.com
https://www.kaidomain.com/product/details.S024616
#75
Zoom zoom zoom zoom bonk

Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 4,922
Likes: 979
From: New Zealand
Bikes: Giant Defy, Trek 1.7c, BMC GF02, Trek Marlin 6, Scott Sub 35, Kona Rove, Trek Verve+2
https://www.kaidomain.com/product/details.S024616




