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Hey I did a search in here and it didn't come up with anything. But I was wondering if anyone has tried the Owleye Highlux5 light out?
http://www.owleye.com.tw/product_det...p?product_id=9 |
I'm not sure why the prices of these stinkin' things are so high. I've about decided the best way to get a lighting kit is to engineer one yourself. I'm sure you have a handful of gel cells lying about, and I have had great success out of sealed beam PAR38 lamps, especially with a 30 degree beam. The flat, wide beam that is so common lends itself well to the purpose at hand. It was designed for this (cars actually). The next step up would be a fistful of CREE LED's. Give Google a workout looking for homebrews. If nothing else, a MAG Lite on the handlebars also works well.
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Originally Posted by nerys
(Post 14755533)
Here is the one I bought (its on its way from china)
http://dx.com/p/p7-water-resistant-s...pack-set-82734 http://img.dxcdn.com/productimages/sku_82734_1.jpg $45 and good reviews. for intermittent usage you could just leave the battery on the bike and recharge it every few months depending on how often you used it. (should get 3-6 hours of run time depending if on high or low) I will be sure to post a review/thoughts thread when I get it and use it. |
Originally Posted by daredevil
(Post 15222523)
your report please.
They gave me the option to cancel the order so I did...... |
its winter so I don't ride at night at all. its sitting here in the box somewhere got to find it. IT WAS CRAZY bright when I was testing it in the house when it came in. I mean "ludicrous" bright but the real test is outside on the bike at night.
sadly the beam pattern is wrong for a vehicle headlight (I was hoping to use 4 of these as headlights for my car would give me an extra 2-3 mpg at night time. |
I use the TerraLux 300 (lifetime warranty) wider beam flashlight in a funky looking Chinese mount that actually works well with a little shade tree modification along with Eneloop rechargeable AA batts (2 required).
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/31PF7Iq%2BOPL.jpg http://i1165.photobucket.com/albums/...L059_4_ALL.jpg http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...L._SL1091_.jpg So March 2nd 2013 pricing is about $33 for the light, under $3 for the mount and $18 for the charger & 4 batteries. I've used this system for years (except I used the TerraLux 220 until the 300 came out) and it works well under 20mph on the street or smooth dirt trail. The light is bright, hold it in your hand & shine it in your eyes & you'll regret it for a few minutes. 1) Remove the pocket clip. Find the balance point of the flashlight & put that point in the center of the removable light mount and tighten the fastening knob. 2) Put the funky Chinese mount base on the bar, I use old inner tubes to make a bar spacer rather than what's supplied. 3) Slide the flashlight onto the mount, it will rotate left-right, use the handlebar mount fastener to get the up-down you want. Go look at it in the dark, freakin amazing isn't it? It seems more impressive aimed so the bottom of the beams dimmer halo is 3 feet in front in front of the tire/ground junction. 4) Now fix the wobbly nature of the mount by carefully sliding the light off the quick release mount so as not to disturb your L-R adjustment. Get some black electrical tape (45cents) and wrap 2 turns around the swivel portion of the base. Fold over & smooth & you don't even know it's there. You now have a very good light for under 20mph use that doesn't blind oncoming, a mount (that you can duplicate for $3/bike, and 2 batts + 2 spare AND a charger for $54.45. For $36.45 you get the light & one mount, so I'm way under budget. The mount is QR, just put a base on each bike & the light will go from any bike to another with a push on the front QR lever. Other cyclists have been amazed by the price when they see the thing in action. Is it as good as lights in the $150 & up range, absolutely not. Is it pretty freakin' impressive for $36.45? Absolutely. Also, TerraLux is in the USA and does honor the warranty, we had one of six go out (older 220 model) & they sent a switch free of charge! |
I have owned several of the lights mentioned here and others as well. I have gotten tired of DX lights from China that are amazingly bright but unpredictably stop working at inconvenient times too... I also do not like the big clunky dedicated lights that seem to be steal targets too. My newest favorite is this http://edcplus.com/black-xeno-e03-wi...e-t4-p-16.html which puts out 480 certified lumens on high and it uses either a single AA or a 14500 cell. Have to use the rechargeable 14500 to get the max output though,but still pretty bright with a regular AA. On medium it gets about 90 minutes of output before needing to have cell replaced or recharged. The light is basically tiny, just a little bigger than the battery and visually looks so small no one steals it because they are looking for something that looks like a real light. This is the equivalent of the "noisy cricket" gun that Will Smith gets in the Men in Black movie. Looks tiny but amazingly powerful when activated. This light is so great you will buy a second one to keep in your pocket or to take backpacling as it is so small. It is shock resistant and waterproof to 30 feet. It has really good quality o rings and nice square threads which feel so solid when you screw on the back too. All for $32 bucks (even less if you shop around).
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Originally Posted by ClaraWoods
(Post 15532010)
How much life time these headlights have? while for night ride if it goes down its really hard to survive with out it... if anyone here experienced it so let me know
If you use lights with replacable batteries, carry extra. I use some that use 18650 rechargables, and just carry one or two extra. Also, in well-lit areas, I just use a bright blinky, saving the flamethrowers for the descents and pitch-black zones. I'm thinking of getting another flamethrower here: http://www.fasttech.com/products/160...00-lumen-led-b The mtbr reviews say the headlamp is really nice quality, more of a spot than a flood (better for the road or helmet than handlebar-mount dirt), and maybe 1000 true lumen. The battery pack is of unknown quality, but can be replaced with a known high quality one. |
Originally Posted by 1FJEF
(Post 15334565)
I use the TerraLux 300 (lifetime warranty) wider beam flashlight in a funky looking Chinese mount that actually works well with a little shade tree modification along with Eneloop rechargeable AA batts (2 required).
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/31PF7Iq%2BOPL.jpg |
Originally Posted by daredevil
(Post 15222523)
your report please.
Originally Posted by Nanomite
(Post 15296656)
I ordered one of these 3 weeks ago and just got an email that they are out of stock.
They gave me the option to cancel the order so I did...... http://dx.com/p/singfire-sf-90-cree-...Ernest20130619 A bit brighter than my SSC P7 single 18650 generic flashlight and the 4 18650 pack lasts much longer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MLeZhBw3cjI |
Soon we'll be needing lights again for evening rides. Just from looking around though I'm not seeing anything new and different, just a lot of variations on the XML-T6. Is there anything new from Cree? Are they being put together in interesting packages?
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Originally Posted by zacster
(Post 15930257)
Soon we'll be needing lights again for evening rides. Just from looking around though I'm not seeing anything new and different, just a lot of variations on the XML-T6. Is there anything new from Cree? Are they being put together in interesting packages?
http://dx.com/p/cree-xm-l-t6-4800lm-...x-18650-199920 Another BF member lent me his P7 Magicshine and I have a P7 flashlight to do beamshot comparisons. If you or anybody else have a light they want to compare, please contact me. I'm very interested especially in comparing beams with a dyno powered light. http://www.bikeforums.net/showthread...s)-for-testing |
Originally Posted by zacster
(Post 15930257)
Soon we'll be needing lights again for evening rides. Just from looking around though I'm not seeing anything new and different, just a lot of variations on the XML-T6. Is there anything new from Cree? Are they being put together in interesting packages?
There's also an even newer generation of ultrabright LEDs hitting the stores, I think they are called the XM-L2 ? Yeah, here's a couple bargain ones: http://www.fasttech.com/products/160...-2000-lumen-le http://www.fasttech.com/products/160...00-lumen-led-b No affiliation with Fasttech, just got my light there... |
Had to Chuckle
Originally Posted by Heatherbikes
(Post 7937264)
Planet bike's new BLAZE 1 watt light is really good. It is quite cheap at MEC in Canada(you can order on line) compared to what the regular suggested retail price.
Looking through the reviews here for a cycle light to use, and went to tplanetbikes site to review their review, and found this "Blaze™ one-watt LED is twice as bright as half-watt LED".........you don't think. |
Originally Posted by cacher
(Post 15971654)
"Blaze™ one-watt LED is twice as bright as half-watt LED".........you don't think.
1) "brightness" is a very subjective thing. Doubling the number of lumens or lux doesn't make the light seem "twice as bright", and 2) just because the light uses twice as much power, that doesn't mean it emits twice as much light -- it also matter how efficient that particular emitter is at that particular power level, and there's a lot of variation there. It's entirely possible that the one watt light emits less light than the half watt light. Our four times as much. Really, "watts" is a really poor indicator of how good a LED light is -- if you must pick just one number to describe a complicated thing, lumens emitted would be the number to pick, but of course the beam pattern factors into how good it is too. (The beam pattern needs to be what you need it to be for your particular application.) |
Originally Posted by K1NJO
(Post 6969689)
Just looking for something cheap but effective. This isn't really for any nighttime riding on the regular, but more for those times when I'm coming from a friend's house at night, for example.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 Includes the 4,100mAh battery pack and charger. Under $30 delivered. I find that I rarely need the high setting, using medium or low most times. PM me if you need a convincing photo of the beam. I will shoot a pix tomorrow and post it... Note; If you want even more light, just put a second one on the other side of your stem. /K |
Originally Posted by ksisler
(Post 15975288)
Buy this headlamp and the replacement lense. You will not believe how good they are.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 Includes the 4,100mAh battery pack and charger. Under $30 delivered. I find that I rarely need the high setting, using medium or low most times. PM me if you need a convincing photo of the beam. I will shoot a pix tomorrow and post it... Note; If you want even more light, just put a second one on the other side of your stem. /K |
Originally Posted by ksisler
(Post 15975288)
Buy this headlamp and the replacement lense. You will not believe how good they are.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 That said, any time somebody asks me about bike lights, I now point them at this $23 light. I suggest this, two of the $5 DX PBSF clones, and one of those $1.55 DX flashlight bike mounts and a $2 9 LED 3xAAA flashlight (or whatever they have lying around) as a spare second light and $1 for a pack of AAA alkalines for that. $38 total spent, and they have redundancy and more light than 90% of the bikes on the road. I used to go the 18650 flashlight approach, but this light is just too good and to cheap to overlook. |
:(
Originally Posted by ksisler
(Post 15975288)
Buy this headlamp and the replacement lense. You will not believe how good they are.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 /K dont know if others have had this issue, just be warned, the bezel might be really really tight. |
rode tonight, switched back and forth with lens, actually like it better without the diffuser
boy is high beam bright |
I added another Bontrager Ion2 to the bars. One was nice, but two is extra nice.
http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r...psf9d980f9.jpg http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r...ps0634f017.jpg |
Originally Posted by cacher
(Post 15971654)
Looking through the reviews here for a cycle light to use, and went to tplanetbikes site to review their review, and found this
"Blaze™ one-watt LED is twice as bright as half-watt LED".........you don't think. |
the XML Based units are the best so far. you really can't beat the insane throw and brightness for $28 shipped (amazon ebay anywhere pretty much now) the new one has 3 modes with a lower "low" which is what I used most of the time and its more than enough usually when its really dark I throw it on hi "just because" why not.
WOW niuoka found it for $23 gonna order two of them at that price and get free shipping (christmas gifts) |
I just bought one of those "1800lm" lights from Ebay and compared it to a known 500 lm lamp, and it has an identical beam. No where near the output of my Di Notte. I found what appears to be the same item for $17.90, advertized as 600 lm.
http://dx.com/p/lzz-t6-cree-xm-l-t6-...x-18650-197235 |
Hey, has anyone figured out a reliable conversion factor for DX lumen and mAH over ratings? Like maybe multiply DX flashlight lumen ratings by .6 to get a more realistic measure of the real light output you can expect, and multiply DX mAH battery ratings by .7 or something like that to compare it to a normally rated battery.
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