I got to thinking .. some of you must have a headlight ,, something in the
$20-$50 range.. what brand, model, type,, etc do ya like the best.
--
Tom Sherman - 42.435731,-83.985007
If my posts in general annoy or offend, please kill-file.
===
That was really funny .. the light cost more than the bicycle.
I'm thinking more like a $15.00 AA battery light?
I settled on the Cygo-Lite Night Rover with Water Bottle SLA battery
several years ago and have been very happy with it. (After crashing
while using a simple Cateye light because it did not help me see the
road, I bought this one.) My battery has just now worn out after five
years of use, but I have found a replacement online (searching SLA
6V3.2Ah batteries) for $18 (shipping included).
It cost more than you'd like ($75 - $80 - so not much more), but it is
well worth having the extra amount of light.
Why SLA battery? Because it can hold a charge for 3 months. If you don't
use it for a long while, then need it one night, the battery (unlike
NiMH's which trickle down in a week or two) will still have a charge.
Search Amazon - Cygo-Lite Night Rover Halogen Light NTRVR-WB Halogen Gel
Cel. There is a water bottle (WB) battery model and a frame mount
battery model.
--
*****************************
Chuck Anderson • Boulder, CO
http://www.CycleTourist.com
Nothing he's got he really needs
Twenty first century schizoid man.
***********************************
You get what you pay for. I have used the $20 - $50 range lights and
have moved to more expensive lights because they are much more reliable
and definitely brighter. Check DiNotte Lighting. Brightest tail light
ever....will blind anyone riding behind you!
I use the Cat-eye Octicube, with 4 AA batteries. I've had no luck
with a variety of rechargeables over the years in a Wisconsin winter,
which is when I mostly need a light. A set of batteries in the
Octicube is long lasting (100 hours or so) and casts a blueish light
that is easy to see,
It's not good to see by. That's no problem for me around Milwaukee,
because I know the roads.
It was a considerable problem on my recent trip to Newfoundland. The
ferry got into Argentia at 9:30 p.m. on a Saturday night and I had to
bike 5 miles to Placentia, where I had a motel reservation - no street
lights most of the way, hilly, curvy and not a real smooth road. I
crawled along, twice asking if I was "on-route", but did eventually
get there.
==
Thanks,, Ron,, I will look that light up..
Permormance has some good prices.
I am not really that interested in rechargeale lights. I just want to stick
to the
basic .. I am thinking,, maybe take two lights such as the Opticube and tie
together. Little velcro?
I hear ya on the NewFoundland ride. I once got off a ferry and when I went
about 200 feet it was so dark I could not see my handlebars.
I ended up stopping, going into the woods to my right, kinda putting my tent
together,, and sleeping on the ground for the night. Better than getting
run
down. When I awoke in the am,,, it was quite a site..
=v= I have this, but the AA batteries I use are rechargeable.
I find it frustrating that after all these years nobody has
worked out a bike light with off-the-shelf rechargeables
(AA or C batteries) that you could just plug in. They either
have some proprietary battery or a bizarre proporietary plug
to thwart this.
=v= For seriously dark rides, Light & Motion makes a very
bright light with a large rechargeable batter that fits in
the bike's water bottle cage. Very durable and waterproof --
Light & Motion makes lights for underwater use, too.
<_Jym_>
Dangit, Sherman. You had me thinking that such a wonderful light
could be had for $50 or so. I was planning Christmas gifts. Then at
the bottom of the page I see that this light is almost $1000.
--
Mike Kruger
"What information consumes is rather obvious: it consumes the
attention
of its recipients. Hence a wealth of information creates a poverty
of
attention, and a need to allocate that attention efficiently among
the
overabundance of information sources that might consume it." -
Herbert
A. Simon
Yeah, but imagine how much fun you could have ripping down the North
Branch Trail with that thing.
--
Kristian Zoerhoff
kristian...@gmail.com
The $3 for the North American outlet adapter is the killer.
--
Tom Sherman - 42.435731,-83.985007
If you are not a part of the solution, you are a part of the precipitate.
That's exactly what I was thinking. Even with normal lights, it's
easy to blind a jogger or walker who's not lit up at all. I thought
the road mode would help with that.
I don't know. I 'only' have the Ixon IQ SPeed, and I've accidentally
blinded peds at the Huntley outlets (the hand raised to the eyes was
a pretty good hint to drop to 'low' mode). I fear the Big Bang,
therefore, would be more akin to this:
<http://www.yehudamoon.com/index.php?date=2008-09-10>
--
Kristian Zoerhoff
kristian...@gmail.com