Re: [RUSA] Digest for randonneurs-usa@googlegroups.com - 9 updates in 2 topics

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Peg Miller

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Nov 20, 2025, 12:18:59 AM (yesterday) Nov 20
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Hi,
My setup was very similar to Ramsey's when I rode the divide (section 5 & 6) this past August.  The Fenix HM65R was great.  I removed it off the headband and attached it to my helmet and then in camp I could easily remove it and place it back on the headband.  I could easily pop in a new battery and carried an Anker battery bank.  In northern New Mexico I didn't see an outlet for 2 days, but no issues.  My tail lights were a rechargeable Cygolight and PlanetBike which takes two AAA batteries.  I've used dyno hubs but I prefer the battery/rechargeable options.

ps I prefer the mounts for the Nite Riders as you can easily turn the mount for an aerobar, but for a long haul the Fenix.  My computer was a Garmin solar and only needed a little charging once.

Thanks
Peg Miller


On Wednesday, November 19, 2025 at 06:14:50 AM PST, randonn...@googlegroups.com <randonn...@googlegroups.com> wrote:


Kitty Goursolle <kgour...@gmail.com>: Nov 18 12:17PM -0800

Does anybody use this light? It's on sale, so I risked my $64 (inc
shipping). It claims 30 hours of run time (on low beam). I may yet make the
switch from all generator lighting to all rechargable lighting if this is
good enough.
https://magicshine.com/products/allty-1500s-bicycle-light
 
My current set up is a Son 20 hub paired with a Sinewave beacon headlight
and Supernova taillight. which has been good for me ever since 2009. My
backup lights-- a Niterider 1000 headlight, and a Serfas tailight.
 
The Beacon is really nice for a generator light. No faffing at controls to
recharge. But it has no high/low beam option. On slow climbs, there's
very little light output. On fast nighttime downhills, I add in the high
beam from my Niterider 1000, for the few minutes needed. I like the USB
port on the Beacon too, I use it in line to keep the gps charged.
I'm looking forward to hearing back about this.
Cheers,
Kitty
Ramsey Hanna <rambora...@gmail.com>: Nov 18 03:24PM -0500

Hi!
I have used this particular headlamp before and think it is a great light
depending on the use case.
It was reliable and the runtime is as advertised. I still use it sometimes
though not so much anymore.
My opinion is that the best lights for ultra are the ones that have
rechargeable batteries you can just pop in and out, so you just carry a few
extras and swap them in. This allows me to put my lights on pretty much
full blast the whole time I’m riding as long as I know I have spares. I use
a fenix HM65R on my helmet and two fenix bc21r lights on my handlebars
(these use the same style batteries), and they haven’t let me down yet (and
have been through a lot!)
 
Ramsey
 
On Tue, Nov 18, 2025 at 3:17 PM Kitty Goursolle <kgour...@gmail.com>
wrote:
 
Mike Sturgill <mikest...@cox.net>: Nov 18 01:58PM -0700

I have a Magicshine EVO 1700 ($72 at Amazon) and love it. It has a remote switch, mounts on a GoPro mount under your GPS and a cutoff beam.
 
Here are the runtime number that I found online.
 
Low beam modes:
 
200 lumens: 11 hours
 
400 lumens: 5.5 hours
 
800 lumens: 3 hours
 
High beam modes:
 
1700 lumens: 2 hours
 
Flash modes:
 
Day flash: 5 hours
 
Night flash: 3.5 hours
 
I've had mine for well over a year so I don't remember exactly what my run times measured. I tested all 3 Low Beam modes, 3 times each, and every one of them was slightly longer than the spec. I seem to recall the 200 lumen mode lasted about 13 hours, 400 lumens - 6 hours.
 
https://www.amazon.com/Magicshine-EVO-1700-Rechargeable-Black/dp/B0CFHCHB3L
 
-Mike
 
On 11/18/2025 1:17 PM, Kitty Goursolle wrote:
 
Does anybody use this light? It's on sale, so I risked my $64 (inc shipping). It claims 30 hours of run time (on low beam). I may yet make the switch from all generator lighting to all rechargable lighting if this is good enough.
 
https://magicshine.com/products/allty-1500s-bicycle-light
 
My current set up is a Son 20 hub paired with a Sinewave beacon headlight and Supernova taillight. which has been good for me ever since 2009. My backup lights-- a Niterider 1000 headlight, and a Serfas tailight.
 
The Beacon is really nice for a generator light. No faffing at controls to recharge. But it has no high/low beam option. On slow climbs, there's very little light output. On fast nighttime downhills, I add in the high beam from my Niterider 1000, for the few minutes needed. I like the USB port on the Beacon too, I use it in line to keep the gps charged.
 
I'm looking forward to hearing back about this.
 
Cheers,
 
Kitty
 
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Brook Henderson <bro...@gmail.com>: Nov 18 03:55PM -0800

I did parts of an 8k600k with Mike a month or so ago. His Magicshine
headlight was indeed noticeably bright.
 
That said, I'm in Ramsey's camp and prefer lights with replaceable
batteries to proprietary battery packs and USB recharging. Unfortunately,
there aren't many good options. I have two Fenix BC30v2 lights. Great
lights, but the mounts are poor. Fenix sells sturdy replacement mounts, but
they're overly bulky, IMO. Ramsey's BC21R are discontinued.
 
Lately I've been using a custom setup that combines a Lezyne
ebike gopro-mount headlamp with a weatherproof battery pack that can be
opened and swapped with fresh batteries that I carry and/or add to
dropbags. (And I have an old USB headlamp mounted on the bars as a
backup/extra.) This system worked well this year on some overnight training
rides, three 600k, and the upended LEL. I need to add a switch to the
connector so that it's easier to turn on and off, though.
 
I completely understand why certain folks love dynamo setups. However, the
kinds of events with long self supported remote sections that would require
a dynamo aren't what appeals to me. [Well, maybe the Sverigetempot in
2028...? IDK.]
 
This is one example of what I love about randonneuring: there's so many
ways to do it -- different bikes, different kits, different strategies,
etc. -- and not one single "right" or required method. (And, the folks
doing it are also great people.)
 
-Brook
 
Rob Hawks <rob....@gmail.com>: Nov 18 04:13PM -0800

I have two of the Magicshine 1500s. On last spring's 600km worker's ride, I
took both on the ride with me plus an external battery. I know the whole
unit will weigh more than just the battery pack but can it be that much
more to where it is a deal breaker? Maybe someone here has an opinion. The
1500 can be recharged while using the light
 
I'd prefer a dynamo hub to a battery powered light any day, but to build a
second wheel that would match the wheelset would be way, way more than the
price of a second battery powered light.
 
The things I don't like about the Magicshine model I have are:
 
the light gets warm to hot when running the light and when recharging
the lens on this model is oriented to the light mounting on top but the
outfront mounts I have use the top position for the head unit (which
obviously can't go on the bottom). This bottom mounting position means you
can't see the warning setting when the light is running low on charge.
the mounting unit that comes with the light won't work on aero bars
 
The 1700 Mike has linked sounds interesting to me (it addresses at least
one of the downsides I've listed above), so I'll be checking that out.
 
rob
 
 
 
Cheng-Hong Li <chengh...@gmail.com>: Nov 19 08:36AM -0500

There are some battery lights that can do pass-through charging (you can
charge the light with a power bank while the light is on.) The light's
running time is only limited by the capacity of the power banks you carry
and the light's own internal battery combined.
 
B&M also has a few. I have used their Ixon Space. It has the best light
pattern <https://youtu.be/Rc_1XqZCUTk?si=8OzbGodtf4eLoyHN> among battery
and dynamo lights. But unfortunately most of them will die after a few rain
showers, mine included.
 
Lezyn has a line of StVZO compliant lights that also support pass-through
charging. The brightest model is this
<https://ride.lezyne.com/collections/stvzo-led-front-bike-lights/products/deca-stvzo-1200-front-bike-light>.
The light pattern is good enough, though not as good as Ixon Space.
 
 
On Tue, Nov 18, 2025 at 3:24 PM Ramsey Hanna <rambora...@gmail.com>
wrote:
 
Julien <julie...@hotmail.com>: Nov 19 06:07AM -0800

Yes pass-through charging is a very nice feature for us. I've also used the
B&M Ixon Space. The beam pattern is great. I also like the ability to
switch up and down the intensity (higher output when leading, lower when
drafting). The B&M mount is clunky though (how did they come up with such a
design...), I also wish it was usb-c, maybe they'll make a new version one
day.
Another StVZO model I use is the detour
<https://www.outboundlighting.com/products/detour> from Outbound Lightning,
also pass-through enabled. They have a useful adapter
<https://www.outboundlighting.com/collections/mounts/products/quick-release-action-camera-mount> so
it can conveniently be mounted under a garmin. While I don't think the
light pattern is as good as B&M, the fact that it's different makes for a
very nice combination when paired with the B&M even at low intensity (it
fills the dark space between short and long distance that B&M optics
typically have). I also use the detour as the backup light on the dynamo
bike on long rando.
 
Cheng, that Lezyn model
<https://ride.lezyne.com/collections/stvzo-led-front-bike-lights/products/deca-stvzo-1200-front-bike-light> you
reference doesn't mention pass-through. How do you know that it is? I'd be
tempted to add another model to the collection, but pass-through is a hard
requirement for me now :) If only there were more choices...
 
Thank You,
Julien
 
On Wednesday, November 19, 2025 at 5:36:37 AM UTC-8 Cheng-Hong Li wrote:
 
Dave Thompson <thomp...@gmail.com>: Nov 19 09:11AM -0500

I use cygolite and fenix lights that both do pass through.
 
Dave
 
From my iwdt
 
 
Charlie Martin <charlie....@gmail.com>: Nov 18 05:35PM -0800

Hi folks,
 
Just a heads up that rusa.org will be offline (intentionally this time!)
for maintenance for a handful of hours starting tomorrow, Wednesday
November 19, at 9pm Pacific. Please take care of any urgent permanents
registrations or other administrative tasks ahead of that. If you notice
anything freshly broken once the site is back online, please report it to
webm...@rusa.org directly.
 
There will likely be 1-2 more scheduled downtimes before the end of the
year.
 
Thanks,
Charlie (on behalf of the web team)
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