Many, perhaps even most, randonneurs are using hub generators these
days. The current hot setup - state of the art - is the Schmidt SON20,
now known as SONDelux, generator hub and the Schmidt Edelux light.
I think a lot of people use generator type lights. You should check
out this page:
http://www.peterwhitecycles.com/headlights.asp
and
http://www.longleafbicycles.com/products/dynohubs-and-lighting/
-sv
I have the wald mounted on the nitto mini front rack with the cyo light.
It mounts off the reflector/light mount on the front of the nitto rack.
-sv
http://www.flickr.com/photos/37542512@N04/4815789426/in/set-72157624427413755/
There's also a picture of the taillight, which is VERY bright (though tiny). I also use a blinking battery taillight to maximize attention, but the Supernova taillight by itself would certainly be more than adequate.
It's really a pleasure never to have to worry about light batteries and chargers on this bike. On my other bikes, I use Exposure MaxxD rechargeable LED lights. They are if anything even brighter than the Supernova, but they have to be charged, and they're significantly more expensive than the Supernova (or, more accurately, about the same as the hub PLUS the Supernova). I prefer the SON/Supernova setup.
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Patrick Moore
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Long leaf cycles has the sanyo built into a velocity twin hollow for $112
The cyo for $104
That's $216 + shipping.
You can also get the
http://www.longleafbicycles.com/products/dynohubs-and-lighting/dynamo-headlights/busch-muller-lyt/
lyt plus which supposedly has good output for the price - at $47
you can get a whole kit for $159 + shipping
sounds like a deal.
-sv
A dynohub is very convenient; my Schmidt SON (which I bought for PBP
in 2003) is very useful- it's always there, just flip a switch. I
have not made the jump to an LED lamp yet. However, the bike I ride
most at night- my All-Rounder- has an old Sanyo Dynapower bottom
bracket generator. Because of the shape of the chainstays, it's not
mountable in the normal location and I fabricated a mount on my Nitto
mini rack to drive it off the front wheel. I prefer a BB generator
to a sidewall generator because they are easier to align and roll on
the part of the tire intended to be rolled upon; there are several of
these on the market. The downside is they are more susceptible to
mud and oil than a sidewall generator
An add-on generator like this can work very well and cost less than a
dynohub and building up a wheel with it. In terms of elegance,
however, I think the hub option is superior. It is also not going to
slip when riding in the rain, won't get fouled by oil or mud on the
road, etc. I just haven't gotten around to buying a SON 20 yet to
build up for the All-Rounder.
> Looking for light recommendations for use in my ride in the early
> morning hours, about a 10 mile ride on dark rural roads. I am looking
> for suggestions by Riv owners for lights that work with their setups.
> I am a longtime owner/user of the NightRider "classic", which was ok,
> although I never liked the gunky coax-like cabling, but the 3 ton
> battery has finally given out and I'm ready for something new,
> hopefully lighter in weight, and brighter, if possible...LED's?. Does
> anyone still use generator type lights?
If the last light you had was the NR Classic, you will be pleasantly
surprised by the changes in battery weight if you go that way.
In addition to the most appropriate suggestion, which was to read through
the info on Peter White's site, you may find that you don't actually need a
lot of light for rural use, depending upon how much auto traffic you have.
The current crop of low wattage, high intensity LED's give pretty good
light - enough so that your eyes can adapt fairly quickly IF you have decent
night vision and aren't receiving a retina-scorching set of auto headlights
in your eyes every minute or so. A short-brimmed hat will help a bit
against that.
I run the USB-rechargeable (and traditionally rechargeable) NR mini whatever
with a bright but narrow beam which goes on/off quickly (shopping) to see
plus a widely dispersed AA battery LED to be seen from the sides. LED
Headlamp to shine at side entering vehicles. But, I'm on a fairly urban
route. If I am on the less trafficked route home, I see how little light I
can get away with.
I do covet the SON20/Edelux setup though....
- J
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> I totally forgot that I have an NOS Sanyo Dynapower that I found at a
> garage sale in my parts box. Now that I have bikes with kickstand
> plates, I wonder if it will fit? That would be pretty slick.
You might have to do a little work as it is designed to nestle
between the chainstays. But these are smooth and easy rolling
generators, I don't even notice that mine is engaged except for the
light output.
> I've been using the Dinotte 200 AA model which uses 4 NiMh
> rechargables. It is a bright 200 lumen light and has a very clean
> beam. The only drawback is the 2 hour run time at full power. You can
> carry an extra set of battries for longer night rides.
Ride-buddy Carlos had a nice hack for the Dinotte 200 -
http://bike.duque.net/dinotte-5w-hack.htm
- J
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"She edged in to get a better look at the bike, how it was made, the
intricacy of its brakes and shifters pulling her straight in. Beauty."
-- William Gibson, "Virtual Light"
Well, you still might be able to get it to mount readily enough
through one of the holes on the kickstand plate. There's a 6 mm bolt
for mounting the generator that would be oriented properly for this,
assuming the hole is in the right place (you might have to drill or
elongate an existing hole.
Since I never use a kickstand, I think the presence of a kickstand
plate is a detriment no matter what. Although some of that is just
my elderly years and the association of those plates with crappy
department store bikes from the 1970s. It's not a fair comparison,
of course, given the fine quality of Riv products but I can't quite
get over it.
On Wed, Oct 6, 2010 at 7:33 PM, charlie <charle...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> I use the inexpensive Planet bike 1 watt light and have used two of
> them mounted on my bar. These seem to have enough brightness for me to
> see fine up to about 18 mph. I'd love a Son 28 built on a A719 rim to
> match my back wheel but this combo with the lights is over $500. I can
> buy two 2 watt Plant bike lights for around $100 and get some AA
> rechargeable batteries and be fine I think. My 1 watt PB light is as
> bright as my Fenex L2d flashlight in the standard high power mode (107
> lumens) so two 2 watt lights ought to be plenty. The only problem I
> can see is that these lights are not the best for oncoming traffic
> like the generator lamps are and some of the battery powered German
> made lamps.
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Patrick Moore
Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW at resumesp...@gmail.com
And you never ever have to remember to charge it, or keep track of when
it's time to recharge. I used to get 3 trips on a recharge of the
NiteRider battery, which over time became 2 1/2 trips - hence the
resonance with your comment about "rationing".
The worst part of my commute was 1 1/2 miles from the end, where the
bike trail goes under the bridges on the GW Parkway, the railroad line
and Rt 1. There are lights, but there were several years when they
weren't working, and at night under those bridges with rip-rap on one
side of a narrow bike path and the guard rail and the Four Mile Run on
the other side, it's dark as the inside of your pocket and a certain
crash if you misjudge. I dreaded having the light go dim down there,
and it happened more than once.
I love generator lights.
I have one on the tandem and one on the atlantis. I've debated getting
another for the rom but I almost always ride the atlantis if i'm
riding at night.
The remark that made me the happiest about my headlight was when I was
riding up behind some folks walking who turned when I was passing them
and said "wow, I thought you were some sort of motorcycle from that
light"
-sv
For those of you that are replying - do any of you use a Wald front
basket with your light? If so - how is it mounted? I'd love to have
a light mounted in front of the basket, preferably above/on the fender
- but I never could figure out a way to make it work with the
NiteRider.
> Looking for light recommendations for use in my ride in the early
> morning hours, about a 10 mile ride on dark rural roads. I am looking
> for suggestions by Riv owners for lights that work with their setups.
> I am a longtime owner/user of the NightRider "classic", which was ok,
> although I never liked the gunky coax-like cabling, but the 3 ton
> battery has finally given out and I'm ready for something new,
> hopefully lighter in weight, and brighter, if possible...LED's?. Does
> anyone still use generator type lights?
>
> Since this is not really RBW related, please email your suggestions
> offline!
>
> Cheers
I'd use the German LED lights, though -- Cyo for rationality, Edeluxe
for pretty.
Hub via LBS: $100. Cyo: I think it's $100, but I got mine cheap
onlist. Wheel build $50 and spokes no more than $50 if you go fancy.
Total before tax or shipping: $200. I get the builder to also take
apart and lube and adjust the bearings, having heard that Shimano
dynohubs fail quickly if you don't do this -- BQ somewhere.
So --- just $60. Hell, that's only 10 boutique beers .... or five
fifths of cheap bourbon.
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Patrick Moore
Albuquerque, NM
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> Yea, I ran the numbers tonight and with high quality Sanyo batteries,
> a quality charger plus two 2 Watt lights it ended up around $140
> so......this means I would only need $350 more for what I really want.
> I just can't settle for less, unless its way less. I just don't want
> to spend money twice. I do this often and regret it later. I
> compromise and find out later I should have purchased what I wanted. I
> nearly always end up doing so later wasting the initial money I spent
> in the first place. I can see myself using a generator hub of quality
> and riding more because I have one. Maybe some of you can explain the
> real world realizationsyou had after getting a Son hub or......did any
> of you find out that you really didn't need such a fancy setup?
When you're riding with a hub generator, it doesn't seem fancy. It
just makes sense- flip a switch and you've got lights. Just like in
your car. BTW, look at some of the Shimano hub generator options-
very good hubs, half the cost of the SON and about 98% of the
performance. Drag is just slightly- probably unnoticeably- higher.
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On my tandem the light comes on bright enough for me to see by when
i'm walking the bike.
I've lifted up the front wheel and spun it with my hand and used the
light as a flash light.
so... almost no speed.
-sv
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--Eric
Sent from my iPad
I hesitate to say this but there is another reason to go with the dyno/led:
Batteries, even rechargeable ones, have a VERY limited lifespan before
you toss them or recycle them (which still ends up with some nasty
waste being housed)
So if only from a controlling waste standpoint the dyno/led combo are
a better idea.
-sv
-----Original Message-----
From: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com [mailto:rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Seth Vidal
Sent: Thursday, October 07, 2010 11:19 AM
To: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Lights
-sv
--
B/c some folks see it as environmental proseltyzing and I don't want
to be in that argument.
that's all.
-sv
> Tim,
> What are the lights that you're using with your Sanyo Dynapower?
Jim, I am using a Busch & Mueller Lumotec with 3W halogen bulb. This
is the unswitched version because there is no need for a switch using
a tire-driven generator that's not turning when not in use; with a
hub dynamo, a switch is good. The one I use does not have a
"standlight" that stays on for a while when you stop; that's the
Lumotec Plus. I have a switched Lumotec Oval Plus for my bike with
the Schmidt dynohub.
http://www.peterwhitecycles.com/schmidt-headlights.asp#unswlumotec
I got mine from list member Jim Thill's shop, Hiawatha Cyclery.
While I find that this produces plenty of light for long rides in the
dark (dusk to dawn), I do plan to upgrade to an eDelux LED lamp. The
reliability of the LED lamp is appealing, and they are apparently
much brighter than the halogen bulbs.
Another option, if you're handy with a soldering iron, is to build
your own LED light. There's a lot of information on the Web about
this and it could be a fun project.
> Hi all:
>
> I recently purchased a "Magic Shine" bicycle light from Deal Extreme.
> It is a Lithium ion battery operated LED light. It was 70.00 shipped
> and is as bright as my Supernova E3. The charge time is about 3 hours
> on the brightest setting. The only negative was that Deal Extreme is
> based in Hong Kong, and it took 1 month to receive the light. There
> is a US-based firm, namely, Geomangear that sells this light as well.
> You can read the reviews about the light by Googling Magic Shine
> Bicycle Light.
>
> If you are attentive to recharging battery operated lights, and need
> light for only 1 to 2 hours, I am not sure how you could go wrong with
> this light. On one review I read, the light was compared to a light
> made by Lupine that was in excess of $400, and the reviewer only
> slightly favored the Lupine light.
One issue for me- having bagmatching tendencies- is the aesthetics of
the installation. Lights with external battery packs always look
kludgy to me. With a generator system, usually (but not always) the
installation is very tidy.
Geez. What have I become?????
> Another option, if you're handy with a soldering iron, is to build
> your own LED light. There's a lot of information on the Web about
> this and it could be a fun project.
I would point you to ride buddy and Master Of The Useful Hack JimG - he's
built some pretty impressive lights, and has a load of references on his
site/blog.
If you have an interest in homebrewing, what you'll find is the "good" LED's
you can buy separately are about a year or two ahead of most commercial
products. The technology has really been moving fast on those, and with
product cycles inherent in the bike biz, the actual LED's they spec end up
being not as bright/efficient/advanced.
For more on that, I'll point you his way -
http://yojimg.net/bike/equipment/lights/led_lights.php
- J
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