Best light for seeing
runny
Posts: 13
Hello
I commute on a regular basis. A large part of my journey is down an A road which is unlit for a good few miles so I need a good light to see where I'm going. I borrowed my boyfriend's Moon light which was really good but that was part of a set and I only need a front light to see, I already have rear lights.
Any recommendations? My budget is about £70-80.
Thanks
I commute on a regular basis. A large part of my journey is down an A road which is unlit for a good few miles so I need a good light to see where I'm going. I borrowed my boyfriend's Moon light which was really good but that was part of a set and I only need a front light to see, I already have rear lights.
Any recommendations? My budget is about £70-80.
Thanks
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Comments
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Depends on how bright you really want, I commute on a dark country lane and use a 300lumen Lezyne Macro which is plenty enough, but on my MTB I use a circa 800lumen lamp, which to be honest is a bit anti social with oncoming traffic.Currently riding a Whyte T130C, X0 drivetrain, Magura Trail brakes converted to mixed wheel size (homebuilt wheels) with 140mm Fox 34 Rhythm and RP23 suspension. 12.2Kg.0
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C and B seen commuter kitAnd the people bowed and prayed, to the neon god they made.0
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People will tell you to go for cheap chinese clones with cree xp-g LEDs in them. I prefer the Magicshine 808e that I use. Stupidly bright and you can get a lens replacement for a couple of quid that throws the light out in a broad sweep across the road.
Even on low power it puts out enough light to see by. On full power it's basically a car on dip beam, you REALLY need to angle it correctly so you don't blind oncoming traffic.Chunky Cyclists need your love too! :-)
2009 Specialized Tricross Sport
2011 Trek Madone 4.5
2012 Felt F65X
Proud CX Pervert and quiet roadie. 12 mile commuter0 -
Philips SafeRide 80 @ £55.02 + delivery. Shaped beam like a car/motorcycle headlight, single unit, USB rechargeable, yet 4x AA batteries in case you can't recharge. Downside is that the run time on high is not that long (quoted 2.5hrs), whereas the battery packs on the MagicShine clones can give hours.
(Love the irony of tipping commuting lights on the longest day)Location: ciderspace0 -
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I'd recommend the Cateye Volt 300, it's fairly compact and very well built. The 'hyperconstant' mode is really good for around town as it is provides a steady beam whilst also flashing.
I, personally, didn't like the idea of a CREE type lamp where you can't guarantee the quality, and I didn't want a separate battery back.0 -
I have always used cheap cree torches (from dx.com or ebay) mounted to the handlebars, i have a few of them, have 2 on the bars and one as a spare but not had any issues with themwww.conjunctivitis.com - a site for sore eyes0
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Cheap cree ones off ebay have done well for me over the winter.
2 Flashlights like this (10.99 x 2)
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/UltraFire-1800LM-CREE-XM-L-T6-LED-502B-Flashlight-Torch-Remote-Pressure-Switch-/141315744276?pt=UK_SportsLeisure_Camping_LightsLanternsTorches&hash=item20e7132214
2 Batteries like this (£12.59)
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/2-GENUINE-PAN ... 2a330f9431
2 Handle Bar mounts (£1.24 x 2)
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Universal-Black-Bicycle-Bike-Handle-Mount-Holder-for-Flashlights-Torch-Gadgets-/290802609745?pt=UK_SportGoods_CyclAcces_RL&hash=item43b52fae51
Battery charger (£12.99)
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Nitecore-i2-CR123A-26650-18650-AA-AAA-Intellicharge-Universal-Battery-Charger-/271414815334?pt=UK_Sound_Vision_Battery_Chargers&hash=item3f31956a66
Total £50 ish
Having two independent lights gives you good control over how much light your actually putting out so you can be seen but are not blinding oncoming traffic. I think it looks better on the bike having it even and having one light either side, but that is more my OCD than anything important. 2 of these on full power is plenty to see where your going when there is no street lighting and it is pitch black, but switch them down or dip them if there is a car coming the opposite way.0 -
Thanks guys, all food for thought, it is difficult deciding without being able to try.0
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Hope Vision One, I am done fannying around with Chinese tat.+++++++++++++++++++++
we are the proud, the few, Descendents.
Panama - finally putting a nail in the economic theory of the trickle down effect.0 -
symo wrote:Hope Vision One, I am done fannying around with Chinese tat.
I wonder where they are made!?www.conjunctivitis.com - a site for sore eyes0 -
Hope is made in Barnoldswick from lumps of machined aluminium.
I have 2 Hope 1's for the commute and have loads of Chinese mega powered lights, but these are for off road. Way too bright for the road.0 -
The Hope internals are not made here. They don't make LEDs or circuit boards.
Quality of 'chinese' stuff varies. Check my link earlier for a good piece of kit. The low mode is about as bright as Vision one on full blast, but will give you about 10 hours run time. For a third the price.0 -
This may be worth looking at,some reviews.
http://www.torchythebatteryboy.com/p/bike-light-database.html
And some he sells
http://www.torchythebatteryboy.com/p/blog-page_20.htmlSpecialized-The clitoris of bikes.0