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bike lights
didds wrote:
looking for some advice... I have available the cheapy Lidl type lights which are OK for a bit of commuting on my old sit up and beg etc but they aren;t really suitable for my road bike, and the fittings don;t fit anyway. I've googled about and am rather confused now... LED sets seem to cost anything between £15 and £500 pounds but I can;lt obviously discern the differences online. I don't intend to do much night riding anyway, its more a case of riding back at twilight and BEING seen and avoiding potholes :-) The more expensive ones are for riding at night on unlit roads. There are cheaper alternatives to do the same job with halogen lights (from about £35), though they need bigger batteries. You might want to invest in some sort of powerful front light if you are cycling on country lanes. It doesn't take long for twilight to turn to no-light. Otherwise: The fairly cheap Smart Polaris 5 LED front light is mainly for being seen, but is also just bright enough to help you see potholes. Recommended rear: Cateye LD600 or LD610. ~PB |
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#2
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bike lights
looking for some advice...
I have available the cheapy Lidl type lights which are OK for a bit of commuting on my old sit up and beg etc but they aren;t really suitable for my road bike, and the fittings don;t fit anyway. I've googled about and am rather confused now... LED sets seem to cost anything between £15 and £500 pounds but I can;lt obviously discern the differences online. I don't intend to do much night riding anyway, its more a case of riding back at twilight and BEING seen and avoiding potholes :-) Any suggestions? cheers didds |
#3
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bike lights
didds wrote:
I don't intend to do much night riding anyway, its more a case of riding back at twilight and BEING seen and avoiding potholes :-) Any suggestions? Light clip-on LEDs from someone like Cateye. If you only have them as emergency lights put in non-rechargeable batteries and go for light weight rather than serious lighting power. For slightly more regular use up the weight and power and think seriously about using rechargeables. Probably the case that a dedicated rechargeable cell and associated lamp is over the top for this job, costing more than you need to spend. For the back, a seatpost mounting LED flasher should be fine. Pete. -- Peter Clinch Medical Physics IT Officer Tel 44 1382 660111 ext. 33637 Univ. of Dundee, Ninewells Hospital Fax 44 1382 640177 Dundee DD1 9SY Scotland UK net http://www.dundee.ac.uk/~pjclinch/ |
#4
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bike lights
On 13 May, 10:27, Peter Clinch wrote:
didds wrote: I don't intend to do much night riding anyway, its more a case of riding back at twilight and BEING seen and avoiding potholes :-) There must be hundreds if not thousands of different bike lights to choose from. If it is being seen you want then most of the cheapy LED flashing lights will do the job as well as any other. Make sure the front light has white LEDs not green or amber. Two cheap lights (front and rear) are more visible than one expensive one and if one breaks, gets nicked or has been accidentally switched on all day in your bag you've still got one working. Maybe hedge your bets with one on your clothing and one attached to the bike, one steady and one blinking. Make life simple by having them all take the same type of battery. Wilkinson's sell some bright LED lights for only a few quid that have survived use by my kids for a couple of winters now. For more money Cateye have the advantage of lots of different kinds of attachments being readily available. |
#5
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bike lights
On Tue, 13 May 2008 02:02:17 -0700, didds wrote:
looking for some advice... I have available the cheapy Lidl type lights which are OK for a bit of commuting on my old sit up and beg etc but they aren;t really suitable for my road bike, and the fittings don;t fit anyway. I've googled about and am rather confused now... LED sets seem to cost anything between £15 and £500 pounds but I can;lt obviously discern the differences online. I don't intend to do much night riding anyway, its more a case of riding back at twilight and BEING seen and avoiding potholes :-) Any suggestions? These are really neat, not so sure about avoiding potholes though :-) http://www.chainreactioncycles.com/M...x?ModelID=9051 |
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