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Lights for night riding



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 2nd 08, 09:59 AM posted to rec.sport.unicycling
deadlydes
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Default Lights for night riding


I know a few people in the UK who make their own lights for night
riding.

Can you give me a few starting points on how to make them?
I have started to look at various websites but there is a lot of
varying info.

Cheers
Des


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  #2  
Old October 2nd 08, 10:48 AM posted to rec.sport.unicycling
joemarshall
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Default Lights for night riding


Hi Des,

I've built them, using kits and parts from http://www.cutter.com.au

Basically, you need a cree LED or Seoul z-power LED, a lens or
reflector to make it shine in the right direction, some kind of constant
current source (something that takes power from a battery at one end,
and gives out a constant current at the other end), and a battery.

I've got a quite neat helmet one, which is made from the cutter 500ma
cree kit - runs off 2 AA batteries, weighs about 100g including
batteries, and has a built in rear light. I commuted using it for about
9 months last year.

One thing worth thinking about is cheap torches - dealextreme.com sell
lots of LED torches - and they are similarly bright to my one, just
strap them on your helmet (or bars on a bike) and you're ready to go.
There is an Ultrafire 606a Q5 which is the one many people use, runs off
2 AAs. With the torches, you don't end up with quite so nice a package,
but it saves bothering with soldering, and is often cheaper than buying
the parts.

There are also some torches using the Seoul P7 LED, which is very very
bright (think almost as bright as an HID light), as it is basically 4 of
the normal power LEDs all stuck into the space of a single LED. It runs
through batteries quite quick though - most of the torches use lithium
ion batteries, and run for about an hour on the high setting. From
Dealextreme, these torches cost about £20 - £30

Joe


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  #3  
Old October 2nd 08, 09:19 PM posted to rec.sport.unicycling
sarah.miller
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Default Lights for night riding


DEs- do you want a 2nd hand set cheap? not quite home made, but home
modified.
Tis a white light, halogen bulb not LED, currently runs on a LA
rechargeable battery with long enough cable to mount battery under
saddle and light on helmet.
Shout before BUC if your going to be there and I can bring it along.
Sarah


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  #4  
Old October 2nd 08, 09:57 PM posted to rec.sport.unicycling
phil
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Default Lights for night riding


Apparently Tesco are selling a 2xAA powered Cree LED light for a tenner
that's supposed to be quite good; you can rig up a helmet mount with an
old inner tube or velcro or something and bob's yer uncle...

I'm looking for one but our local tesco had the two large sizes but not
this little one!


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  #5  
Old October 2nd 08, 10:24 PM posted to rec.sport.unicycling
nickjb
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Default Lights for night riding


The Tesco one is really good. I've used it for a couple of unplanned
night rides. Its quite a narrow beam but it is bright and only a
tenner.


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  #6  
Old October 3rd 08, 03:06 PM posted to rec.sport.unicycling
keg
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Default Lights for night riding


nickjb;1106452 wrote:
The Tesco one is really good. I've used it for a couple of unplanned
night rides. Its quite a narrow beam but it is bright and only a
tenner.




I've bought one of these today. Although it came with batteries I
decided to fit rechargables, except the two types I tried would not fit
in the torch Even the supplied batteries were a tight squeeze,
dropping out slowly due to the near air tight seal.

Will see what the beam is like tonight at BUC.


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  #7  
Old October 3rd 08, 03:33 PM posted to rec.sport.unicycling
joemarshall
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Default Lights for night riding


keg;1106778 wrote:
I've bought one of these today. Although it came with batteries I
decided to fit rechargables, except the two types I tried would not fit
in the torch Even the supplied batteries were a tight squeeze,
dropping out slowly due to the near air tight seal.




I've had that - there are two fixes - either take the cover off the
batteries, or just attack the torch a little with a circular file.

On one of my torches, the rechargeables can just about be pushed in,
which means to take them out you need to unscrew the torch head and use
a pen to push them out. Which is easy enough to do.

It's better to have a tight fit than a rattly battery, because the
tight fit is pretty easy to fix.

Joe


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  #8  
Old October 4th 08, 03:33 AM posted to rec.sport.unicycling
JosephCampbell
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Default Lights for night riding


put some rock crawling night lights for a 4X4 on your car. I am
thinking of doing this. but you can only ride where your car goes
though. I am from usa and this makes sense. but I dont know about the
uk.
-JOE


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  #9  
Old October 4th 08, 09:42 AM posted to rec.sport.unicycling
joemarshall
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Default Lights for night riding


Only in the USA!


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