You're doing quite well, but still a bit of catching up. This is my commuter bike from 2012. That's 12 years ago!Didn't @soundwave have a Magicshine? I like the lens and even spread of light, I dislike the remote, price, app, and the non-replaceable battery... which looks too small to provide the brightness as despicted for 2 hours? It's pretty easy with manual control of a camera and editing, to make lights seem brighter than they are, plus human eyeballs and brains perceive differently to cameras. Does his body language suggest he didn't pay for that light? Reviewers with big followings are offered cash plus freebies for reviews.
After three years of fiddles I'm presently quite happy with my light ensamble, they resolve my problems and annoyances as a cyclist - potholes are clearly visible at night, my lights make me visible day and night, drivers now see me at junctions, vehicles don't pass close. Besides, I'm cheesed off about having to charge so much stuff before going out for a ride! 4 red flashers, red GPS tracker light, GoPro 7 Hero Black with extra batteries, a steady Planet X head/helmet light made red, 2 Aldi spoke lights, phone, power bank etc. etc.. but at least I don't have to worry about these two cheap "1800LM" and one "2400LM" on my handlebar, plus another "1800LM" made red flashing on the rear pannier rack, because they're soldered to my ebike battery.
Drivers used to flash their headlights at me when I only had one "1800LM" pointed horizontally, and driver friends said it was "blinding", but my three angled down aren't. These all have a "Dim" mode, which I never need to use. The rear "1800LM" made red is also angled down - despite that, I hope it distracts drivers from texting... and using social media, which makes them antisocial.
View attachment 56094
View attachment 56096
View attachment 56097
View attachment 56099
View attachment 56100
These lights are about £13 a pop, cheap to replace. I've repositioned the headlight on the right since this video, for a brighter more even spread. During the day, two are on constant mode and one flashing. The first part of the vid is on auto and brightened in post to show potholes, but I usually go manual and underexpose for night, to better record number plates.
That's before I was born!2012
I bet that lot lit the scene really well. Did you start with the smallest light, then the one slightly larger etc. etc. directly proportional to your rising fury at drivers, pedestrians, and the blasted from space by Project Thor state of our roads? Even if I needed more light, and much as I'd like to, I don't think it'd be wise to install any more on my bike... their power consumption is no longer insignificant - I use them to run down my battery for storage, and besides, my bike needs to retain it's folding capability. I'll simply have to wait for brighter LEDs of the same size to become more efficient.You're doing quite well, but still a bit of catching up. This is my commuter bike from 2012. That's 12 years ago!
View attachment 56141
Or you could just buy a single quality light and not look like you're compensating for something elseYou're doing quite well, but still a bit of catching up. This is my commuter bike from 2012. That's 12 years ago!
View attachment 56141
Some of my bike rides are 6 hours or so in darkest inky night surrounded by hostiles of all sorts... a mere 2 hours at highest brightness isn't long enough for me, I get great illumination of the road for much longer than that, from my lights powered by my ebike's 19.2Ah/690Wh battery.Exposure 6 pack
That's why I use three beamed lights - the middle light throws light a little further ahead, for higher speed night riding. You can see two spots on the road here, the third light is flashing at "1800LM".prob get 25mph down the canal in pitch black it just dont throw the light far enough down the road.
No, I woke up one day and got the idea to go for the blitz. I tried to get some photos, but the camera always adjusted the light in the photo, so no matter how bright, it always loos the same. The worst thing was my mate, who used to ride in front wearing a high vis jacket: It completely dazzled me, like a car that hadn't dipped its headlights.Did you start with the smallest light, then the one slightly larger etc. etc. directly proportional to your rising fury at drivers, pedestrians, and the blasted from space by Project Thor state of our roads?
All three of my lights have a dimmer mode, which you can switch to, by switching them off and on... but if you switch them off an on again, you get the discombobulating, nauseating to view and terrifying flashing mode at high brightness, and all three flash at different rates. Off and on again to get back to full beam.Someone here will know this for sure.
But I seem to remember coming across a front lamp that had a little lever/switch on top that flipped from full beam to dipped beam, much the same as you have on car headlights. Only cant remember anything other than that.
Did some incident trigger installing those Mad Max-usque lights? The final straw for me was a car at a T junction one night about 10.30pm - I assumed he'd seen me, because he stopped at the T junction to my left as I approached... but when I was directly in front of his car, the car suddenly accelerated at me, and the big fat driver immediately shouted "****!!!!" and slammed on the brakes. I'd rather not be be flattened, nothing like that has happened since I installed these lights.No, I woke up one day and got the idea to go for the blitz.