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Brighter rear lights for non-streetlit roads

(45 posts)

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  1. wingpig
    Member

    My twelve-to-fifteen bike had a bottle dynamo on it. Can't remember why I didn't shift it over to the bike whose frame is still up in the loft when the downtube snapped - maybe it required a brazed-on fitting.

    Posted 8 years ago #
  2. chdot
    Admin

    As Arellcat points out, there was a period between the old 'dark' ages and the 'modern' LED period.

    Better bulbs, batteries and indeed reflectors.

    There was also the transition from lights being on brackets fixed to front forks or headset to handlebars. Previously lights were too heavy to reliably fix to bars.

    So now it's possible to easily change where lights point and switch the brightness up or down. Whether many/most light beams are now designed 'properly' is another matter.

    Posted 8 years ago #
  3. chdot
    Admin

    Of course a key transition word was halogen.

    Posted 8 years ago #
  4. rbrtwtmn
    Member

    For those interested in on my question about the Highway Code etc...

    This gave me some useful pointers...
    http://www.cyclinguk.org/cyclists-library/regulations/lighting-regulations

    Looks like flashing became properly legal as main lights not until 2005 (amendment to Road Vehicles Lighting Regulations)
    http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2005/2559/pdfs/uksi_20052559_en.pdf

    So the remaining question is when they became popular. Anyone remember? I think I was using them around 1991 to supplement a dynamo - but memory isn't my strong point. That would make it about 15 years of popular use before made legal.

    Posted 8 years ago #
  5. chdot
    Admin

    "around 1991"

    Sounds about right.

    About the time I was told 'white LEDs are impossible - they'll always be a bit blue'.

    Posted 8 years ago #
  6. ih
    Member

    Not only weren't flashing lights legal until 2005, but any led light wasn't legal (as the only light) until the same year. You had to have an incandescent bulb as your main light. Leds could be used as supplementary lights.

    Looking at Wikipedia into this question, I was intrigued to find that in Germany, any bike overy 11kg had to have dynamo lights until 2013. Apparently this is one reason that Germany developed particularly efficient dynamo lights.

    Posted 8 years ago #
  7. Arellcat
    Moderator

    Yesterday I finally managed to catch up a cyclist whom I'd seen a few times already to ask about his fantastically bright-but-not-blinding rear light.

    It was the Knog Blinder MOB V Kid Grid, and currently PlanetX are selling it for £13 instead of £35.

    Fine for seatpost mounting; pannier racks (and torpedoes) would require invention.

    Posted 8 years ago #
  8. Arellcat
    Moderator

    Now £11! PlanetX must've bought a job lot of them. Also some Lezyne/Moon-knockoffs with strange names.

    Posted 7 years ago #
  9. crowriver
    Member

    There have been some great deals on PlanetX site recently. Picked up front and rear light set (batteries included) for a fiver! Plenty bright too. Good deals on leather saddles, lights, all kinds of stuff right now.

    Posted 7 years ago #
  10. Dave
    Member

    That does look like a neat light... big surface area is the winning factor IMO.

    I was just going to comment that while driving to work the other day I noticed a super awesome bike light up ahead. When I caught up with the rider I'm pretty certain it was a B&M Toplight line plus (potentially battery version).

    The very greatest rear light I've seen was the Philips saferide, but I think they might be OOP: http://www.philips.co.uk/c-p/SRRBLRBBX1/led-bike-lights-saferide

    Posted 7 years ago #
  11. fimm
    Member

    Well I invested in an Exposure Flare a while back but because of Reasons I only got to try it for the first time yesterday. I do like the pulse mode, and viewing it from behind it is a lot brighter than the other two lights I've got, which is all I really wanted.
    It is a bit bodged on to the rear rack, though, as it is designed to mount on a seat post. However the bodge seems to be OK and I have ways to improve it.

    Posted 7 years ago #
  12. Frenchy
    Member

    Now £11! PlanetX must've bought a job lot of them. Also some Lezyne/Moon-knockoffs with strange names.

    Went up to £16 in between me loading the page and adding it to the basket.

    Posted 7 years ago #
  13. acsimpson
    Member

    @Frency, the black one seems to be £16 while the red one is £11.

    Posted 7 years ago #
  14. Frenchy
    Member

    Ta!

    Posted 7 years ago #
  15. CJC
    Member

    @Arellcat thanks for the tip, I've just bought a slightly different Knog one from Planet X.

    My current rear light needs switched on by using a paper clip because the button fell off at some point!

    Posted 7 years ago #

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