sailorman
Well-Known Member
Just as other road users have an obligation not to dazzle others, something you claim to do deliberately when other road users annoy you.
Two wrongs do not make a right!
Some, dont know how their lights are set
Just as other road users have an obligation not to dazzle others, something you claim to do deliberately when other road users annoy you.
Two wrongs do not make a right!
Perhaps not, but it can make you feel a lot betterTwo wrongs do not make a right!
Just as other road users have an obligation not to dazzle others, something you claim to do deliberately when other road users annoy you.
Two wrongs do not make a right!
Simple answer is Full beam back, until they do "dip" theres.
..
Just before Xmas there was a thread about headlights and I mentioned that I was waiting for one to come from the Far East which I had taken a punt on on E-Bay.
It arrived a few days ago and I have to say that I am astonished at how good it is. http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/160932220705?ssPageName=STRK:MEWNX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1439.l2649
It cost me £17.55 including delivery (they've now put the price up a bit) and it comes complete with a rechargeable battery pack, a charger, straps to hold it on your head, plus bungies (?spelling) to hold it on bike handlebars.
I've already relegated my previous bike lights to the lowly position of backup.
The little bungies enable the light to be fixed on bike handlebars in just a few seconds. They could equally well be used to fix the light to a push pit, a pulpit, stanchions or the frame of a canopy.
Very highly recommended. At £20 ish it is fantastic value for money.
One small grumble. It was advertised as being 1800 lumens but the box it came in says 1200 lumens. If the box didn't say anything I would have none the wiser. It seems churlish to com[plain about it though.
A word of caution. For use in a cockpit on passage it may be too bright...night vision and all that...but I won't know until I use it in anger on the boat. But as a powerful headlight when you need something with a bit of umph, highly recommended.
Good on a bike too!
Getting back to the light....
I'm tempted to get one. Does it have a facility to mount it to the handlebars? Is the switch easily accessed when riding? Its described as 100% waterproof, but has a standard power plug, does the battery have an o-ring or would you expect this will survive in typical wet weather?
I'd love to compare that with my Cateye Nano Plus ... it says it has 600 lumens and I know it's bright - so yours is super bright!
I usually ride with mine on 1/2 power - it gives a longer run time and most of the time I don't need the extra brightness - plus it gives me an opportunity to flash up the (occasional) driver who doesn't dip ...
Grumble grumble - I thought you said this was bikey. Its about pedal cycles not bike headlights.
The Cateye products are bloody good and I've already got three Cateye lights on different bikes. The problem is price and I'm a bit of a cheapskate
-1,000