Dedicated bike light or... ?

I use a Zebralight SC600w IV Plus. It’s a very efficient 1x18650 light, which a very flexible user interface I programmed for my bike use. I get almost 3 hours at 700 lumens (regulated output), using a Sanyo GA cell. Bump it up to 2300 lumens when going downhill or in rough conditions. It’s a fairly wide beam so I can see around me, but still has a decent hot spot to light up enough ahead of me.

I use to use a BLF A6 (similar to the Convoy S2), which was fine for occasional use, but I wanted something better for long rides. If you don’t use a light a lot, I think your S2 will do fine.

Sure, dedicated bike lights can be better, but they’re larger and often have a horrible cool-white LED.

I do step-down my brightness when cars approach me, unless they refuse to turn off their high-beams that is.

normal light is not good for a bike light as it has not a beam pattern of conventional down lights
so you wll blind other people on the road

so normal light is only off road good for long distance and lightning up tree branches above the light that may hit you unseen with a conventional bike downlight

I don’t have one; I’m making do with clipping a torch to the outer edge of my bike glove, then when the hand is on the bars it shines perfectly straight. The Convoy S2 (no +) on Biscotti mode 50% is my favourite, it has a very even beam that doesn’t spill farther than it needs for me to see.

Convoy’s pocket clip works well enough to hold it in place even on the bumpy patched up streets and the stretch of unpaved doubletrack in my route, though I don’t dare going too fast for fear of it shaking itself loose from the clip.

Handlebars are generally around or less than 1 meter above the ground. For road cycling, if you keep the flashlight tilted down to have the farthest part of the circle of the hotspot projected forward at about 8 meters, which is enough to anticipate road bumps and holes while commuting at 30 to 35 km/h in urban areas, the upper part of the cone of the hotspot will stay under 1 meter.
It won’t blind someone walking or cycling and it won’t enter the interior of a car. The spill stay on my lane and is not bright enough to really blind someone with its upper part.
I’m checking it daily in winter before my first pedal stroke, but I do agree that careless people should use more dedicated bike light.

My most used FL for commuting are a 4sevens maelstrom X7 (XM-L2) or an Eagle eyes X6 (XM-L2)…not crazy bright. Years ago i was using P60 hosts and drop-ins.

A convoy S2+ should be fine if used responsibly.

NB : the best to BE SEEN : reflective jacket.

+ 1

Currently using an Astrolux S1. Right now its just zip tied to the frame, but I do have some different bike mounts on order. It seems to work alright for me.

I ride a road bike fast and hard for my 1.5hr commute (one way). I like a LOT of light.
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Handlebars: Modified Victagen dual LED :
Modified with (2x) 4000K XP-L Hi, and “striped” TIR optics (elliptical beam, puts much more light on the road in front of the bike at the right distance. Much less wasted light above and below)
Modified with 4x18650 battery pack so it can run maximum brightness constant for the whole 1.5hr ride. Normally this would overheat the light badly, but moving at 20+ mph keeps it cool.
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Handlebars: Emisar D1. Lots of throw without being too small hotspot. Small package. 50% brightness is good balance of throw distance and runtime (will get me to work on 1 cell - no battery swap needed mid-ride) and supplements the Victagens with some extra throw that doesn’t tend to stray into oncoming driver’s eyes.
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Front fork (low mounted): Another Victagen, modified as above. The low mounted light casts shadows across irregularities in the road surface and gives much more information about the relief of the road and any undulations/cracks/potholes.
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Rear: Solarforce L2 with red XR-E emitter
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Helmet: Cheap eBay 18650 zoomie (because cheap = lightweight for helmet use)
Modified with 4000k XP-L Hi.
Focused at maximum throw, it throws a square die shape beam that is about two to three feet wide at far distances.
Perfect for using to light up things off the road, or (usually) to flash quickly across the hood of a driver that still might not see me with my 4000 forward facing lumens. (Don’t just beam it into the car, I don’t want a pissed off blinded driver after me).

The spill of a reflector or even TIR is enough to blind more than an average car light will do
putting the hotspot and corona all the way down wont do it for fast cycling

the only thing that works is taping 1/2 of the reflector on the upper part

like Paul321, I use and like the Fenix ALB-10 mount. I only ride on mountains, with lots of climbing to get to
the fun stuff going downhill. For context, I ride an “enduro” bike with 170mm travel front and rear with big
knobby tires, and it still gets pretty bumpy at certain sections.

That said, I’ve used many, mostly modded by experts on BLF and they know who they are (PM me if you’d like),
all are 1x18650. I typically use a triple or quad led on the bar for flood (brightest being triple led Eagle Eye X6) and usually a single led
tube light on the helmet (BLF A6 or equivalent) for more throw. For my night rides, typically 1.5 hrs I rarely need to swap
batteries but I always bring spares. If I’m leading up/down, then I will go full brightness to help riders behind.
If not, then I go for med/low, whatever is needed depending on the sections.

The Fenix bar mount has been great, I have several of them and have bought many for buddies (as well as modded
lights). The only minor issue is that some of them have a little free play between the light holder and the
bar mount so image is not rock steady. A little shim with whatever (folded paper, toothpick…) and it’s good.
Despite the choppy rides, light beam is solid, none has ever flown off. For helmet, I don’t yet use a mount, I simply
use strips of velcro to secure onto the helmet. Some helmets are more conducive than others for a tube light. I have a helmet that I
just leave light mounted and only use it at night. The better setup is either a gopro mount/adapter (but it sticks up
a bit higher) or I’d found a link for a 3D printed mount that’s much simpler and elegant but never bought it because
night riding at my local trails are no longer permitted (huge bummer because the same trails at night are like completely
different trails and it’s a totally different riding experience at night, and much cooler during hot months). I’ll try to look for that link again…

This looks updated to be able to use the gopro mount. You likely can do w/out that section, velcro mount directly to the helmet:

https://www.google.com/search?q=3d+printed+helmet+flashlight+mount&rlz=1C1CHXU_enUS718US718&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx=1&fir=kTWErv7kaSiDVM%253A%252C3PLVW6fR7eRCnM%252C*&vet=1&usg=AI4*-kSlcBoaO6bSokjmlBnAhWv0pyUp7Q&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwi3qJLcw-nhAhUS2FQKHc-EAF8Q9QEwAnoECAkQCA#imgrc=kTWErv7kaSiDVM:&vet=1

As for modded lights… a must for me has been to have them potted to withstand the vibration. I’ve killed a few
lights before doing that, some barely went 100 yds and fried, no fun in the middle of a rough section…

I use an aspheric zoomie since it puts all the light on the ground in front of me with no spill.

If you ride at night…and ride hard….go big or go to the hospital.

Biggest problem night riding in the saburbs is driveway kamakazis and pot holes. Wide, high lumen light is mandatory.

I didn’t pay much attention because i haven’t gone for a ride in a while. Now, I’m looking at the light issue too.

There are a few multi beam lights on Amazon that deserve a closer look.

I use a Zebralight combo :

  • Handlebar : SC600Fd Mark III Plus, this is floody
  • Helmet : SC600w HI, the throwy one

I've had numerous very nice DH/enduro sessions with that in the woods and mountains. It is also adapted to more roady sessions.

I also usually use one the Fd for day runs, in blinks mode.

Playing with the various modes combination possibilites also proved useful to stay adequately enlighted for ~2h sessions.

They are some of the lightest and smallest 18650 (which is very underrated on the helmet), yet great thermal management also helps for D- situation, where I need full throttle, both on bike and lights :)

Here’s my setup.

Convoy S2+ with 3500k SST-20(modded):
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/Gray-Convoy-S2-with-luminus-SST20-DTP-copper-plate-ar-coated-glass-lens-7135-biscotti-firmware/32969287656.html

Good handlebar setup(the only one that doesn’t fall off and threads on very well):

Strip lens:
https://www.aliexpress.com/store/product/LED-lens-for-CREE-XML-XML2-LED-60degree/330416_1577614278.html

I understand OP wants a removable battery for charging convenience but I prefer bike lights with built in batteries because (usually) they don’t rattle. It’s a pet hate of mine having a rattling battery.

Anyone have any experience with this Xanes DL06 ?

Poor man’s Fenix BC30? :slight_smile:

Here’s my setup. Thrunite TN4A with a “strip” type lens installed, one of the options that BlueSwordM linked to above. For my mount I used one made by twofish, not sold where I originally purchased it anymore. It is a velcro type and wiggles around a bit, but I like that feature as it makes me more visible I feel, and does not really affect what I see much.

Got the TN4A on sale for $40 IIRC, the mount was less than $10. 4 AA eneloops and your off and running. It is a bit big, but I ride with panniers, so carrying it while not riding is never an issue.

My backup is my 18350 D4 with a hand carry. I don’t do this for more than a few miles at a time, but have gotten more miles than I would have imagined with it. Bike strobe mode (like has Anduril installed) is very nice.

The Xanes light you linked to looks like it would be hated by any oncoming cyclist. It may be designed for low and wide, but it doesn’t really say that anywhere, it just says “Floodlight”. Other than that it looks like it could be a good deal if it is somewhat reliable.

What does a strip lens do?

Make a horizontal beam pattern like a good car headlight.

And as a result reduces the light shinning in an oncoming cyclist’s eyes. If you are only riding on the street, not likely a big deal. If you ride on bike paths, your fellow cyclists will appreciate it, or at least they won’t curse you because you don’t have that feature. I think the Fenix BC30 mentioned above is designed to avoid light in the oncoming cyclists eyes as well.

No, it’s not. You can’t assume everyone is running their bike lights at full blast. My bike light mode is pulling 0.2 amps, tilted slightly forward. The spill is not going to blind anyone more than an average car light.