johnridley: (Calvin vs Bike)
johnridley ([personal profile] johnridley) wrote2008-11-18 07:04 am
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Bike lights again

I've used the Dinotte 200L for a couple of days now. It kicked a low battery indication at me a mile from work today, on the 2nd day. This is OK, since it just strobes for 1/2 second and turns the power indicator LED from blue to red. It still kept going at full brightness. After a while (10, 15 minutes apparently) it would have strobed again and dropped into low output mode, where it would have run for 30+ minutes.

That's only about 100 minutes of runtime on 100% brightness (42 minute commutes, plus probably 15 minutes of playing with it), though to be fair to it, the batteries have been outside in the cold for 4 days and it was about 19 degrees this morning. And I had another battery pack in my bag anyway. I probably could run OK on medium power, which doubles the runtime, but I don't think I'll bother. Swapping batteries takes all of 15 seconds every 2 days.

For anyone who's looking for a nice bike light, they have a sale on these running today at www.dinottelighting.com - this light is now $100 instead of $130, and the taillight is $105 instead of $130. I just ordered the taillight - I don't like winter night riding without my strobe on the back.

[EDIT] - apparently the sales there last a couple of hours at a time. It's over. Glad I checked at 6AM.

[identity profile] johnridley.livejournal.com 2008-11-18 02:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, the Nova Bulls are THREE 1W emitters slaved to a controller puck. I saw them on a cop car in an Independence Day parade, and in bright sunlight it hurt to look at them.

The blink modes on the Dinottes are (I'm guessing at the speeds)

- 1 Hz full brightness/off
- 2.5 Hz full brightness/low power
- 5 strobes at probably about 8 or 10 HZ at high power, then low power for .5 second or so.

I think the 2nd mode would be good for daily use at night, 3rd in adverse conditions. But I might decide to use the 3rd all the time.