#46
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I really like my Ledlenser MH10 Headlamp for running and riding. Its not cycling specific, but I have attached it to my helmet. Its never let me down in -20C, weather etc.
600lm, Range 150m, Battery 10h. |
#47
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I have done some night MTB rides with a guy that has a Outbound (though I am not sure which model) and it looks really nice to me.
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#48
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As an update to this, a single rainy ride killed this light after having it for less than 2 months, so cannot recommend.
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#49
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Quote:
Quote:
I've been running a Garmin UT800 which integrates with my computer and changes brightness automatically based on speed etc. Nice feature for the more urban style of riding I do and plenty bright for my relatively young eyes. Have a lot of cygolite and niterider stuff as well as a few lezynes. Normally it's a combination of multiple for me. Helmet mounted + bar mounted + fork mounted for right up close. |
#50
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You can mount it to a GoPro mount, which most out front computer mounts have accomodations for. Detour is what I run for road/gravel and even MTB and its pretty great, if slightly underpowered for MTB
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#51
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Thanks for the review -- I was just about to buy one of these! Did you try contacting MagicShine for warranty?
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#52
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Quote:
with they had it integrate into Garmin's ANT+ light network though, the ability to turn lights on/off from my computer is nice (and a one click button function i've got tied into my Di2) |
#53
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Yeah, they had me send the light back and refunded me. They rate it is IPX6 which should be very waterproof, but losing it to a single rainy ride lost my trust in them.
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#54
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As much as I like Lezyne mini pumps, their lights are not very good. The battery is what is in question. The Lezyne I had the battery only lasted 3 years, while the time it would hold a charge while using kept getting shorter and shorter after the 2nd year until it just no longer charged.
Lezyne was probably using a cheap low-quality Chinese rechargeable battery. Anyway, if you have too narrow of a beam then consider buying a second light with a flood-type beam, and combine it with the spot beam you now have. Outbound Lighting Hangover bike helmet light is what appears to be a wide beam. I know nothing about this light, it just seemed like an option that fit your needs, a helmet light with a wide beam, and the run time is pretty good. Most MTB lights will have a flood beam vs a road bike that will be more of a spot beam. |
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