http://www.teamestrogen.com/products.asp?pID=22737
Was it something like this? There are LOTS of red blinky lights available.
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The other day I was driving home, I know I shouldn't confess this in the Commuting section) when I saw this intense flashing red light about 100-150 feet ahead. It was on the back of a commuting bike.
Does anyone know if lights like this are commercially available for bikes? It was extremely effective for visability. What are the brightest rear flashers people know of?
I hope it wasn't just a motorcycle light that was modified.
Thanks
Quillfred
Yes, SHE can.
"Angels fly because they take themselves lightly"
Gilbert K. Chesterton
http://www.teamestrogen.com/products.asp?pID=22737
Was it something like this? There are LOTS of red blinky lights available.
Bork Bork, Hork Hork!!
Someone at bikeforums.net posted photos of a test of a Cateye TL-LD1000 (or whatever it's called), and I could not believe how bright it was from 1/4 mile away. I bought one and it is easily the brightest bike light I have ever seen. You can't even stand to look at it when it's on.
Tres cool. It's on sale at REI, too.
http://www.rei.com/online/store/Sear...LD1000&x=0&y=0
“Hey, clearly failure doesn’t deter me!”
Oooh, nice.
Darn, I've already gone way over my bike budget! (I have a Nite-Ize, which is fine for the non-dark I ride in, so I shouldn't be gazing longingly at the Cat-Eye)
(but I can't help it)
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
Here's a really bright light for a bike. I use it on the back of my BOB. It's so bright, it's almost blinding to anyone following right behind.I have a Cateye something-or-other on the bike. It's great. I've been impressed with most of the Cateye light products.
http://www.reallite.com/RLHome.htm
annie
Time is a companion that goes with us on a journey. It reminds us to cherish each moment, because it will never come again. What we leave behind is not as important as how we have lived." Captain Jean Luc Picard
I had the Cateye TL-LD1000- and was quite unhappy with it. It is so heavy that it is difficult to mount on anything soft- like a seat bag. (Can't aim corrrectly and goes flying off) So I put it on the holder on my rack that is made for lights, and it broke that off! I really needed it for a ride, so had it electric taped to the rack, and it was quite unreliable- turning itself off and on.
Right now I have two of these Cateye TL-LD600 Tail Lights-
http://tinyurl.com/oatyv - one on each seat stay, vertically, and another rectangular six-LED light that lives on the bike permanently. At night I use all three, plus a blinky on the back of my helmet.
It's pretty important to have the lights aimed correctly (horizontally) so they are easier for drivers to see- make sure they aren't pointed up or down.
A friend I ride with has a three LED light that is so bright it's impossible to ride behind her, almost. I am trying to find out what it is- I'll let you know.
Nanci
***********
"...I'm like the cycling version of the guy in Flowers for Algernon." Mike Magnuson
http://www.serfas.com/lights/TL-1000.shtml
Ride buddy says this light is visible at one mile away as tested on a night ride on a paved trail. Around $29.
***********
"...I'm like the cycling version of the guy in Flowers for Algernon." Mike Magnuson
I've got a dual TL-LD600 set up. Saw lot of bikes set up like that at The Furnace Creek 508, too.
I had one of those TL-LD600s, but I gave it to my husband and he mounted it vertically on his seatpost. On our first night time ride together I was really horrified by how not visible it was. Horizontally, you can't miss it. Vertically, it seemed to really disappear. Fortunately (!) he left it on the bike and somebody stole it.
xeney -- where/how do you have your cateye TL-LD1000 mounted?
I ordered a couple -- one for me and one for my husband. They won't arrive for awhile, though. I took advantage of free delivery to the local REI and that always takes longer.
“Hey, clearly failure doesn’t deter me!”
Well, it's not mounted anywhere at the moment, but I just had it attached to the seat post. Like pretty much all CatEyes, it doesn't mount well to a rack or anything, so I use an old Vistalite on my commuter. But as far as seatpost-mount lights go, the LD1000 seems to be the brightest I've found.
I've got the 1000 mounted to my Brooks. Luckily, the Brooks seat has the little metal tabs for seatbag mounting and I just bolted a crosspiece between the tabs (from my son's old erector set!) and the light snaps securely over that thin crosspiece and never moves a bit.
I don't know how many lights I've watched (or heard) go skittering down the road - it seems like they all get shaken off unless they're snapped into their own mounting system on the seatpost - which you can't use if you also have a seatbag as well as panniers.
I have that Cateye 1000 on the seatpost of my commuter. It's great and very bright. I've never tried to move it or mount it anywhere else. It's there year 'round....set it and forget it.
I had a Vistalight (don't recall which one) that I used to mount to the daisy chain around my panniers (Performance brand), but it disappeared on day. I don't know if someone lifted it in the parking garage where I lock my bike, or if it went flying during the ride home.
I prefer the secure mount of the seatpost, so long as your saddlebag or panniers don't block it.
I've been pondering that mini Cateye with the rope attachment - http://www.performancebike.com/shop/...slisearch=true - to put on the zipper of my REI sling bag for a light high-up.
I like my reallite even though I've abused it to death, I think. The guarantee is almost worth the purchase price; if I send the pieces back, especially with a good story, it will be replaced. (Guarantee is effective against armies of killer bees, among other things.)