Yeah that's why I wanted to ask people personally because looking online they all say that they are great.
Do you need the brightest though? If you're riding in town, there's such a thing as too bright.What's the brightest headlight I can purchase?
It functions like an automobile headlight. Lighting the road, not the oncoming traffic.My bike came equipped with a Euro (German?) standard called STVZO, which helps prevent people approaching you by having a softer light at top and bottom.
A StVZO standard headlight is far better than some damn overly bright flashlight blinding oncoming traffic. Mine run on 36V and 48V cell packs.
Oh for sure... My OHM Cruise came with Lezyne E-65, and it's a world of difference compared to the cheapo light that came with my fat folder.It functions like an automobile headlight. Lighting the road, not the oncoming traffic.
It functions like an automobile headlight. Lighting the road, not the oncoming traffic.
If you ride in traffic this is an especially important point. Bright hand held flashlights and most inexpensive bike lights don't shape their beams to avoid blinding oncoming traffic. Traffic that's blinded by your head light can't see you. Not a good thing for the cyclist.Indeed, it seems its all in the lens technology they put into the lights themselves. Cutoff points for our headlights are necessary to not blind people.
The company Outbound Lighting I got my headlights from made a great point of this...
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Indeed I bought a no name China brand to find out if it was up to the hype they put it through, 30 bucks for 2000 lumens...LOL kinda knew it would be crap but tried it anyways. I have a lux/lumen reader and it came out to less than 300 lumens. I returned that thing so fast.