D
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Not renewed my membership for many a yearObviously not a member of the Wheel Tappers and Shunters Social Club.
Not renewed my membership for many a yearObviously not a member of the Wheel Tappers and Shunters Social Club.
Other (mine) reasons are that at a shop visit I don't want to leave my bike with lights on drawing attention from the curious and the thieves, and that I rather want to preserve the capacitor energy so that when back I can switch on to see something, energy that got lost for nothing in the case of inability to switch off.Having a red light showing is against railway regulations since it could cause confusion to a train driver and so risk an accident.
The red button is an off switch.The red button dumps the capacitor, so kills the light at rest.
The red button is an off switch.
If you wheel the bike a yard or so, the light will come back on, and stay on for another 4 minutes, without you needing to ride the bike half a mile or whatever to charge the capacitor back up, which you would do if the capacitor charge had been dumped.
To OP:
Only some lights have an off switch.
The Toplight Line rack-mounted lights have the red switch
The 4D-lite (mudguard light) has a couple of contacts on the outside you can short with a key
The Secula and Seculite mudguard lights don't have any off switch
If I'm on a bike with a switch, I turn the light off to stop helpful strangers coming looking for me to tell me I left my light on.
It was an example light that had a similar cable passing part as on your picture, to find out how to disconnect it without cutting wires / losing a distance. It could be that one of the inside spade connectors just got shaken loose, which may be repaired by carefully pressing the metal abit more together, or, molest it from the wire, and pressing a new spade connector on it.Thanks. That's not my light though. I've got the one in this article.
In the end, I've ordered a Toplight Line Plus for its "off switch", and a new wiring loom.