Rear light

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.

Gwylan

Guru
Location
All at sea⛵
Erm? My rear doesn't emit much light and generally less wisdom
 

fossyant

Ride It Like You Stole It!
Location
South Manchester
Exposure does I think. My Magicshine Seemee 200 and 300 'pulse' but don't flash - they stay on but then fade bright, then fade lower. Has other features like brake light and smart sensing of light levels.
 

fossyant

Ride It Like You Stole It!
Location
South Manchester
Cateye did a good one, 2 rows of 5 LED's that can be set idependently i.e one flashing and one constant

Oh, Cateye lights, in the long distant past of a candle equivalent ! It's a shame they never kept up really. Build quality of new lights is much better and brighter and better light focus (e.g. dipped).
 

midlandsgrimpeur

Senior Member
Mode # 7 of the Lezyne Strip Drive 300+ would cover that. It's a good light, but not cheap.

Used the strip drive for years, great light.
 
Garmin Varias have a mode which is always on but pulses from bright to less so. And a distinct benefit of those, if you just have the one rear light and it's a Varia, is that a) it'll tell you when the battery is low on the head unit but, more importantly, b) it'll say 'Radar disconnected' if the light either drops off or runs out of energy, so you *do* know that your light is still there and still working. (More precisely, you are told if it isn't.)
 

fossyant

Ride It Like You Stole It!
Location
South Manchester
Garmin Varias have a mode which is always on but pulses from bright to less so. And a distinct benefit of those, if you just have the one rear light and it's a Varia, is that a) it'll tell you when the battery is low on the head unit but, more importantly, b) it'll say 'Radar disconnected' if the light either drops off or runs out of energy, so you *do* know that your light is still there and still working. (More precisely, you are told if it isn't.)

Complicated and expensive. Lets see what the OP wants. You know the Magicshine SeeMee range is on, as it has a downlighter, which is very good for commuting. Two lights is the answer, and that's what I run.
 
Garmin Varias have a mode which is always on but pulses from bright to less so. And a distinct benefit of those, if you just have the one rear light and it's a Varia, is that a) it'll tell you when the battery is low on the head unit but, more importantly, b) it'll say 'Radar disconnected' if the light either drops off or runs out of energy, so you *do* know that your light is still there and still working. (More precisely, you are told if it isn't.)

I love my Varia - I don't actually ride at night now - but when I did having two rears is just better. If one fails - you have another.
No point the varia telling you its run out if you don't have another light with you.

All of these lights are so much better than the lights we had back in the day. Three or four of us would go out for night rides and by the end of two hours we would have one front and one rear light working between us all.
 
Top Bottom