Sunday, January 25, 2009

Testing out my new MiNewt.X2 Dual lights

Last night (Jan. 23, 2009) I finally got a chance to use my new lights. :-) It was warm (40F) and it was dark. I decided to ride over to a road that is hideously potholed, no street or house lights, and the forest on either side is far enough away that it can't be use as a reference. So I took off, rode this section road in both directions and found a reasonable smooth path to ride on (good to know for my commute home). The pair of lights, set as I have them, worked great! I'm very pleased with the lights.

For Christmas I received these new lights. I was looking for something that would last at least an hour (hi: 1:45, Lo: 3:30) and recharge in less than 8 hours (my work day). This would allow me to ride my bike to work before dawn and ride home after sunset. It will also allow me to take my older sets of lights and modify the setup to use newer halogen bulbs and an over voltage battery setup (more on that at a later date). I did a little searching on the 'net and found that the overall review of the Nite Rider MiNewt.X2 Dual setup was favorable. So that's what I got.

Back to last night, So I rush to get out, I got dressed, put water in the Camelbak and I'm outside with my bike and I put the lights on, I push and hold the button and the lights barely get any light. I turn them off and I push and hold the button longer, it now blinks but barely lights, I fidget with the lights for 15 - 20 minutes, Nada! So I take the lights in the house and fidget some more. What I've found since I first received these lights was that I had to push and hold the button for about 3 seconds, then the lights begin to flash brightly (I feel that I'm about to have a seizure when it first starts) once they start blinking I can release the button and push it a second time to get it stay on high and steady. Push it again and it drops to low and steady. Any more button pushing toggles between high and low. Today I tried simply hitting the button and releasing it quickly and it works. Tomorrow I'll try it out in the cold again to see if it was me or the lights (I suspect it was me).

Once I got over the initial problem I had to adjust the lights to put down a nice beam on the road. I chose to put the left beam center and closer to the tire (about 10 - 15 feet). The right beam was aimed a little further forward and slightly left. This worked out nicely. Some of the roads in my area suffer greatly from potholes, cracks and some would make the cobble stone roads of Belgium and France seem smooth. The lights did a real nice job of lighting these surfaces. I was available to avoid the potholes without slowing down.

Update: Jan 25, 2009 - Looks like the battery I have has some kind of problem. I have a second one (don't ask) and it works properly. I'll send the bad unit back to Performance and get it replaced.

4 comments:

jzeek88 said...

"It will also allow me to take my older sets of lights and modify the setup to use newer halogen bulbs and an over voltage battery setup (more on that at a later date)."

Does this mean you can take a halogen bulb and put it in a MiNewt X2 housing?

http://www.jonathanzeek.com

Neil Cherry said...

"Does this mean you can take a halogen bulb and put it in a MiNewt X2 housing?"

Sorry for the confusion, no I don't think you'll be able to get the halogen bulbs in the X2's housing. This was just for my older (1995) setups. I can replace their bulbs with the halogen bulbs. The older setup runs off standard D batteries not the newer LIPO (Lithium/Polymer) batteries required by the newer, smaller, fancy and expensive bulbs for the X2.

jzeek88 said...

Thanks for the info. I have a friend who has changed the connector that goes to the battery to a standard trailer connector. This allows him to create his own battery packs with standard C or AA batteries.

He runs a halogen set-up, but I bought the LED MiNewt X2 for longer battery life, and rigged a battery pack the same way he did. It appears that the MiNewt LED needs the exact voltage to make it happy, because after several hours of testing my light with my own 10v battery pack my LED went out. The blue and red light on the top of the housing goes on when I plug in the battery pack, but the light does not turn on...

Anyway, thanks again.
Jonathan

Neil Cherry said...

So it's one year later and I haven't gotten in as much night riding as I would have liked but when I have I've been very pleased with the X2 lights. I definitely think I've gotten my money's worth out of these lights.

I haven't touched the other project lights as I've just been too busy and the future doesn't look a whole lot more promising for free time either.