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• #3028
My dynamo light has stopped working.
I'm running a standard Shutter Precision hub, on a 20" wheel, and recently hit 70 kph with the light running. Before I buy another, is it possible the light could have blown out? I'd guess there should be some form of over-voltage protection in a modern LED light, and there were no spectacular fireworks but the timing does seem right (it was day at the time so I couldn't say for sure it stopped working right then).
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• #3029
I'd always disconnect and reconnect everything first. Connections randomly fail all the time
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• #3030
Yeah, it's all been rewired and seems fully dead, sadly.
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• #3031
I had assumed overvoltage protection also. Sounds like credit card time
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• #3032
I'm running a standard Shutter Precision hub, on a 20" wheel, and recently hit 70 kph with the light running.
Woah! Chipped electric bike? Massive hill?
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• #3033
I imagine front of a cargo bike?
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• #3034
Can anyone confirm if this is a common problem? 70kph always seems to happen at some point in a bike tour. If there's a chance it'll blow the electric system, then I'd rather not have a dynamo fitted in the first place.
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• #3035
Ah, of course, a 20” wheel means the dyno spins faster in relation to speed.
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• #3036
Never heard of a light being over-loaded since LED.
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• #3037
What was the light? Most LED lights have built-in overvoltage protection, and AIUI dynamos only generate crazy voltages if there is no load connected.
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• #3038
Definitely not common.
If you look at the graphs here, on the right side the voltage is rising very slowly with speed:
https://www.sp-dynamo.com/series8.html70 kph shouldn't be a problem - I've certainly done close to that many times on dynamo bikes, and I tend to keep the lights on all the time.
SP do do a special version of their dynamos for small wheels. I presume it has slightly less drag because they anticipate it spinning faster.
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• #3039
Can I use Son coaxial junction boxes and adapters with a Supernova light? I'd like to be able to disconnect both light and a charging device from the wheel easily and if compatible they look like they'd be ideal.
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• #3040
Yes. It's just a connector, nothing clever. There's no way the Supernova can tell what connectors you've used.
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• #3041
Cool wasn't sure if there was any difference in the wires in my light compared to the Son coaxial stuff.
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• #3042
Nah, for these purposes wires is wires.
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• #3043
Great, thanks
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• #3044
Any issues running the rear son light on its own?
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• #3045
Am I right that that the son rear light should only be piggy backed off the front light, or run with the voltage protection cabling if running direct off the dyno?
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• #3046
Depends on what voltage protection it has built-in. Some (maybe most) rear lights are fine on their own, some burn out very quickly. SON’s website is rather sparse on information.
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• #3047
SON rear lights have no voltage protection. If you wire them direct to the dynamo hub, they will go pop.
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• #3048
Anyone recommend front and rear lights for a commuter lock up build? Sounds like b&m secula on the rear is well regarded and cheap, but the front light options are doing my head in.
Will hopefully be mounted under my rack somewhere if that matters.
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• #3049
Yeah I think I've proved that. Rear light died on me and couldn't work out why. Now I know.
Sorry meant @.gaz.
The connectors on SP and Shimano look exactly the same to me (I have both). Never tried connecting one to the other though as one’s 26” mtb and the other is 700c road.