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Re: LED spot light.
Posted: Wed Dec 11, 2013 9:42 pm
by Major Softie
bbelk wrote:ME 109 wrote:
Definitely on. The brighter the lighter.
Makes sense, but I think you are overlooking the impact on your forward progress that results from shooting all those photons forward. I know they are mass-less, but if there is a whole lot of them.....
Exactly.
I Love Lucy did a show with a similar theme: Lucy was losing about $0.25 on each sale, but figured she'd make it up in volume.
Re: LED spot light.
Posted: Wed Dec 11, 2013 9:44 pm
by Sibbo
bbelk wrote:ME 109 wrote:
Definitely on. The brighter the lighter.
Makes sense, but I think you are overlooking the impact on your forward progress that results from shooting all those photons forward. I know they are mass-less, but if there is a whole lot of them.....
Maybe if they shone down you wouldn't need shockers but then you couldn't use them unless you used mirrors but light is smart so that wouldn't work ... BUT, it might work in place of a rear shocker and you could ride in a pool of white light ... so cool, so cool.

Re: LED spot light.
Posted: Wed Dec 11, 2013 10:44 pm
by Airbear
Light must have mass. It is definitely affected by gravity.
Anyone who has driven an old 6 volt VW at night will tell you that the light from the headlights droops onto the road. And if you are travelling at speed (say, on a very, very long downhill stretch) the light actually lands on the road surface after the car has passed. You'd see these two dim yellow pools of light following, desperately trying to keep up, when you checked the mirror.
ps: This thread is taking a turn for the better. I sometimes wonder what innocent visiting lurkers must think.
Re: LED spot light.
Posted: Thu Dec 12, 2013 12:31 am
by Chuey
Airbear wrote: This thread is taking a turn for the better. I sometimes wonder what innocent visiting lurkers must think.
The frequency of new participants tells the story.
Chuey
Re: LED spot light.
Posted: Thu Dec 12, 2013 3:59 am
by Sibbo
Airbear wrote:Light must have mass. It is definitely affected by gravity.
Anyone who has driven an old 6 volt VW at night will tell you that the light from the headlights droops onto the road. And if you are travelling at speed (say, on a very, very long downhill stretch) the light actually lands on the road surface after the car has passed. You'd see these two dim yellow pools of light following, desperately trying to keep up, when you checked the mirror.
ps: This thread is taking a turn for the better. I sometimes wonder what innocent visiting lurkers must think.
It's a right bugger when you get away from those little yellow pools ! On an old Yamaha I owned I used to go back for them, poor little things would get all tuckered out trying to keep up and I'd find them all dim and pale beside the road .
Re: LED spot light.
Posted: Thu Dec 12, 2013 3:17 pm
by enigmaT120
You guys have much faster vehicles than I do.
Re: LED spot light.
Posted: Thu Dec 12, 2013 3:19 pm
by enigmaT120
Chuey wrote:Airbear wrote: This thread is taking a turn for the better. I sometimes wonder what innocent visiting lurkers must think.
The frequency of new participants tells the story.
Chuey
Chuey wanted me to say this: That hertz!
Re: LED spot light.
Posted: Thu Dec 12, 2013 3:36 pm
by bbelk
enigmaT120 wrote: That hertz!
Damn, I wish I had thought of that.....
Re: LED spot light.
Posted: Fri Dec 13, 2013 2:00 am
by Sibbo
enigmaT120 wrote:You guys have much faster vehicles than I do.
Maybe on your end of the planet but light is slow down here, it just hangs around in the shadows .
Re: LED spot light.
Posted: Fri Dec 13, 2013 2:24 am
by Toga
Yes, that is true Sibbo,
Ozzie riding conditions require a very sensitive eye to spot what is lurking in the shadow of the shadow... especially whilst riding our airheads at light speed.
So we are now back full circle to the needs of the opening post...
Have those new spotties caught up with your test ride yet ?