barbagris
Mad Scientist
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2010
- Messages
- 12,988
- Location
- On the verge of insanity
- Ride
- 1979 Guzzi V1000G5 - 2018 KTM 790 Duke
I'll put money (OK a beer) on GOOD bright dips being more visible at night than dim mains.The reason you want the lights dimmable is because 2000 lumens right in the eye of oncoming motorists is pretty darn antisocial.If you turn the lights off, you're less visible. Therefore, if you dim them and keep them on, you're visible and you're not a menace to society, all at the same time. The Clearwater setup also taps into the high beam so when the high beams go on, they automatically go to full brightness. Dipped beam lights are a good compromise for seeing the road while not blinding on-coming traffic, but one drawback of LEDs that use projectors is that they're too precise. You're less visible with good LED headlights than you are with stock halogens from the side, because less light "leaks". That's why the idea of dim flood-style lights seems like a good one expressly if you're looking to be more visible, rather than looking to light up the road to the max.
Look at oncoming traffic. At night - the fact that there is a broad swathe of LIT road (this scatters light that is enough to alert without blinding) that alerts you to a vehicle - sometimes well before yo see the car (bike).
If you want scatter for daylight visibility - fit decent DRL's.
I don't know how it is in Finland - but EU law makes DRL function a pre-requisite on new cars.
There are cars with proper DRLS (Audi and new LandRover spring to mind) and others that use dimmed lights. No guesses which are most visible during daylight
Even STRONG DRL's or LIGHTS will not be able to compete with reflections of bright sun off chrome or glass.
Sorry - but dim lights are just a commercial dodge to avoid doing things right. And it's no coincidence that the dodge solutions DO NOT obtain DOT/SAE or ECE approval.
I've been doing this for a while, mate. And there's method to my personal madness.