New LED lights on DealExtreme: Compatible/practical with XB-600?

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pockyrevolution
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New LED lights on DealExtreme: Compatible/practical with XB-600?

Hi all,

These two LED brake and signal lights turned up on DealExtreme.com today:

63 led brake light (1157 dual 'filament') - 126 lumens - 12 Volts 4 Watts
http://www.dealextreme.com/details.dx/sku.48242

21 led signal light (1156 single 'filament') - 63 lumens - 12 volts 1.5 Watts
http://www.dealextreme.com/details.dx/sku.48241

Two questions:

1. Based on the wattage, would this be practical for a XB-600? ie, is there any benefit on energy savings?
2. Would this install/fit on an XB-600? =)

Thanks!

pockyrevolution
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Last seen: 13 years 4 months ago
Joined: Wednesday, September 2, 2009 - 10:33
Points: 19
Re: New LED lights on DealExtreme: Compatible/practical with ...

Images:

Electra Voy 88911 Community Site:
http://electravoy.blogspot.com/

mf70
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Joined: Friday, December 1, 2006 - 09:01
Points: 712
Re: New LED lights on DealExtreme: Compatible/practical with ...

The brake light on the XB600 uses the 1157 dual element bulb, so you probably could replace it with the LED assy. Your energy consumption for the brake light would go from around 30 watts to four. The turn signal bulbs are far smaller. Open the blisters up to check. HOWEVER:

  1. how much of a typical ride do you spend with the brakes on? Remember it's watts times time that adds up to energy drain.
  2. Remember that your front headlight assy is a dual-bulb 18 W assy, making around 50 watts fr night lighting. This won't change the totl energy cost that much, especially as the hub motor is drawing 900+ Watts at full cry. Even limping home at night, I've generally left the lights burning, as I can save more power by having a light touch on the throttle than I would gain by putting out the lights (especially considering the chance of an emergency room "visit."

The one justification would be to reduce the 12V accessory drain to allow you to change to a more conservative and reliable DC/DC converter. I'm seriously thinking if this, as I've burned two of the stock units up. I'm thinking of one that's used by the Telco's to get 12V accessory power off their 48V standard buss voltage.

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