Terrene Cake Eater 4.6 with studs. Lezyne KTV Drive Pro 300. They are only 300 lumens max. But they have a claimed run time of 3 hours at 300 lumens. So set them at max and don't worry about them. They have a decent spread but they don't throw far enough. They work for winter since you aren't going fast enough most of the time to need the throw. Also with a lot of snow around you can away with less lumens. They look impressive in the video because of the white snow. Even 4 of them when riding a dark paved road or path. They are only just acceptable.
@ for a few years I commuted by bike using a 32 mm studded winter tire Not much snow on my commute into the city because the roads get plowed quickly after the snow. Ice was always the issue. Funny thing about bike light is that where you ride makes a huge difference. The lights I use to trail ride are almost useless when riding on a beach on a cloud covered night
Snow way is beautiful watching !!
Sick bike!!
Nice light set up Are you using studded tires?
Terrene Cake Eater 4.6 with studs. Lezyne KTV Drive Pro 300. They are only 300 lumens max. But they have a claimed run time of 3 hours at 300 lumens. So set them at max and don't worry about them. They have a decent spread but they don't throw far enough. They work for winter since you aren't going fast enough most of the time to need the throw. Also with a lot of snow around you can away with less lumens. They look impressive in the video because of the white snow. Even 4 of them when riding a dark paved road or path. They are only just acceptable.
@ for a few years I commuted by bike using a 32 mm studded winter tire Not much snow on my commute into the city because the roads get plowed quickly after the snow. Ice was always the issue.
Funny thing about bike light is that where you ride makes a huge difference. The lights I use to trail ride are almost useless when riding on a beach on a cloud covered night
How fast do you can ride with fat tyre's?
This ride I averaged 14.9 km/h.