Curtain Rail Tri LED

znomit

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Aug 1, 2007
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Look what I found.
TriMTB1.jpg


Its a curtain rail.

Its a little to narrow to fit leds inside, unless you do a little grinding. 17mm stars from Cutter need a little shaved off with the grinder. Q5s because they didn't have R2s last week. Boo. :( But my thursday order arrived on tuesday. :thumbsup:

Its a little too short to fit an optic in, unless you get some of those tiny little polymer optics. Its a perfect fit. About a mm on the sides and the top. Looks like it was made for it. I have found two almost identical rails, so I think its a standard sizing. Probably you can find end caps too. I haven't looked.

TriMTB2.jpg


Three is a good number. Two wide and one narrow optic for the MTB.
File some curves to let the light out a little. A little glowinc glow in the dark magic paint on the inside too.
TriMTB6.jpg


Might get a bit warm in there. How about some air scoops on the side.
Took a few extra cuts and a little bending. The main body is only 6cm wide. Thats over 100lm/cm. I have about 4m of curtain rail. Anyone need a 40,000lm light? :twothumbs

TriMTB5.jpg


Add some exhaust holes in the back, and a hole for a mount. Forced air cooling should keep 12w under control. Cool running. One piece housing means no junctions keeping the ergs in. The Aluminium is 1mm so easy to cut and file.
TriMTB4.jpg


LEDs are sitting on thermal paste and glued in place with araldite. Holes drilled through the mounting plate for the wires at each end. I had to cut away some of the optic mounts to solder in the wires. These optics need the stars with 6 pads. DX or Kai do Q5s on tiny stars which would eliminate the grinding step.
Need to seal up the front, sides and the gaps in the scoops and wire into my old bflex/battery then I'm out on the trails again. More pics when finished.

New bflex is waiting for inspiration for a mount. :poke: Anybody have any ideas?

Oh, and I have another housing made for dual helmet light. Might finish that this weekend. Its something different again. :whistle:

Top marks for Cutter, Taskled and glowinc. All delivering to NZ in under a week.
 

MMACH 5

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Sep 14, 2006
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Will the bflex fit into the area behind the lights? Not in the groove, but in the more "enclosed" section of the rail.

It looks awesome. Good work, there.
 

znomit

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Will the bflex fit into the area behind the lights? Not in the groove, but in the more "enclosed" section of the rail.

No, its only 13x16mm. Bflex is an inch wide. Also putting anything in there would ruin the forced cooling.
 

HEY HEY ITS HENDO

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Oct 15, 2005
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Scunthorpe, UK
Hey Timmo, the ram air cooling is a neat idea !! ....
the bflex is a buck driver so maybe it wont really need a heatsink/cooling type mount?
make a tiny plastic enclosure for it.....recycle/chop up a cd case or the the like
polystyrene cement should make for a good solvent welded join
....
timmoxs2.jpg
 

znomit

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My last two builds the bflex lived in a little plastic box on the stem, with mom button and status led on the top. Its fine without cooling. It worked well. A nice big button I could quickly push once or twice to get the desired level.
The new bflex UI required holding the button down to drop the power level through the five stages, means I need to hold it for a few seconds... longer than I would like to ride one handed.
I have a nice led lit mom button so might waterproof that and make a remote button/led combo for the bars.
 

Mash

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Dec 18, 2006
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378
Good find!
I am currently playing with a 2 metre long extruded aluminium bar, from a back panel of an office desk, it is kind of a double U closed profile. With a bit of cutting it makes a perfect mounting solution.
Also, in my quest, I realised picture framers are probably one of the best places to get aluminum pieces, with a suitable profiles which provide good mounting options, and large surface areas. Also look at window manufacures.
 

znomit

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Light head is up and running, wired into my old bflex.

The ends I sealed up with carbon. When dry I back filled it with sellys "knead it" which is a polymer metal putty. Its good stuff, sets in 5 min and you can file it smooth. I also filled in the gaps where the scoops meet the main housing.
Not sure what the plastic on the front is. Its glued on and the whole unit should be waterproof. I think I'll stick a replaceable layer of mylar over it for protection.

Its about as wide as the front tyre. Its might end up living under the stem if I can find a mount.
TriMTB7.jpg


TriMTB8.jpg


Exhaust holes out the back.
TriMTB9.jpg


Had my first ride last night, very happy with it. Heat isn't a problem, pedaled for a few km on the flats at a sedate 15kph and it wasn't hot, think the scoops are working well.
Light output is good, its up from the 440 on my last MTB light, not as wide though. Its very low so every pebble casts a shadow. A few fast downhills around 45kph no problems.

I have the parts ready for the new bflex housing, but first I'll do a helmet light and I have a SSC P7 on the way for another little light :devil:
 

dom

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Dec 22, 2006
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That is VERY,VERY COOL.
If you painted it black it'd look cooler still.

Brilliant thinking to get such a compact housing.
Love that airfow bit:cool:

Cheers
Dom
 

msxtr

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Jan 2, 2007
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znomit, why have you perforated the bridge of your fork???? :eek::eek: Could are very, very dangerous for your teeth :sick2:

By the way, nice light :cool:

Greetings - Saludos
 
Last edited:

Jarl

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Jan 11, 2007
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msxtr: Some forks come with holes in them- the idea being you can shove your excess cable from your V brakes through them to keep it out of the way. What with V brakes redundant, the holes are getting more and more uncommon.

Interesting mounting it on the fork bridge. I find the lower you mount something, the better for riding, but never thought of mounting there. That said, my mudguards would probably get in the way :(

I'm surprised you put a big wodge of plastic in front- that'd cut down on light transmission somewhat, I would have thought?

Awesome design, needless to say!
 

znomit

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Msxtr...I don't drill into important bits...The hole is there for mudguard mounting I think. My teeth are safe :D

Dom, anodising would be the best bet, don't know about how much the paint would insulate. The anodising guy here has moved on and all that acid scares me. :eek:

Jarl
Light was built with stuff I had lying around. Previously to let the light out I've used paper thin mylar from OHP sheets, I wanted something super tough to stand up to a bit of bush bashing, this stuff did the trick!
I dont know if the losses from having it thicker are that significant, a lot of losses are getting the light into and out of the material. Its 750 odd lm out of the leds so I think I have a few to spare anyhow! :cool:
 

znomit

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Light finished!

A small plastic box holds the bflex and momentary switch. The box...one end of base rounded to sit nicely on the stem, the other end I cut a channel up to sit around one of the handle bar clamp bolts. Perfect fit. The lid of the box is pushed up inside and the wires exit through holes in it. Wrapped tape over it and under the stem, held nice and firm.

A RGB led on the top has a green power led and a red status led. Not sure why I wanted a power on LED, maybe to remind me to ride my bike? its wired through a 500k resistor so only draws 0.5mA. The status LED is much brighter though I have a resistor in there too. I found direct driving it from the bflex stat pin is way too bright.

Switch is dustproof and waterproof, LED is glued to the inside of the box to seal the hole, and after a few field tests I will seal up the underside of the box.
Total weight is 106gm, lighthead is only 58gm. Battery and holder add 400odd!

TriMTB10.jpg


I picked up a couple of cateye blinky mounts to hang it under the handlebar stem. Light is easily adjustable for angle. Being sprung now it should be more durable, and no shadow from the front tyre.

TriMTB11.jpg


TriMTB12.jpg


The only problem is the cables run in front casting shadows, I will get them shortened to pull them out of the way (makes a big difference with lights this small!).
Planning a 5hr ride one evening this week to test things.
 

Jarl

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Are you running at 1000ma? If so, I'd advise dropping to 700 or 800- with a buckpuck, I can switch between 800 and 1000ma easily, with no dark flash while it switches, and I'm hard pressed to see any increase in brightness. However, the extra battery life is definitely noticeable!
 

znomit

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Are you running at 1000ma? If so, I'd advise dropping to 700 or 800- with a buckpuck, I can switch between 800 and 1000ma easily, with no dark flash while it switches, and I'm hard pressed to see any increase in brightness. However, the extra battery life is definitely noticeable!

Jarl its running off a bflex. Thats a microprocessor controlled buck driver from taskled. Five levels from 1A down to less than 100mA, roughly halving each step. Level selectable on the go at the touch of a button, and the LED tells me when my battery is half full(blinking) and near empty (steady).

Yes the difference between between 1A and 750 isn't huge light wise but battery run times drop significantly at 1A, and heat becomes more of an issue if there is no airflow. Note this thing is designed around only running on high while riding, and works very well... but it really cooks in the lab without airflow. Point a small cpu fan at it and things cool down so you dont actually need a lot of airflow for sufficient cooling.
I'll probably set it to 750mA max which will give me 600lm for downhills, 330 for flats and 180 or less for those long slow uphills or when riding through town.
 

GeeTeeOhh

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Feb 17, 2008
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:thumbsup: Very cool with the minimalist design and RAM AIR scoops. (GTO's have ram air too! but my '66 doesn't)

What is it with the mounts? Seems to be the last thing to build and one of the most difficult. I finally made an aluminum platform with 3M Dual Lock fasteners adhered, so I can quickly take on and off all of the lights I am currently experimenting with (all two of them...).

I really like the QR mount from Exposure Lights, but a bit expensive for me in the US. It looks to be pretty easy to use, and the QR is a must for me.

Nice Light!
 

znomit

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Aug 1, 2007
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New Zealand
...
What is it with the mounts? Seems to be the last thing to build and one of the most difficult. I finally made an aluminum platform with 3M Dual Lock fasteners adhered, so I can quickly take on and off all of the lights I am currently experimenting with (all two of them...).

I really like the QR mount from Exposure Lights, but a bit expensive for me in the US. It looks to be pretty easy to use, and the QR is a must for me.
...

Building the lighthead is easy as you are not constrained, but integrating with the bike is difficult. My dyno light has been a big pita as the original mount wasn't up to it, but the light was designed around it.

For QR Dom has a good idea of using the standard cateye brackets and spacers. I don't need QR but have done lights that mount directly to the cateye handlebar bracket, they are good quality.

Anyhoo
This is my next curtain rail light awaiting assembly.
I wanted something to replace my minewtx2 helmet light(which is a fantastic light).

dual1.jpg


Dual LED light.
Velcro fastening to helmet.
Q5s with polymer optics.
One narrow 350mA 100lm.
One wide 500mA 140lm.
Independently switched.
Independent micropuck drivers and batteries. 2xAA x2 in jersey pocket for 2+hrs run time(or Ds for all nighters).
Integrated tail lights if I can squeeze the LEDs in the back.

Coming together nicely. Its tight but everything fits in behind the LEDs.
 
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