lexina
Enlightened
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2005
- Messages
- 782
Quite a number of CPFers have this bike clamp:
http://www.dealextreme.com/details.dx/sku.792
While the design is innovative, many of us soon found out that the clamping mechanism was too fragile to be of any real practical use. The following steps show how you can combine this clamp with a common Cateye clamp to come up with a stronger and more useful generic flashlight clamp.
This is what you need:-
a Cateye HL500-II and the DX clamp

First, remove the clamping part from the base of the light:-

Next, separate the DX clamp into its 2 halves by prying off the rubber covers (a flat-blade screwdriver helps) and removing the screw. Discard the top half (shown on the left in the photo) as this is the weak link:-

Finally, connect the remaining (bottom) half of the DX clamp to the Cateye clamp using the Cateye bolt and a suitable-sized nut. The result is as follows:-

Bottom view:-

Fully assembled:-

http://www.dealextreme.com/details.dx/sku.792
While the design is innovative, many of us soon found out that the clamping mechanism was too fragile to be of any real practical use. The following steps show how you can combine this clamp with a common Cateye clamp to come up with a stronger and more useful generic flashlight clamp.
This is what you need:-
a Cateye HL500-II and the DX clamp

First, remove the clamping part from the base of the light:-

Next, separate the DX clamp into its 2 halves by prying off the rubber covers (a flat-blade screwdriver helps) and removing the screw. Discard the top half (shown on the left in the photo) as this is the weak link:-

Finally, connect the remaining (bottom) half of the DX clamp to the Cateye clamp using the Cateye bolt and a suitable-sized nut. The result is as follows:-

Bottom view:-

Fully assembled:-

Last edited: