Anyone using Custom Dynamics TruBeam?
#11
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Tallahassee, Florida
Posts: 12,363
Received 2,199 Likes
on
1,685 Posts
#12
Although I'm sure it's a great product, I couldn't justify the expense of the TruBeam.
I decided to try a Moons MC. If anyone is hesitant, don't be! I couldn't be happier with the fit and functionality. Just spent a few days at Laconia, riding the dark NH back roads at night. The light was 100X better than stock, and both low and high beams worked great and threw a nice pattern of light.
I decided to try a Moons MC. If anyone is hesitant, don't be! I couldn't be happier with the fit and functionality. Just spent a few days at Laconia, riding the dark NH back roads at night. The light was 100X better than stock, and both low and high beams worked great and threw a nice pattern of light.
#15
Truebeam pattern
I notice the Truebeam on low throws out 2 different light patterns. One is a wide short pattern that illuminates the area about 10' directly in front of the bike. The second pattern is a bright but very narrow verticle pattern which illuminates much further out in front. Of course on the high beam, it's like an aircraft landing light...tremendous! But on low beam, it doesn't give me sufficient coverage to see safely ahead, as there is a dark gap between the 2 patterns. Am I doing something wrong? I've got that higher narrow pattern adjusted to top out at about top of a cars trunk at about 30'. Anyone else notice this?
#16
#17
Although I don't have any experience with the Truebeam, I bought a knock off daymaker from Amazon. I couldn't justify spending $100s on a headlight. I can't believe how good the quality is and how bright it is. My brother has an actual daymaker on his Dyna and we compared side by side. My knockoff is slightly brighter than his more expensive daymaker! My advice is to skip out on paying way too much money for a headlight. LEDs are so cheap now that the cost to make the headlights are next to nothing. You are pretty much just paying an extra $200 or $300 just for a name
#19
JW Speaker headlight
I have a few CD products and they’re awesome. LEDs are cheap, but you can’t forget about the development costs associated with implementing a headlamp system. It’s not just a bulb, or light-emitting diode in this case, it’s a complex arrangement of spectrums, designed after years of trial and error, while riding both day & night. In the case of JW Speaker, it’s on a whole other level. It makes night riding barely discernible from day riding, aims the light where you are turning, and, for those of us that loved Knight Rider, it has this cool initialization sequence, when the killswitch is disengaged. the low-beam is designed to cut-off before it blinds oncoming drivers, which is good as I don’t need to daze people into my lane. It’s water-proof, fog-proof, vibration-proof, engineered to not interfere with radio signals, and it throws light like Gandalf is sitting on your handlebars with his staff! (See Lord Of The Rings for the reference). I can’t provide a first-hand endorsement for CD headlamp, as I’ve no experience with them yet, but the CD hardware I do have is fantastic and built to last. ~$500 might seem steep for a headlight, but it pales in comparison to hospital bills and your bike doing it’s best impression of a pretzel!
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
TravelingTall
Harley Davidson Videos
0
05-03-2019 09:37 PM
AmericanMuscle
General Harley Davidson Chat
0
08-30-2012 11:38 AM
dh2683
General Harley Davidson Chat
3
02-19-2012 07:54 PM