This isn't Nihola specific, but Reelights are great lights for utility cycles, so here goes. (Also in two of the following photos, a Nihola is in the background!)
I have a lot of Reelight lights, the ones that go on racks ("cargo carrier", whatever) are especially good, as they are protected against damage. Both Niholas have had one of those for years, I suppose a whole decade now. There can be a little fiddling with spoke magnets, and the generator-cylinder can be pushed around by accident, but mostly things are great. Then they improved things. Not sure what year that happened, but in 2022 I got my first fancy new Reelight Nova.
The new generator goes by the rim, there are no spoke magnets, and the cable can be replaced. The replaceable cable especially sounds good, as I have personally ruined 2 or 3 Reelights by pulling out or otherwise damaging the cable. (In at least one case, destruction involved falling over on ice.)
Here we have the generator mostly installed. |
I had, in 2022, the need to equip a pre-teen bike for winter school commuting. I got a rear Reelight Nova for the cargo rack and installed it, zip-tied the cable like I should. It worked OK. I'm not so sure the light effect was better than the old models, but it was sufficient. It started out blinking and went to steady light. Could have blinked a bit more at low speed. The generator needed to be installed quite close to the rim, which is potentially problematic for the rear wheel in front-facing dropouts. The wheel can move if the nuts loosen, and it would take hardly any movement for the generator to rub on the rim. In practice, the kid was light enough, and I tightened the nuts enough, that the wheel stayed put. The generator was also not a problem when removing the wheel to change the tire, and was only rarely bumped into the rim. Overall not so bad.
It ended badly however, due to some series of events that only my kid knows.
This is how it went. |
One end of the cable is still in the light. |
I think I'll get a new cable for the light some day to get it back in service. I should point out that the cable exits the light housing sideways at an angle, which is less ideal than the old cable, which left the housing centered. The large plug probably required this change. In most cases this could be better, but specifically for the rear rack-mounted light, it exposed the cable to more risk. After leaving the light, the cable had to traverse an air gap, near the outside edge of the bike, before it could be tip-tied to the rack. This is the first time a rack-mounted Reelight has failed in this household.
Before that unfortunate event, it turned out that the inlaws had, for Xmas, bought a front version of this light, and found it didn't work at all for their needs. They wanted to illuminate a bit of where they were going, which was not even slightly in the cards. I scored that light, and on it went ... to replace a different front light that broke during a winter crash (or something).
Nice happy new front light (installed upside down for cable clearance). |
I have high hopes that the new front installation will last. For one thing, the light itself contains no battery and is therefore lightweight, and unlikely to get much of a shock if the bike should fall. But also I like the placement of the generator better than a rear installation, high and mostly out of the way (its at top of the wheel, just visible under the snow). The front wheel also has no need to move, so placement should be quite static.
The functionality as a light is pretty good, if your goal is to be seen, rather than to see. It provides a sharp noticeable light spot to any eye that points its general direction, because it doesn't focus light into a narrow beam. This works well for being seen out of the corner of an eye, I can confirm, and of course it always flips on automatically, being driven by the generator. Overall pretty good.
So that is a story about Reelight and a kid bike.
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