This is wild. WILD. I really enjoyed reading it, and I was panicking, right 
there with you! You should write them a product review.
L

On Monday, March 25, 2024 at 8:41:26 PM UTC-4 divis...@gmail.com wrote:

> Essentially, this was what Busch & Muller did with the Luxos U, which 
> everyone but me seems to have disliked. It's one of the heaviest LED 
> headlights of the last 15 years, specifically because there's a lithium 
> battery inside the headlight enclosure. The dynamo charges up the battery, 
> and then the battery allows a steady-level filtered power to the USB device 
> and (I believe) both the head and tail lights. The headlight's stand light 
> definitely comes off the internal battery, rather than from a capacitor; 
> when I come into the house with my headlight on and wander away without 
> switching it pff, it will sometimes stay lit for a few hours - which I 
> often only notice when I'm switching off all the ceiling lights as I go to 
> bed.
>
> "Hey! That damn headlight's still on!"
>
> The steady power supply eliminates the risk of damage to USB-chargeable 
> computerish devices, or at least reduces the risk. It's the same as any 
> other USB storage battery, although it's smaller than most external 
> charging bricks.
>
> I got a lot of experience using the charger in February-April 2020, just 
> before and going into the pandemic. The Bay Area had a horrendous windstorm 
> on February 9, with winds approaching 70 MPH near the Bay and 110-120 on 
> the crest of the Berkeley Hills. Among other damage at my house (two large 
> branches torn off a giant incense cedar in my backyard which came crashing 
> down on my neighbor's elaborately maintained garden, just as my neighbor 
> and his wife were looking out the back window to see what the storm was 
> doing - resulting in nearly a year of financial drama), the storm made the 
> city-owned street tree in my parking strip sway wildly, finally ripping the 
> power drop cable from PG&E out of my wall, cutting off all electricity. 
> After PG&E capped the live line and told me that the location of the break 
> meant that it was my financial responsibility to fix, I restored the 
> connection and then got into a two-month pissing match with PG&E (every 
> Northern Californian's most hated utility) before they reconnected it after 
> I pulled strings with then-Berkeley City Councilmember Kate Harrison, who 
> called up a midlevel exec at the utility and did a little yelling. My power 
> was restarted before the end of that day.
>
> In the meantime, my life sort of stopped. I was roaming around the city 
> with power strips, charging bricks, and chargers for a laptop and phone 
> trying to collect enough juice each day from libraries and cafes to limp 
> through the night and do it all again the next day. The generator+USB 
> charger on the Luxos U came into play, both to incrementally recharge my 
> phone and to charge charger bricks, which I could then use to recharge 
> other gadgets. The experience taught me a lot of survivalist skills, and it 
> also taught me where there are uncontrolled publicly accessible wall 
> sockets and WiFi (East Bay tidbit: There are tons of open AC outlets on 
> Lower Sproul Plaza at UC Berkeley, presumably for prospective 
> students/parents on campus tours, and the open WiFi network from the ASUC 
> student union is crazy fast. A lot of the Telegraph Avenue street people 
> take advantage of what's essentially a public resource).
>
> To the best of my knowledge, no current USB-charger headlight includes an 
> internal battery. This makes sense; the extra weight of the Luxos U was a 
> factor in breaking two front mounting bolts for MAFAC centerpulls, as I had 
> mounted the headlight at the end of one of those little TA handlebar bag 
> racks that attach to the mounting bolt and the pivot bolts of MAFAC brakes. 
> I believe the extra weight plus the vibration of the rack while moving 
> stressed weak points in the 50-70 year old brake mounting bolt that opened 
> up micro-cracks that wouldn't have expanded much without the stress.
>
> If you're really nervous about the risk of an irregular power supply to 
> recharge sensitive gadgets, then using the charger to recharge a brick is a 
> natural, especially if you're using a front rack and/or front/handlebar 
> bag: Stick the brick in the bag (or strap it to the rack), run an 
> appropriate cable from the charger to the brick, and ride on. Then you can 
> use the brick to charge whatever USB thing you've got once you're off the 
> bike.
>
> Peter "unwilling survivalist" Adler
> Berkeley, California
>
>
> On Friday, March 22, 2024 at 9:08:28 PM UTC-7 Bicycle Belle Ding Ding! 
> wrote:
>
> I’m glad everyone knows all these things and then shares because I’m in 
> need of it. I didn’t know you could damage your phone charging it in dyno. 
> Will this be true even of the German master engineers at Schmidt when their 
> new edelux hits the market? They say it charges 10 volts… Max, is that a 
> better thing?
>
> https://nabendynamo.de/en/new-edelux-headlight-with-high-beam-function-2/
>
> I wouldn’t be opposed to the charging brick, either; I just hadn’t thought 
> of it.
>
>

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