On Friday, March 7, 2025 at 8:40:16 PM UTC-6 Matthew Williams wrote:

What’s the best practice for cutting excess headlight and taillight wire? 
How much extra “just in case” extra length should I leave? How have other 
people handled excess wire? As always, your experience, advice, and wisdom 
are welcomed and appreciated. 


A lot of this depends on your tolerance for "messiness". I received some 
criticism for my West Coast Sam because of the black zip ties on the olive 
green paint (slightly different issue) but I don't get too bothered by it.

Another important question - how handy are you with and equipped for 
cutting wires and attaching fasteners? And, of course, how likely is it you 
will want to move things to another bike, or change the setup of this bike?

If you're handy and equipped, and you have the bike and setup nailed, 
there's nothing as nice as perfect length wires run internally as much as 
possible. If you have a taillight wire running to the headlight, a 
beautifully made curl (wrapping the wire around a spoke) allows the wire to 
stretch and shrink back as the fork rotates.  A quick and easy alternative 
can be to stuff the extra wire up the steerer tube from under the fork 
crown, depending on what else is in there (brake bolt, fender daruma, ...). 
On Great Lakes Sam, which uses coaxial wiring that's a bit more tricky for 
attaching connectors, and because I want the whole setup to be removable, I 
just wrap the excess around the headlight mount. It's not pretty, but it's 
well hidden by the light and the handlebar bag. 

There was an occasion where I had to cut the wire for an Edelux and attach 
a longer one to it. Not ideal, but it can be done. So, while it's often 
better to leave some extra "just in case", it's not the end of the world if 
you decide you need a longer wire.

One great thing about coaxial wires is the connectors. Fiddly to attach, 
but they give you additional flexibility. For example, on Great Lakes Sam 
the hub is wired to the headlight via a connector, so I can change it so 
the hub is wired to a USB adapter. I can then plug a power bank into the 
headlight and still have lights while other stuff  is charging off the dyno.

Ted Durant
Milwaukee WI USA

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