Eurobike 2015: Exposure

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Exposure had a range of new lights to show us, aimed at road and MTB, here are some details on the MTB specific ones. As well as small remotes that can control both a light on your helmet and one on the bars, they’ve also started putting sensor packages in their lights too. On descents, the lights will sense that you’ve sped up and are on rough ground, then automatically boost light output. Swanky!

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The Sixpack is the biggest and brightest in the range.
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While the Maxx D weighs a little less, it’s not as bright as its bigger brother. So, it’s simultaneously lighter, and not.
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A lovely, legible display on the back gives you your current setting and estimated runtime.
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The lights all have exposure and runtime charts etched onto them. The etching is crisp, my photography wasn’t.
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Shown here on a road light, one of their wireless handlebar remotes.
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Afraid I didn’t get the model name on this one, but it appears to be a revised Diablo or Equinox.
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Here’s the MTB remote.
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Shown at Eurobike in a prototype 3D printed mount!

 

Click to read ALL our Eurobike 2015 coverage so far

David started mountain biking in the 90’s, by which he means “Ineptly jumping a Saracen Kili Racer off anything available in a nearby industrial estate”. After growing up and living in some extremely flat places, David moved to Yorkshire specifically for the mountain biking. This felt like a horrible mistake at first, because the hills are so steep, but you get used to them pretty quickly. Previously, David trifled with road and BMX, but mountain bikes always won. He’s most at peace battering down a rough trail, quietly fixing everything that does to a bike, or trying to figure out if that one click of compression damping has made things marginally better or worse. The inept jumping continues to this day.

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