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CatEye Bike Head Light HL-EL500 by Cateye Title: CatEye Bike Head Light HL-EL500

Purchase Item

Manufacturer: Cateye
List Price: $49.99
Our Price:

Features:
  • 30hr runtime
  • waterproof to 100ft.
Customer Reviews:
CatEye Bike Head Light HL-EL500 by Cateye

Great light to be seen, not to see with

The CatEye HL-EL500 has great battery life with 4 AA alkaline batteries. It is easy to mount on a bike handlebar. The on/off switch (keep your pants on, there is no "flashing" mode) is nice because it operates with a magnet through the light's case -- contributing to waterproofness. However, I've noticed it is not too hard for the light switch to be activated when I throw it in a bag. The HL-EL500 is a great light for being seen by auto drivers. I like how there are holes on the side of the light's body for the light bulb to shine through (for side visibility). However, as many other reviews have suggested, it's not bright enough to provide enough see-the-road light between streetlights. On rainy nights, it's practically useless for seeing where I'm going. Re: Durability -- I dropped this light once, and it caused small cracks on the sides, where the silver LED reflector housing screws into the black battery housing. As a result the light didn't work without a bunch of duct tape pressing the two light parts together. I told CatEye about the problem and they had me send the light in -- and mailed me back the newer version of the light, the HL-EL530. The EL530 has a brighter LED, but it wasn't *that* much brighter. I have been considering a brighter light, with a rechargeable battery (such as the CatEye Double Shot HL-EL710RC), but they are generally pretty expensive and have unwieldy external batteries. Side note: CatEye's U.S. customer service, located in Boulder, Colorado, is great.
CatEye Bike Head Light HL-EL500 by Cateye

Good light for casual use or back-up

I've been using this light for a couple of seasons now and it has held up well. Amazingly bright for a single led for about the first 4 hours with new batteries, usable light for several more. I run a Light and Motion Li-ion Logic Solo as my main light with this one for back-up in case the Logic's battery dies because I forgot to charge it or the bulb fails. Makes a great around the house flash light that fits in your pocket for on the go.
CatEye Bike Head Light HL-EL500 by Cateye

Brighter than most cheap lights, still too dim, still too fragile

I went away to college in a city where bicycling is ubiquitous and there is little in the way of street lights due to light pollution concerns. Since I figured I'd have a lot of late night classes and I wasn't willing to spend lots of money on some expensive rechargeable system, I went with this because this was the brightest AA light in the bike shop I went to. I quickly learned that this light was inadequate for riding down a street with no lights at night, but oh well. One day, I accidentally knocked this light off my desk and it fell about 3 feet to the ground, which was covered with carpet. The part where the head screws into the body was cracked and the entire thing was rendered useless. I went and bought a replacement EL500, which fell victim to the same thing a few months later. This thing really isn't that durable at all.

I later discovered that you can get a whole lot more bang for your buck if you get one of those new Cree LED flashlights from China. I'm currently using a Fenix L2D CE Q5 premium 2xAA flashlight that is WAYYYYY brighter than this, throws much further, costs about the same, and is quite rugged. Don't waste your money on this (or any dedicated plastic bike light) and go the LED flashlight route instead.
CatEye Bike Head Light HL-EL500 by Cateye

Good light, but not terribly bright

It is good to use in dark areas but in semi dark places it is not great but OK (for instance a street with some lamps here and there). Pretty easy to mount.
CatEye Bike Head Light HL-EL500 by Cateye

Very good overall

I think for a battery powered headlight, this one is one of the best. But I believe the useful run time to be exaggerated. It may indeed last 30 hours and continue putting out light, but in my experience once the batteries have reached about 8 hours, the light output drops enough that it becomes pretty hard to see by. So I'd say that if you're just using it to be seen by cars when riding at night, then you probably can get 30 hours out of it. But if you actually need it to illuminate the road, then 8 hours is probably about the maximum use you'll get out of the EL500 before needing to replace the AA batteries.

With fresh batteries, I've found it to have enough light to ride on country roads with potholes, roads with absolutely no street light. It's probably pushing it to ride over about 15mph in those conditions, however. To ride faster, safely, I believe you'd need to add another EL500 or one of the much more powerful (and expensive) rechargable halogen lights.

As of this writing, Cateye has released the EL530 which claims to be 50% brighter. That may be the way to go unless you can get a super deal on the EL500.

This light is also probably useful for people who have a rechargable halogen but need a backup light, since most of the rechargables have run times not much over 3 or 4 hours. The EL500 would be very good for that purpose.

Overall, a good product.
CatEye Bike Head Light HL-EL500 by Cateye

Product Description

Power Opticube. CatEye's latest LED light sets new standards in brightness. At over 1000 candelpower, it is more than twice as bright as the nearest competitor with the same LED bulb. This is made possible with CatEye's exclusive Opticube lens technology. The Power Opticube offers 30 hours of headlight-quality run time on 4 AA batteries. It features an innovative magnetic switch and is highly water resistant. Side visibility and tool-free bracket make this simply the best and brightest LED light available.

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