Much has been said of the Blaze since it became one of the first genuine success stories on Kickstarter. So as somebody who has been following the progression of the company ever since, I was excited to try out the finished product.
When you first receive the light, two things are clear: It is beautifully designed and it is sturdy. It has a claimed weight of 182 grams, but the road.cc scales of truth bring it in at 215, which is heavy, but comparable to the Moon X Power 720. However, it must be noted that this is not a light designed for night sportives, it is very much an urban safety light, where weight is of less importance.
The sturdiness comes from it feeling solid (heavy) and being machined with an aluminium casing with diamond cut edges and an etched, silver nickel control panel. The light itself, is well designed and there has clearly been thought put into how it functions on a practical level.
It has two buttons on the top, one which control the light sequencing (flashing 100 lumens, solid 100 or solid 300) and the other which controls the laser (solid or flashing). Sitting at 11.5cm by 4cm, with a 4.5cm height it is certainly not compact either, having looked around at the thousands of cyclists I see, I am hard pressed to remember a time where I have seen a larger one.
That being said, it is a good looking light and makes a nice change from the standard plastic shelled units that most people tend to use, so it is not an ugly thing that floats on top of your bars.
When in use, the light is fantastic. I tended to use the 100 lumen flashing sequence with the laser also on flash. The laser itself is a clear safety benefit, shining out to varying distances in front of the bike (depending on the angle that you set the bracket). I noticed cars identifying it and I had several conversations with people who asked me about it. One was a police officer who told me how he would have never have known that I was there without the laser.
Clearly much thought has been put into the design of the light, with battery life matching the quality of the build. Having used it on various settings for a few weeks, I have only needed to charge it once, so I can believe the claimed 13 hour battery life. I have also used it as a main light for illumination rather than visibility, and can safely say that it is the best forward facing light I have used.
However, all of the thought on the light itself seems to have been undermined by the bracket. I have unfortunately found multiple, issues whilst using it.
The first being the actual attachment to the bars themselves. It is as easy as Blaze claim, to use the Allen key provided to attach it to your bars and there are different thicknesses of rubber protectors designed to stop the metal bracket scratching the paint from your bars. These only attach at one end though, meaning that the underside of the bar need to be fiddly adjusted to make sure that the rubber sits properly.
On most bars, the only place to put lights is on a slight slope, so I have found that with the weight of the light, it has shifted slightly off the rubber and scratched my bars. Which when you have invested in a good quality bike, is not something that you want accessories to do.
Secondly, the light sits within a coupling in the bracket. This consists of a hollow bolt with one side machined flat to allow the light to clip below it. To keep this in place is a bolt facing upwards that is tightened with an Allen key. This is a design flaw, as the weight of light will naturally loosen the bolts meaning that I had one fall out onto the road within the first week of me using it.
It is further let down by having a heavy light on a clip that has little gripping space. I found out that this was not close to being enough when I went over a speed bump at 16mph, the beautifully sculpted light came loose from the clip and clattered along the road. The fact that it still works after skidding for a good 20 metres is testament to the build quality, but it is now dented, scratched and held in place by a zip tie to stop it happening again.
It costs £125, which is very expensive for a bike light. Admittedly the actual unit is very well made, but if I saw my £125 bike light skidding across the floor due to a badly designed bracket, I would not be impressed.
Blaze will undoubtedly improve in the future and the actual functionality of the light itself is good. Blaze told us that they have had similar feedback from early users of the light regarding the bracket and that they have made some changes to the exsisting clamp including to the coupling and the yaw bolt and they are currently prototyping new clamp designs.
This is essentially a great product if you ignore the bracket. It does what it is advertised to do with a bright and easily visibly laser that alerts other road users to your presence. I even found that it worked well on uneven or wet surfaces, which is one of the aspects that I was particularly sceptical about.
The fact that this promises so much and functions well after being zip tied to my bike, just makes it more annoying that it is badly let down by a bracket that does not belong on a £125 light and hopefully will be scrapped in the next edition.
Verdict
Great light, but badly let down by its bracket
road.cc test report
Make and model: Blaze Laserlight front light
Tell us what the light is for, and who it's aimed at. What do the manufacturers say about it? How does that compare to your own feelings about it?
The light is designed for urban cycling to allow for added visibility with a bright laser that projects an image in front of your bike.
Blaze claim that the core idea of the light is safety and the increased visibility on the road. In this regard it does what it should and does significantly increase visibility, minimising blind spots and allowing more peace of mind whilst cycling in busy urban environments.
Tell us some more about the technical aspects of the light?
- Laser projects 5-6 metres ahead of you
- Best in class 300 lumen bike light
- 13 hours of light each full charge
- USB chargeable
- 100% waterproof
- Retina-safe laser
- Smart-mode warns you if battery low
- Includes stylish handlebar mount and charger
- Simple one-hand release
Rate the light for quality of construction:
8/10
The light itself is very well constructed, quality material has been used throughout and this is evident with a robust and solid feeling light.
Rate the light for design and ease of use. How simple was the light to use?
9/10
Design of the light itself is good, very easy to use and had no problems with operation. It was very well designed
Rate the light for the design and usability of the clamping system/s
2/10
Not enough gripping room, bottom bolt falls out. The bracket really needs to be completely redesigned for the next iteration.
Rate the light for waterproofing. How did it stand up to the elements?
9/10
No problems with waterproofing or temperature fluctuations, even after being dented and scratched after falling from the bike.
Rate the light for battery life. How long did it last? How long did it take to recharge?
8/10
Recharges in around 3 hours from a laptop, which is fine whilst sitting in an office after using it to commute. Battery life is good and will easily be enough for most users.
Rate the light for performance:
8/10
The light illuminates well and the laser itself is clearly visible in a range of conditions.
Rate the light for durability:
8/10
Still working fine after taking a tumble that would have been the end of most lights.
Rate the light for weight, if applicable:
6/10
Heavy for a light, but this would never be found in a race or on a big hill climb.
Rate the light for value:
6/10
Very expensive for a light, the quality of the construction may be very high, but not sure whether £125 can be justified for a light.
Tell us how the light performed overall when used for its designed purpose
In terms of increasing visibility and lighting the way in urban environments, this light functions well. In terms of staying on your handlebars or not having the feeling of constantly needing to check if it is about to fall off, less so.
Tell us what you particularly liked about the light
The laser is a very strong selling point, combined with a very impressive illumination and battery life.
Tell us what you particularly disliked about the light
The bracket. This belongs nowhere near a light worth £125.
Did you enjoy using the light? Yes
Would you consider buying the light? No
Would you recommend the light to a friend? No
Anything further to say about the light in conclusion?
Put a new bracket on this and this would be a genuinely great product. As it stands at the moment, I would not want to have a £125 light that could fly off my handlebars as easily as this one did.
Age: 27 Height: 6 ft Weight:
I usually ride: Cannondale Supersix Evo 6 My best bike is:
I've been riding for: 5-10 years I ride: Every day I would class myself as: Experienced
I regularly do the following types of riding: commuting, club rides, sportives, general fitness riding,
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8 comments
Due to the badly designed mounting system my blaze laserlight has fallen off the bike many times, including twice in a very busy central London rush hour commute. The cyclist behind nearly fell over and it was easily a life or death situation. Needless to say after the drop every time the mounting steel pole just gets more bent and the light itself more damaged. The light itself doesn’t even work now as the internal wire seems to be detached somehow so the light turns itself off as soon as I hit a gentle bump on the road.
Bear in mind this is a bike light costing £125 and it broke gradually over ONE year I would definitely recommend anyone NOT to purchase this light. Blaze customer service certainly did not help by refusing to offer a replacement and instead try to blame the user for not mounting the light properly... completely unacceptable.
I wish they had just produced the laser symbol projector for a lower price, and not combined it with a normal light. I'd buy a symbol projector for perhaps 30 pounds. Already have a good expensive dynamo light so I'd really only be interested in the laser.
I don't think the laser projection will make much difference in terms of safety, so I wouldn't want to spend so much money on it. The symbol is invisible on wet roads and, when visible, there are only very limited situations where a bike symbol in front makes any difference at all. It won't stop close overtakes, and I can't imagine that drivers who pull out of side roads would notice the bike symbol if they don't see my front light.
As a driver, I find the symbol confusing. If I hadn't read this article, I probably wouldn't realise that the symbol is connected to an actual bike. It's all very nice on the dark empty roads in the adverts, but on a busy road it would just be another one of the hundreds of lights, reflexes from advert boards and other distractions. If it gets my attention at all, I might focus on the symbol trying to figure out what it means, and it would distract me from noticing the actual bike.
The only realistic situation - and why I would perhaps pay 30 pounds - is on shared paths; it can alert pedestrians when you approach; a bell often has disadvantages (some people find it aggressive, others don't hear it at all). It could be a way to reduce conflicts on shared paths, at least for cyclists who generally try to be courteous.
I wasn't looking to purchase one of these due to the big price tag, but found one for half the RRP. Can't say I've had any problems with the bracket, the laser projection is a bit of a novelty thing (it can actually be pretty distracting) but the light is pretty decent and the construction and design of the unit is very nice. The new black one looks good too.
Had one since they first came out. Personally never had an issue with the first bracket coming loose, and Blaze did ship a modified one free of charge. I love the look + feel of the light but yes its heavy and an expensive bit of kit for what it does. I've had it as my secondary light on my commute bike all year and its never come off or came near to coming off in a lot of riding. It could benefit from a simple clip arrangement with a bit of cord to hold it on if it it did come loose (my front camera has this). I don't like the charging cable ... why not use a standard USB ? Making the socket waterproof is easy. I don't like the mount much either. I find the lazer mainly a gimmick and it doesn't work well in the wet or under streetlights - so I rarely turn that on. I also find the image is blurred and shaky. It is quite good, however, if you are on a shared use path as pedestrians see the bike shape even when they have earphones in. I usually only have the Blaze on in flash mode as a secondary running light most days. Am I happy I kick-started it? - Yep. Would I buy it at £125? - Nope.
I reviewed the light when I got one (I was one of the backers of the original Kickstarter) and found the bracket to be rubbish.
http://humancyclist.blogspot.com/2014/02/blaze-bike-light-is-here-but-it...
Not specifically about this light, more about headlights in general.
Last night, I drove (yes, I drive as well as cycling) along Aston Lane, in front of a rider whose headlight was angled upwards so that it shone directly into my rear view mirror (in a Xsara Picasso). Apart from being anti-social, this must have meant he could not see the road surface in front of him which is a very risky situation in Birmingham.
There's a very in-depth review including many shots in real-world use courtesy @beztweets here: http://mashing53.wordpress.com/2014/11/26/gunpowder-gelatine-cycle-light...
Basically it seems to be a bucketful of meh. For £125 there are many brighter, better-mounted lights out there. The laser is a gimmick at best, and - as Bez finds - basically disappears in the wet (see below blatantly lifted image from Bez's site - Property is theft dude! ). This is yet another seemingly workable 'safety' device that is impossible to prove works. I'm sure that having spunked £125 on it, owners will acutely recall and wax lyrical about the 1 in 100 cars they think gave them more space because of the laser image.
Screenshot 2014-12-19 08.05.24.png
I have one of these, and find the bracket to be fine - it's never caused me problems.
But the laser concept sadly doesn't really work in highly trafficked areas - it's completely overwhelmed by car and street lights on my London commute. To the extent that I don't bother switching it on any more.