At the back is a single rubber-covered button that doubles as a mode indicator and battery level warning with a combination of colours and flashes. The illumination helps you to find the button, too, although a semicircular cutout in the edge of the casing gives tactile feedback as well. The button's not the easiest to press with the sort of gloves you're likely to be wearing on a winter night, although you may find you rarely need to press it. If it turns out to be an issue, Exposure do a remote bar-mounted switch that plugs in to the Smart Port next to the main button.
The Smart Port is a rather clever socket. By day it's a charge socket (gold plated for efficient conductivity, no less). (As a side note, the supplied mains charger has a USB socket on it – the lead is detachable and can be plugged into a USB port on a PC, which saves you taking the whole charger with you in anticipation of a battery top-up.) By night, the Smart Port can have a bunch of accessories attached to it, either duration-extending piggyback batteries, the aforementioned remote switch, or additional tail lights.
While there are lights out there with higher claimed lumen ratings, the Diablo's narrow beam means that it's about the brightest you'll find if you're just looking straight ahead. Peripheral illumination is more limited, although you're not exactly blind to what's going on in the verges. While the beam pattern is symmetrical (rather than flat and wide like Exposure's own road-optimised Strada), the relative tightness of it means that it's not too hard to set the light at a position that gives good visibility without too much risk of dazzling oncoming drivers even with the prodigious output available on full power.
The Diablo switches on at full power, with a single press of the button stepping down through medium and low settings. There's a flash mode too, which is thoughtfully accessed via a long push and therefore sits outside the standard power setting cycle – from low a single press goes straight back to high. The flash mode itself is more of a pulse than a flash, as the light never goes out – it's a low-power beam with bursts of high. From flash, a single button push launches you back to a steady high.
Claimed run time from the 2600mAh li-ion battery is an hour on high, three on medium and ten on low, and I got real-world numbers close enough to that. An hour's not that long, but high power really is mighty – medium is ample for most purposes, you'll only need high for going properly fast on unlit roads. The low power mode is quite sturdy too, offering more oomph than full power on many compact commuter lights and adequate for sensible speeds.
While pure road riders will naturally look to the Exposure Strada, the versatile Diablo has a unique blend of power and compactness that certainly has its place, especially if you find yourself doing off-road riding at night too.
road.cc test report
Make and model: Exposure Diablo Mk 3 Front light - Helmet Kit
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?
Exposure says: "The Diablo is one of our most popular lights. This light is often handlebar mounted with road users or helmet mounted for the ultimate mtb helmet light."
Exposure has the Strada as a road-specific light, so the Diablo's more of a multi-purpose unit. It's lighter and more powerful than the Strada but without that light's flatter, dippable beam.
Tell us some more about the technical aspects of the light?
The Diablo uses three Cree XPG R5 LEDs with a total claimed output of 975 lumens. The emitters shine through a resin collimated lens. It's powered by a 2600mAh lithium-ion battery with claimed run times of 1, 3 and 10 hours on High, Medium and Low settings. Everything is housed inside a lightweight CNC-machined aluminium body.
Rate the light for quality of construction:
9/10
It's rather lovely, all swoops and curves and (obviously) strongly reminiscent of the circus toy for which it's named. Light, too, at 124g.
Rate the light for design and ease of use. How simple was the light to use?
8/10
The Diablo uses Exposure's familiar one-button interface -- double-click for on (it switches on in High mode), single click to cycle through Medium and Low back to High, long click for flashing, extra-long click to turn off. The button's not the most accessible with thick gloves, but it's easy to find thanks to a cutout in the light body and a light in the button itself (which doubles as a mode/battery level indicator).
Rate the light for the design and usability of the clamping system/s
7/10
The Diablo comes with a helmet mount, which works well but isn't ideal for road use. Exposure offers a choice of bar mounts. The plastic ziptie mount is cheap but you'll probably need something on the bars to stop it slipping, while the aluminium quick-release mount works well but is expensive (and relies on a rather fiddly bolt that tightens from underneath for added faffery).
Rate the light for waterproofing. How did it stand up to the elements?
9/10
Exposure describe the Diablo as "weatherproof". There's a substantial seal around the lens at the front, a cover for the charging socket and a silicone diaphragm on the button. No weather got in during testing, and there was plenty of weather about.
Rate the light for battery life. How long did it last? How long did it take to recharge?
7/10
The Diablo is something of a hybrid, with the same emitters as the chunky Toro light but the same battery as the slimline single-emitter Joystick. Run times are, therefore, limited -- you'll only get an hour of High. But Medium is ample for most purposes and that gives you three hours, so not too bad. The trade-off is compact size and low weight.
Rate the light for performance:
8/10
975 lumens is a lot, and unlike some inexpensive high-power lights the Diablo's beam is quite well-controlled too. It's still going to need care to avoid dazzling other road users, but the collimating lens does a good job of pointing most of the photons in a useful direction. The medium setting is ample for most riding and considerably more driver-friendly.
Rate the light for durability:
8/10
It's not packed up. Early Exposure lights had some teething troubles but the current generation seem pretty well sorted.
Rate the light for weight, if applicable:
9/10
Small battery = low weight. It's significantly heavier than a Joystick, a difference you can feel on a helmet mount. But you're probably not using the helmet mount on the road.
Rate the light for value:
8/10
You're clearly paying a premium for a light made in the UK in relatively small numbers, and there are plenty of cheaper lights around. The Diablo falls into the "reassuringly expensive" camp, though – the construction is a cut above most.
Tell us how the light performed overall when used for its designed purpose
It's not "road optimised" like Exposure's own Strada, but the Diablo's beam is sufficiently controlled to make it a potent road option that doubles as a very useful off-road helmet light if you're so inclined.
Tell us what you particularly liked about the light
Compact, low weight, self-contained, power, useful beam.
Tell us what you particularly disliked about the light
The control button could be more accessible and it'd be nice to get a bar mount in the package too.
Did you enjoy using the light? Yes
Would you consider buying the light? Yes, if I was after a self-contained multi-purpose light for road and MTB use.
Would you recommend the light to a friend? Yes
Anything further to say about the light in conclusion?
A great choice if you want a compact light that's useful for both road and MTB applications.
Age: 38 Height: 6ft Weight: 11st
I usually ride: Whichever's nearest the door My best bike is:
I've been riding for: Over 20 years I ride: Most days I would class myself as: Expert
I regularly do the following types of riding: cyclo cross, sportives, general fitness riding, fixed/singlespeed, mtb, Track; to the shops; with the kids
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7 comments
Is the battery replaceable?
It is still essentially a torch for £200 though....I can't justify that expense...
yeah, it was surprisingly effective though
I think the tester has mounted the it on the bar incorrectly. Interesting bodge of the helmet and handlebar mount. Not sure what is going on there
I think that's just Dave's standard studio bar for pics set-up.
Got the Mk2 myself. Best single bit of riding gear I own. Awesome.
Oh, and I disagree, helmet mounted is the way forwards for all riding styles as it allows to to direct the light exactly where you need it - round corners when off road and directly at car drivers to be sure they've seen you wen on the road.
Brilliant light.
Round corners off-road yes. I don't subscribe to the "point it at the driver" school of thought, though -- with a light this bright it's potentially hazardous. If they've not seen you with a light this powerful on your bars then blinding them with it ain't going to help