Had the 1300 gsa for about a month now - and straight away I missed the old christmas tree look of the 1250gsa that I traded in.
Went aux lights shopping - and whilst I love the look of motolights (bit less so the Denali d7pro), a thousand quid all in was a bit of a stretch after just paying for the bike.
Stumbled on the CoLight D09 pro - looks a lot like the motolight, has the amber ring round the outside & seperate cricuits for diffuse low beam / focussed high beam. A triple circuit light.
Bought the hex ezcan to control it all (£200) and bought the colight D09 pro lights (£115) with denali brackets (£80) - so all in for £400.
Taken me a few days to fit, spending an hour, then overnight to figure out next steps etc - but with everything delivered on Wednesday this week, it's now Saturday & everything is done.
Thoughts?
Fitting is simple, but takes longer than you think. Had to take apart most of the back end of the bike to fit the ezcan - nothing difficult - just took an hour or so.
The lights same story - the colights come with a harness & waterproof cables - you just cut off the primary wire to each light & then make up new ends to connect to the ezcan. I mounted on the crashbars, and wire routing was not the menace I was expecting - nice easy route through with existing wiring bundle, pops out through a hole where the seat adjusters are at the base of the tank.
Configured as Amber ring DRLs (on all the time the engine is on), doubling up as indicators. Diffuse beam & high beam aligned with the main lights on the bike. This does use all 4 hex ezcan circuits, but I have no immediate plans to add anything else, so all good.
Fit & finish of the colights seems identical to the motolights my pal has - and with the ezcan you have full individual control of all 3 functions - brilliant.
They are incredibly bright at full whack - absolutely love them.
Other than perhaps half an hour less hassle with the denalis / motolights when fitting, I see no difference at all.
Whilst £400 isn't cheap, it feels a lot better than £1000! 100% recommend these to anyone thinking of adding aux lights.
Went aux lights shopping - and whilst I love the look of motolights (bit less so the Denali d7pro), a thousand quid all in was a bit of a stretch after just paying for the bike.
Stumbled on the CoLight D09 pro - looks a lot like the motolight, has the amber ring round the outside & seperate cricuits for diffuse low beam / focussed high beam. A triple circuit light.
Bought the hex ezcan to control it all (£200) and bought the colight D09 pro lights (£115) with denali brackets (£80) - so all in for £400.
Taken me a few days to fit, spending an hour, then overnight to figure out next steps etc - but with everything delivered on Wednesday this week, it's now Saturday & everything is done.
Thoughts?
Fitting is simple, but takes longer than you think. Had to take apart most of the back end of the bike to fit the ezcan - nothing difficult - just took an hour or so.
The lights same story - the colights come with a harness & waterproof cables - you just cut off the primary wire to each light & then make up new ends to connect to the ezcan. I mounted on the crashbars, and wire routing was not the menace I was expecting - nice easy route through with existing wiring bundle, pops out through a hole where the seat adjusters are at the base of the tank.
Configured as Amber ring DRLs (on all the time the engine is on), doubling up as indicators. Diffuse beam & high beam aligned with the main lights on the bike. This does use all 4 hex ezcan circuits, but I have no immediate plans to add anything else, so all good.
Fit & finish of the colights seems identical to the motolights my pal has - and with the ezcan you have full individual control of all 3 functions - brilliant.
They are incredibly bright at full whack - absolutely love them.
Other than perhaps half an hour less hassle with the denalis / motolights when fitting, I see no difference at all.
Whilst £400 isn't cheap, it feels a lot better than £1000! 100% recommend these to anyone thinking of adding aux lights.
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