Some experience or advice required please!
I'm just about finished with a project to restore/renew a 1989 British Eagle Touristique for light touring (And Lejog next year). Really happy with how the bike has come out - it is silent and responsive but obviously no lightweight - a neat trick it pulls of - and it makes me really enjoy riding it.
I want to fit a good dynamo light set but cannot decide whether to go for a dynohub or a (high quality) bottle dynamo. I would mount the dynamo on the LHS rear chainstay.
I like the elegance of the installed dynohub but it means 'ruining/rebuilding' a perfectly good set of wheels. On the other hand a bottle dynamo can be 'off' with zero drag when not needed. For me that will be 90% of the time as the lights are for bad weather and when I get caught out - I am not planning to ride in the dark very often.
I would either go for a shimano DH-3N80 hub or a Nordlicht bottle dynamo.
Any experience out there that can help me make the decision please?
Here are a couple of images of the bike as it stands now after its restoration was completed last week.
I'm just about finished with a project to restore/renew a 1989 British Eagle Touristique for light touring (And Lejog next year). Really happy with how the bike has come out - it is silent and responsive but obviously no lightweight - a neat trick it pulls of - and it makes me really enjoy riding it.
I want to fit a good dynamo light set but cannot decide whether to go for a dynohub or a (high quality) bottle dynamo. I would mount the dynamo on the LHS rear chainstay.
I like the elegance of the installed dynohub but it means 'ruining/rebuilding' a perfectly good set of wheels. On the other hand a bottle dynamo can be 'off' with zero drag when not needed. For me that will be 90% of the time as the lights are for bad weather and when I get caught out - I am not planning to ride in the dark very often.
I would either go for a shimano DH-3N80 hub or a Nordlicht bottle dynamo.
Any experience out there that can help me make the decision please?
Here are a couple of images of the bike as it stands now after its restoration was completed last week.