04-23-2022, 11:51 AM
During daylight hours, a yellow or amber lens is often more conspicuous against a high contrast environment w/sun and shadow. At night, brightness usually is the primary consideration.
If considering multiple sets of lights (I'm looking to get a set of bigger/brighter driving lights and a set of smaller amber running/fog lights. Clearwater and Denali hook up to the bike's electronics so that different pairs of lights can be paired with different functions. Having a set of amber secondary lights that flash with a turn signal is very effective IMO, and as most accidents occur at intersections and turns I think that's a good thing. Take a look at the Denali DMs if you haven't already.
If considering multiple sets of lights (I'm looking to get a set of bigger/brighter driving lights and a set of smaller amber running/fog lights. Clearwater and Denali hook up to the bike's electronics so that different pairs of lights can be paired with different functions. Having a set of amber secondary lights that flash with a turn signal is very effective IMO, and as most accidents occur at intersections and turns I think that's a good thing. Take a look at the Denali DMs if you haven't already.
Craig
'20 R1250RS
Previous: '21 R1250RS, '03 K1200RS, '01 R1100RS, '83 R800
'20 R1250RS
Previous: '21 R1250RS, '03 K1200RS, '01 R1100RS, '83 R800