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  #1  
Old 10-21-2000, 01:29 PM
cat320 cat320 is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: eastern,Ma
Posts: 663
What does every one use for lighting.Brand and type?What about hideaway strobes anyone use them?
  #2  
Old 10-21-2000, 01:52 PM
Greenman2ooo Greenman2ooo is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Illinois
Posts: 173
Lighting

I have essentially the same question as CAT320. Magnetic strobes, what do you like? Also, do any of you have rear facing lights on a toggle switch or do you find you don't have much problem seeing with no auxillary backup lighting?

Can you mount rear facing lights on the underside of the bumper (or elsewhere) without making your truck look like a Columbus Day Parade float? Any ideas along these lines would be appreciated. Also, as far as the strobes, will the smaller, less powerful models be suffcient, or is the slightly larger magnetic "bar" style probably necessary?
  #3  
Old 10-21-2000, 02:18 PM
DYNA PLOW DYNA PLOW is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: northern wisconsin
Posts: 75
guys, i plow with a pickup and use the old fashion
revolving amber light- granted its not the one you get from walmart for 19.95 and plugs into the cig lighter. this is a good size light that is hard wired and mounted to a piece of pvc then mounted to my toolbox in the bed. i do not have any auxillary backup lights but i remove the tailgate in winter and install a gate made of 1x1 tubing and steel mesh so i can look out the back of the truck. would like some of those new fancy strobe lights but what i got works well and those strobes are e$pensive.
that is my input
dan
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  #4  
Old 10-21-2000, 05:14 PM
Aspen Snow Aspen Snow is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Northwest New Jersey
Posts: 117
We like the revolving light with the mirrors in them. AW Direct sells them. The use more power but are very noticable in the day and night time.
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  #5  
Old 10-21-2000, 06:13 PM
GeoffDiamond GeoffDiamond is offline
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Join Date: Dec 1999
Location: Maine
Posts: 1,575
Noval stobes, work very well, and are at a good price from aw direct.

I use those on my rear body lights for dump trucks, and there quad flash (18 jouls ?) strobes work great.

Whelen makes great lights bars. If you are going to buy a light bar i would go with a Whelen. Last year i started useing the whelen mini edge on pick ups, over the stanadrd 6" stobe i used to use.


Geoff
  #6  
Old 10-21-2000, 08:41 PM
SLC1 SLC1 is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Connecticut
Posts: 164
We use permenant mount strobe lights. We prefer to use PSE Brand strobes. You can buy them from AW Direct, they have many brands and styles to chose. The type we use are 8" tall and have a choice of single,triple or quad flash. And an automatic high/low intensity sensor. We usually have two stobes on each side of the dump or rack, welded on 1" pipe to the head board or cabshield. Our pickups we have one on the roof and hideaways in the rear lights, and on our loader we use a magnetic one. The reason we don't use the magnetics on the trucks is that a few years ago people were going around steeling them, all they had to do was cut the wire and take it right off the truck, and there goes $160.00 in two seconds, so we have all of the ones mounted right to the truck. Just My two cents
  #7  
Old 10-21-2000, 09:06 PM
slplow slplow is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Framingham,MA
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On my Dump, I have a Peco strobes mounted on each corner of the head board and two flood lights bolted onto the sander. On our pickups, I use a magnetic strobes for the roof and put two floods on the bumper, one on each corner. Works for me.

Unlike other states CT and NJ that have crazy laws about emergency lights, Massachusetts requires you to have emergency lighting for any plowing. You will get a ticket for not using them. No permits needed.
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  #8  
Old 10-21-2000, 09:17 PM
Alan Alan is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2000
Location: NW Vermont (Milton)
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We have homemade "headache racks", which incorporte a side rails as well, on our pickups. On the top of the rack there are "mouse ears" that stick up for tieing loads off. I made removable bars that clamp to the ears and hold our strobes so we can remove them in the summer. At the rear of the side rails are brackets for two auxiliary bakup lights. We use the rubber housing tractor headlights for that purpose. I wire them through a double throw switch and relay, they can operate either full time or in conjunction with the factory backup lights. I run the relay to keep current draw out of the factory switch. This way the only additional load on the factory switch/wiring is the trigger current for the relay. I have never figured hwo you can keep lights mounted under the bumper from getting wiped off on the first snowbank you back through. In addition, having the lights mounted high provides better visibility.
  #9  
Old 10-21-2000, 09:27 PM
Matt Matt is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2000
Location: Western,NY
Posts: 159
We use both rotating lights and strobe lights, we are replacing the revolving ones with strobes because of the lower amount of power they draw. Most revolving lights that I have seen draw approx. 12 amps as compared to 2 amps by the strobes. With the electric motors on the plows we will sometimes have a battery get drawn down if the operator isn't paying attention to the meter. Both are strobes and revolvers are the Star brand and we have been very satisfied with them. For rear lighting we have lights mounted on the headache rack and on the bumper, all of which are on seperate toggles. The one thing that we have also done is put are backup alarms on a switch, we run a wire from the backup light to a switch then to the alarm, this allows us to overide the alarm. The reason we do this is for our customers we plow that don't enjoy beep, beep, beep.......... at 2:30 or whatever in the morning. But when we start plowing during more congested times we flip the switch and the alarm sounds as normal.

Matt
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  #10  
Old 10-21-2000, 10:32 PM
thelawnguy thelawnguy is offline
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Join Date: Dec 1999
Location: Central CT
Posts: 2,339
Studies show...strobes more visible at night, rotators more visible in daytime so a combo would be ideal. I use a magnetic strobe (Whelen 20 joule, decent unit set me back 100 bucks several years ago) I only use it when plowing or transporting the plow.
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