Hey Matthew, 

I’m replying on my phone so apologies in advance for any typos or non-standard 
formatting. 

Running two wires to the taillight from the dynamo is probably the best and 
loner straightforward way to do it. It’s a closed system and easy to track down 
any issues if they arise. 

I’m not sure which model B&M light you have but you can certainly try grounding 
one side of the dynamo and one side of light to the fork and frame 
respectively. I’ve heard the anodizing on some higher quality cartridge bearing 
headsets (Chris King, etc) can prevent the continuity between the fork and the 
frame. In the past folks have suggested removing the anodization around the 
neck of the headset cup to allow current to pass through. It’s easy to check 
for continuity between frame and fork; set a multimeter to resistance (ohms) 
and touch one probe to bare metal on the fork, and the other probe to bare 
metal on the frame (eyelet or dropout works well). If the needle or number is 
close or on zero you shouldn’t have a problem. If there’s no change in reading 
then you don’t have continuity, probe around and start troubleshooting :)

> Splitting a single length of Velo Lumino wire into two and adding spade 
> terminals would not work, right?

Not sure what you mean by the above. The Velo Lumino wire that I have is a 
single strand. One of the headlight companies includes a two stranded 22ga wire 
that can be split into single strands. The insulation on that wire is less 
durable and larger in diameter making it difficult to pull through small holes. 
One strand is black and the other is white, bare wire is copper. Is that the 
wire you’re referring to?

The wire Velo Lumino sells is thin (22ga?) and has a tough but thin insulation 
that is much smaller in diameter to hardware store wire or anything else I’ve 
found. I find it easier to work with compared to the coaxial wire Schmidt uses 
on their lights. 

In the next few months I’ll be reconfiguring my lighting setup. I can snap some 
photos and draw some diagrams if you’d like some more detailed information on 
how it’s configured. 

Hope that’s helpful! 

Christian 
Phoenix, AZ 


> On May 24, 2023, at 15:08, brizbarn <brizbarnh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Christian, thanks for the pics and example.  I have some of the Velo Lumino 
> wire.  With a a B&M light, would I need to run two wires to a rear B&M light? 
>  Or do something similar to what you show in your pics, grounding to the 
> frame on both the headlight and taillight ends, and just running one length 
> of wire to the rear light?   Splitting a single length of Velo Lumino wire 
> into two and adding spade terminals would not work, right?
> 
>> On Monday, March 27, 2023 at 9:57:03 AM UTC-7 christian poppell wrote:
>> Hey Matthew, 
>> 
>> Smaller wire is fine. The wire that Velo Lumino sells is perfect. Any 22  or 
>> 24gauge multistrand wire would work but the Velo Lumino wire is flexible and 
>> has very durable insulation. You could also seperate the BM dual strand 
>> wire. The insulation is thicker and less durable but works fine. 
>> 
>> If the hole diameter is too small to pull two wires you can ground through 
>> the frame. Ground one side of the dynamo to the fork eyelet 
>> https://photos.app.goo.gl/xBqTJ575zxQkeUC49 then ground one side of the 
>> light to the mount or other hard point 
>> https://photos.app.goo.gl/wPGMviZF9n5cYycn6. Run a single wire through the 
>> fork and connect to the light. 
>> 
>> Hope that makes sense! I can draw up a diagram if thats helpful. How much 
>> wire do you need? I might have some to spare if needed. Also what light and 
>> dynamo are you using?
>> 
>> Christian
>> Phoenix, AZ
>> 
>>> On Wednesday, March 22, 2023 at 9:53:38 PM UTC-7 Matthew Williams wrote:
>>> Hi everyone,
>>> 
>>> In the weeks to come I’m going to be revisiting the wire-inside-the-fork 
>>> trick. However, the hole is too small for the existing dynamo wires and I 
>>> do not want to enlarge the hole.
>>> 
>>> What would happen if I used a smaller-gauge wire inside the fork, to 
>>> connect the dynamo to the headlight?
>>> 
>>> Will a smaller-gauge wire be unable to handle the voltage/amperage from the 
>>> dynamo? Will the headlight and taillight outputs be weaker? Or will the 
>>> difference between the existing/stock wire and a smaller gauge be 
>>> imperceptible?
>>> 
>>> As always, your wisdom, advice, experience, and opinions are appreciated!
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On Sunday, November 20, 2022 at 10:13:40 PM UTC-8 Matthew Williams wrote:
>>> Hi everyone, 
>>> 
>>> Most bikes I see with the SON dynamo have the wire wound around the right 
>>> front fork blade. I want to run the wire inside the fork using the small 
>>> hole near the dropout. 
>>> 
>>> I’ve already fished a thin wire through the fork as a leader i.e. I can 
>>> attach the leader to the SON dynamo wire and pull it through the fork, 
>>> unless the dynamo wire is too thick. Below are photos of the leader wire I 
>>> fished through the fork. 
>>> 
>>> Is this possible, or is it a bad idea? Has anyone here managed to achieve 
>>> this setup? If so, how did you do it, and please post photos of your 
>>> internal wiring setups! 
>>> 
> 
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