The Supernova connectors are crimp connectors, not soldered correct?
I crimped (actually, squashed) the Supernova connectors, although they probably can be soldered, if that is your preference. As a side note, a friend of mine is an aircraft mechanic, and he told me that wiring on airplanes is always crimped, never soldered. Due to the vibrations in the airframe, the soldered connections can come loose, because they are brittle.
I am going to run a short length of cable from the Son hub and terminate it with a pair of the Supernova connectors.....about 8-12 inches of cable so I can remove the front wheel without having to remove the connectors from the SON. I believe Dan gave me that suggestion a while back. Then I will run another cable length from that short cable to the Luxos.
This is exactly what I did, for the same reason ("because Dan did it"). I'm glad that I did.
The light I have in the back is one of the new Son taillights....a very small but powerful light. That has a permanently attached 8 foot cable that I can either run directly back to the headlight or I can use the Supernovas again to split the cable. I am leaning towards the split cable, creating a short cable from the headlight terminated with the Superonovas then terminating the taillight with the Supernovas also and connecting near the fork crown...again this is similar to what Dan suggested.
I have a B&M Toplight taillight, and I did the wiring the same way. A short (6 inch) pigtail, with a Supernova connector.
I also have some other very bright taillights (a pair of Niterider Universal taillights) which used a Niterider 6-volt battery pack. After 7 or 8 years of use, the battery doesn't hold a charge anymore. So I bought a cheap (from China) battery holder that holds 4 AA batteries in series, and thus outputs 6 volts. The battery holder had a bare wire connector, and I cut the end of the wires from the taillights, and then made my old wiring and used the Supernova connectors. It works great. I'm not beholded to Niterider to buy their batteries, and when (not if) the AA stop holding their charge, I can just buy new ones. (If only there was a way to power them from my SON28...) I'm a bike commuter, not a bike tourer (not yet!), so it isn't a problem to recharge my batteries at home a couple of times a week.
- Dave