#143611 - 08/11/08 09:17 AM
Re: Flashlight Lumen question
[Re: Fitzoid]
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Enthusiast
Registered: 04/29/08
Posts: 285
Loc: Israel
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Hmnn, in this case, I have no idea. But it would probably be best deemed a paperweight. It looks like an ancient 1st generation LED light that Victorinix slapped their branding on and I doubt it comes close to 20 lumens. Time to get a new light? Nah, I'm good. This one is plenty bright for my needs. Disappointing, sure, but once you start upgrading to the latest model, there's no going back.
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#143645 - 08/11/08 02:22 PM
Re: Flashlight Lumen question
[Re: comms]
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Enthusiast
Registered: 08/23/05
Posts: 289
Loc: WI, MA, and NYC
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Guess I was exaggerating slightly... Check out the Fenix L2D Premium. It provides regulated 180 lumens for 2.4 hours on 2AAs. But it does give 12 lumens for 55 hours! But the days of unregulated, 20 minute runtimes are over for me! Surefire, RIP!
_________________________
----- "When I read about the evils of drinking, I gave up reading." Henny Youngman
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#143647 - 08/11/08 02:29 PM
Re: Flashlight Lumen question
[Re: Fitzoid]
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Addict
Registered: 07/18/07
Posts: 665
Loc: Northwest Florida
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Guess I was exaggerating slightly... Check out the Fenix L2D Premium. It provides regulated 180 lumens for 2.4 hours on 2AAs. But it does give 12 lumens for 55 hours! But the days of unregulated, 20 minute runtimes are over for me! Surefire, RIP! +1 on Fenix. I've retired my Surefire to backup status. I bought the premium Fenix 1xAAA, the 1xAA and the 2xAA body which uses the same head. Around $100, IRRC, for a very versatile and reliable set of lights that meet all of my on-duty and off-duty needs very well. Jeff
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#143658 - 08/11/08 03:11 PM
Re: Flashlight Lumen question
[Re: Rodion]
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Veteran
Registered: 07/23/08
Posts: 1502
Loc: Mesa, AZ
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Thanks. I have not seen a Fenix before. I will give them a look. I tend to go moderate to cheap on my preparedness stuff because I use it hard testing it out. I buy bic's over torches. I have a zippo from 20 years ago.
I recycled a maglite with a Nitize LED. Thank God LED's last so long.
_________________________
Don't just survive. Thrive.
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#143659 - 08/11/08 03:11 PM
Re: Flashlight Lumen question
[Re: Rodion]
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Addict
Registered: 07/18/07
Posts: 665
Loc: Northwest Florida
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Sounds like a great light (and this isn't the first time I hear about it, either), but it's just a wee bit too pricey for my undergraduate budget. Besides, like I said: there's no going back... I remember my starving undergraduate days. I was working full time, going to school full time, and pinching every penny to pay my and my wife's tuition. Still, I remember those as happy days . . . Fenix does have a nice single level output 2xAA model on sale for around 35 bucks, if that helps, at Lighthound.com Jeff
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#143661 - 08/11/08 03:16 PM
Re: Flashlight Lumen question
[Re: BobS]
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Enthusiast
Registered: 08/23/05
Posts: 289
Loc: WI, MA, and NYC
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Ah, I have done this. I have taken at least 10 different flashlights on many occasions to test them out, not withstanding the fact that doing so makes the wife question my sanity. Without question, they perform differently. It's just like your car's highbeams are useless in fog, that's exactly how a white LED performs. This is why I still carry a yellowish Xenon light with me. I have some red LED lights which preserve night vision and are perfect for looking at star charts (the Proton is my favorite). And I have lights with a lot of throw and other lights with a lot of spill that illuminate fields but aren't very useful for navigating. Some are too heavy to be practical and are some are too light to have any real battery capacity. I like wide lights with spill for dog walking (which I do for half an hour every night), so I can find her if she runs off to sniff something without my yelling for her. Highly focused beams aren't very helpful for that. So, I always test my flashlights, as I do all my gear. I can't say I'm a huge fan of the "bang the light on concrete" test that so many people seem to love, but I do like knowing how well everything works.
_________________________
----- "When I read about the evils of drinking, I gave up reading." Henny Youngman
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#143680 - 08/11/08 04:05 PM
Re: Flashlight Lumen question
[Re: terry13111]
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Journeyman
Registered: 05/28/06
Posts: 58
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What would you guys consider to be the minimum number of lumens for a flashlight to be bright enough to allow you to navigate safely? 10 Lumens? Thanks 1 lumen is enough to light up my bedroom, for me to walk from my bed to bathroom without stepping on my son's lego blocks. However, if you are walking in the forest trails or even cycling. Then I would say if more light is needed the faster you travel. For cycling, you may need 120 lumens, enough light to cover 30~50 metres of the ground in front the bike. They should last more then a short time on a set of batteries (many of what are called “tactical lights” fail this one, and fail miserably!) They run off the CR123 batteries (more expensive) and only run for 1 ˝ hrs, this is a very poor choice of a light for a survival situation. Tactical lights are designed to give maximum brightness for a short duration maybe 20minutes. Their intended users are law enforcements, etc. Survival lights are designed to give a long duration of light (not maximum brightness)
Edited by firefly99 (08/11/08 04:20 PM)
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#143688 - 08/11/08 04:38 PM
Re: Flashlight Lumen question
[Re: firefly99]
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 08/03/07
Posts: 3078
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Hi Firefly, Survival lights are designed to give a long duration of light (not maximum brightness) It can also be extremely useful to allow the flashlight to give the maximum brightness in certain conditions. For example if you are stranded in the wilderness at dusk/nightime and you can hear the sound of a search aircraft in the distance, then an SSC P7 type flashlight flashing an SOS at over 600 Lumen for 2-3 hours would be preferred over a Maglite AAA Solitaire.
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#143693 - 08/11/08 04:54 PM
Re: Flashlight Lumen question
[Re: Am_Fear_Liath_Mor]
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Journeyman
Registered: 05/28/06
Posts: 58
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It can also be extremely useful to allow the flashlight to give the maximum brightness in certain conditions. Agreed, maximum brightness may be useful in certain conditions. you can hear the sound of a search aircraft in the distance, then an SSC P7 type flashlight flashing an SOS at over 600 Lumen for 2-3 hours if a search aircraft is actively looking for you and you can hear it, it is unlikely you have flash for 2~3 hours A multi mode flashlight may not flash the SOS signal at maximum brightness. The recent flooding in NO, there was 1 guy who had several bright tactical flashlights and 40~50 CR123A. His experience was that high power flashlight was too bright for indoor use and it takes only a few days before his stock of CR123A was used up. His low brightness light was more useable and it serve him throughout the floods.
Edited by firefly99 (08/11/08 05:09 PM)
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