... recently bought an Olight M30 (700 lumen) which is now my favorite. While looking for batteries and a charger, I ran across some 900 to 1000 lumen Ultrafire and Trustfire lights that are much cheaper but I can't find many reviews on them.
First: Those 900-1000 lumens ratings are most likely hugely inflated, and the quality controll of those cheap *fire (where *fire is any name ending with
"fire" exept surefire, which is NOT cheap) is not premium. You may get a good one, you may get something that is not soo good. Lumens-per-dollar, it may still be a good purchase, but not really a light you can rely on.
Second: Don't get hung up in lumens number, because your eyes do not perceive lumens increase in a linear way. Roughly speaking, if you want something
"twice as bright" you need 4 times the lumens. For your eyes to detect ANY difference at all there should be roughly a 30% difference in lumens.
(Other factors such as beam shape (intense hot spot v.s. more "flood" type of lights are important for how "bright" a light is, too). In real world, there shouldn't really be much gain going from 700 to 1000 lumens.
(But a change from a "floody" into a more "throwy" beam - or vice versa - can be a huge benefit, depending on your needs... )
Thirdly: I don't have an M30, but from the reviews I think it should be pretty hard to find something better. At least not without either sacrificing quality or going into an entirely much higher price range... You may spend about the same amount of money to get something which is about just as good, but perhaps with features that are more an exact match to your needs... but is that small improvement really worth the cost?
My question is, can you recomend a brighter light for the same price as my M30($139) or a light as bright for less money that won't leave me standing in the dark?
There may be specific light requirements for your snake spotting that the CPF community should learn from you. A good start is to tell us what you're happy with about your M30 light, and what doesn't work so well. Do you use the "high", the "medium" or the "low" setting of this light?
(Try using a lower setting for at least 20 minutes so your eyes have time to adjust - it may surprise you how useful LESS light is out in the bush).
It may be that the beam does not reach far enough for your needs. Then either a more throwy beam (smaller, more intense beam that reaches further ahead - but lights up a smaller area) may be the thing. Or the reverse, you need a more floody beam. Both kind of lights are easy to find.
It may be that the colors do not stand out very well (as suggested in posts above). A warm white or neutral white LED may or may not be better. I wouldn't know, I've never done snake spotting... Such lights are harder to find, but I think it should be possible.
Or it may just be that you simply need absurdely amounts of lights. HID (high energy discharge) lights will give you that, but they are absurdely expensive.
(One exception: The stanley HID at walmart / amazon.com cost $70-ish and is a a bargain, but that one is heavy and has half an hour run time. Good if you are in a vehicle with a 12V power source, but not exactly what I would carry around in the desert).
Fourth: Bring a backup that
"won't leave you standing in the dark". Fenix E01 cost $15. Never fails, will last 11 hours before dimming, and will probably give usefull ligth for another 10 hours. You can find something reliable and powerful at shiningbeam.com that starts at around $20, but those have only one mode (high) and will leave you in the dark after 1-1.5 hours. Go a bit higher for multi-mode, or you can buy the quark, fenix LD10/LD20 or a similar light at around $60-70 which will be multi-mode (quite powerful OR a loooooooong lasting low, or something in between).