kelmo
Flashlight Enthusiast
My wife and I did a quick overnight camping trip to Lassen National Park and I had a chance to check out my NovaTac 85P in quality darkness. I initially had it programmed for 2.7, 15, 30, and 85 lumens. 1st off the beam pattern was nearly perfect. A very wide cone of light dare I say (Surefire) L2 like. It really puts alot of light out in a wide area especially on the higher settings. If you want a thrower, this is not the light for you IMHO. The color rendition was very good in the forest for a LED. I think this is because it not being a thrower everything your looking at is at closer ranges, within 35 meters.
When it got really dark I quickly reprogrammed the light to 0.66, 5.3, 21, and 85 lumens. When I 1st got the light I thought click-click-press to reprogram the intensity was a liability because I kept accidently activating the ramping up of the level I was on and resetting the light. After I got used to the level selection process the simplicity of setting the light levels became evident. When ramping up or down the light double flashes at the highest and lowest settings for a reference point. At 1st I was fixated on having to know the exact lumen output I had the level set at and knowing an estimated runtime on that level. All you need to know is by ramping backwards from full output, for the 85P model, 8 steps down covers 60, 42, 21, 15, 10, 7.5, and 5.3 lumens respectively. And ramping up from the lowest settings the 1st 10 bumps covers 0.08 to just under 2 lumens. I just reset my light as the situation dictates. No more preconceived light levels for every situation. Go with the flow and stop obsessing!!! It takes just a few moments to reprogram. As for the runtime obsession, I had an epiphany, just because my light will run at least 30 minutes at 85 lumens really doesn't mean a whole lot in the field because I have no idea how much charge my battery has. So I just carry a few extra cells when away from camp.
I used a Minimag white traffic cone with the 10 lumen output for a table candle. Now I know why some of you want the tail standing capability. This also made a great tent light.
I am extremely pleased with my 85P!
Thanks for sharing!
When it got really dark I quickly reprogrammed the light to 0.66, 5.3, 21, and 85 lumens. When I 1st got the light I thought click-click-press to reprogram the intensity was a liability because I kept accidently activating the ramping up of the level I was on and resetting the light. After I got used to the level selection process the simplicity of setting the light levels became evident. When ramping up or down the light double flashes at the highest and lowest settings for a reference point. At 1st I was fixated on having to know the exact lumen output I had the level set at and knowing an estimated runtime on that level. All you need to know is by ramping backwards from full output, for the 85P model, 8 steps down covers 60, 42, 21, 15, 10, 7.5, and 5.3 lumens respectively. And ramping up from the lowest settings the 1st 10 bumps covers 0.08 to just under 2 lumens. I just reset my light as the situation dictates. No more preconceived light levels for every situation. Go with the flow and stop obsessing!!! It takes just a few moments to reprogram. As for the runtime obsession, I had an epiphany, just because my light will run at least 30 minutes at 85 lumens really doesn't mean a whole lot in the field because I have no idea how much charge my battery has. So I just carry a few extra cells when away from camp.
I used a Minimag white traffic cone with the 10 lumen output for a table candle. Now I know why some of you want the tail standing capability. This also made a great tent light.
I am extremely pleased with my 85P!
Thanks for sharing!