rhinochopig
Newly Enlightened
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2009
- Messages
- 2
Hi Chaps,
I registered here to hopefully tap into your wealth of expertise. Please forgive any ignorance, as I'm purely a user of torches and have no knowledge of their electrickery.
I'm in a mountain rescue team, which means we are often out most of the night searching for people. I have a few related questions.
1. What are the best* cells available today in Sizes AAA, AA, D? *In that I mean balance of, highest mAH, self discharge, voltage drop off.
2. My current charger is a cheap uniross ultrafast charger (Charging current = AA 1000mA; AAA 400maH). Will this fully charge the 2700maH cells I currently use + any you may recommend.
3. What is the most suitable charger (if above is no good)
4. The perfect torch for mountain rescue has the following criteria: Uses standard cells (AA pref for commonality with GPS), is as bright as possible, has a very long burn time, is weatherproof, and as cheap as possible. Just out of curiosity, what would you chaps recommend against my criteria so I can pass on the advice to team members looking to change their torches?
5. Out of nothing but curiosity, why do rechargeable cells have a lower voltage than none rechargeable? Does this mean my LENSER will put out less light on rechargeable cells?
In case anyone is interested, I currently use a light & motion HID LION ULTRA (mountain bike light) which is superb (but was expensive), but obviously fails on the ease of battery replacement criteria (although I get about 5-6 hours out of the battery pack, team rules dictate I have to have a spare, so an LED LENSER proved cheaper).
The L&M is backed up with an LED LENSER P14 (bought last week, which isn't that great TBH - too focused when the beam is collomated, and not enough throw when set to flood - my terralux maglite is better but far too heavy).
I've also just replaced my old head torch with an LED LENSER H7 headtorch as it seems to be the only company that makes a decent LED robust head torch. Some of the team use these and they are impressive little things.
Thanks for the advice!
I registered here to hopefully tap into your wealth of expertise. Please forgive any ignorance, as I'm purely a user of torches and have no knowledge of their electrickery.
I'm in a mountain rescue team, which means we are often out most of the night searching for people. I have a few related questions.
1. What are the best* cells available today in Sizes AAA, AA, D? *In that I mean balance of, highest mAH, self discharge, voltage drop off.
2. My current charger is a cheap uniross ultrafast charger (Charging current = AA 1000mA; AAA 400maH). Will this fully charge the 2700maH cells I currently use + any you may recommend.
3. What is the most suitable charger (if above is no good)
4. The perfect torch for mountain rescue has the following criteria: Uses standard cells (AA pref for commonality with GPS), is as bright as possible, has a very long burn time, is weatherproof, and as cheap as possible. Just out of curiosity, what would you chaps recommend against my criteria so I can pass on the advice to team members looking to change their torches?
5. Out of nothing but curiosity, why do rechargeable cells have a lower voltage than none rechargeable? Does this mean my LENSER will put out less light on rechargeable cells?
In case anyone is interested, I currently use a light & motion HID LION ULTRA (mountain bike light) which is superb (but was expensive), but obviously fails on the ease of battery replacement criteria (although I get about 5-6 hours out of the battery pack, team rules dictate I have to have a spare, so an LED LENSER proved cheaper).
The L&M is backed up with an LED LENSER P14 (bought last week, which isn't that great TBH - too focused when the beam is collomated, and not enough throw when set to flood - my terralux maglite is better but far too heavy).
I've also just replaced my old head torch with an LED LENSER H7 headtorch as it seems to be the only company that makes a decent LED robust head torch. Some of the team use these and they are impressive little things.
Thanks for the advice!