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**DONOTDELETE**
Guest
I've been looking around the internet for information on different types of flashlights, and I'm having trouble figuring out what would best suit my needs. I can't ask a flashlight company because they'd just suggest the best one of their own models.
I need a flashlight that can light up about a 2-3 square-foot diameter area from a range of 3-10 ft away (i'm guessing that would be the distance I would be trying to spot that frogs)(i hear some flashlights have adjustable beam width - is that right? that would be perfect) and be nice and evenly bright within that whole area (i HATE cheap flashlights that have a bright center spot and then immediately outside that spot have a larger dim spot - it makes it hard to look at things in the outer circle when there's the brighter center circle present). The light has to be bright enough to light up small frogs. The flashlight has to last for hours (at least 3-4) and be bright like previously mentioned (is krypton bright enough?). I might also be wading in water or mud, so if I dropped the flashlight into water, would water-resistance protect a briefly (probably quickly brought back to surface w/in 5 seconds time) "submerged" flashlight? Of course cost is a biggy - I'm not a flashlight collector, so I'm not looking to spend more than $50 (preferrably from $20-30). I'd probably be okay with a hand-hend flashlight because I'd have my other hand for grabbing or to hold a net, but perhaps a strong headlight might be a very good idea.
I hear Maglite 3D or 4D are good, is that what I should get if I got a hand-held?
I know you people know a LOT about flashlights, so if you were frog hunting and you wanted a "light" fit for that purpose, which one would you get considering all of the above mentioned qualities and perhaps extra qualities you can think of that would be important. Which hand-held light(s) would you suggest and/or which headlight(s) would you suggest?
thanks - Eric
I need a flashlight that can light up about a 2-3 square-foot diameter area from a range of 3-10 ft away (i'm guessing that would be the distance I would be trying to spot that frogs)(i hear some flashlights have adjustable beam width - is that right? that would be perfect) and be nice and evenly bright within that whole area (i HATE cheap flashlights that have a bright center spot and then immediately outside that spot have a larger dim spot - it makes it hard to look at things in the outer circle when there's the brighter center circle present). The light has to be bright enough to light up small frogs. The flashlight has to last for hours (at least 3-4) and be bright like previously mentioned (is krypton bright enough?). I might also be wading in water or mud, so if I dropped the flashlight into water, would water-resistance protect a briefly (probably quickly brought back to surface w/in 5 seconds time) "submerged" flashlight? Of course cost is a biggy - I'm not a flashlight collector, so I'm not looking to spend more than $50 (preferrably from $20-30). I'd probably be okay with a hand-hend flashlight because I'd have my other hand for grabbing or to hold a net, but perhaps a strong headlight might be a very good idea.
I hear Maglite 3D or 4D are good, is that what I should get if I got a hand-held?
I know you people know a LOT about flashlights, so if you were frog hunting and you wanted a "light" fit for that purpose, which one would you get considering all of the above mentioned qualities and perhaps extra qualities you can think of that would be important. Which hand-held light(s) would you suggest and/or which headlight(s) would you suggest?
thanks - Eric