In another thread we were talking about how some of the early 4D Mag lights put out 60 lumens. 60 lumens was all you got from four gigantic D cell batteries in the flashlight the size of a billy club! And, in its day, that was plenty for law-enforcement officers and others who needed to use it as a tool. This tiny flashlight, however, can blast out 160 lumens of gorgeous, creamy white light with an amazing spot to spill ratio... This is, in many ways, the light I have been waiting a decade for: it has the size, the convenience, the brightness, and the beam characteristics that I have always wanted, rolled into one super portable tool. If it had a high CRI emitter ( and frankly, this one is pretty good!), I might be tempted to retire from being the flashaholic… Well, then again, probably not…![]()
Keep in mind that output is relative. Darkness doesn't get darker as the years roll on by. In an age where 10 lumens was considered average for a hand-held pocket light. 60 was indeed very impressive considering that that was the best most folks had access to if they went to their local hardware store. A couple of generations from now, this SureFire model will be laughed at for putting out ONLY 300 lumens.