Impossible lumens
Enlightened
- Joined
- Apr 25, 2015
- Messages
- 939
The one with the petals vs the other two. These are three great lights that each hold a position at the top of their respective category of flashlight.
While it's granted that the TN42 was just released today and will likely beat the K70 for throw, the question of who can see that far, lit up or not, begins to have a certain relevance when we talk about that last lumen of light out at those distances. The K70 is clearly still royalty when it comes to throw. Of course not everybody wants to buy a flashlight that can verify the sex of an owl in a tree at 700 meters, basically to the exclusion of everything else around.
The K60 is a real gem when it comes to thoroughly illuminating everything directly in front of you at short to mid-range distances and even gets a little bit of light out to that 700 meter range as a bonus. However, while it can get some light out to 700 meters, that light is for the most part unusable, and a lack of real throw would be near the top of the list if creating an argument for the K60s shortcomings.
So on one side, a light that can instantly tell you what and all activity there is on your block for about six houses down, or on the other side, a light for determining if the owl in the tree 600 meters away is male or female. And the question of which of these two lights to purchase has brought more than a handful of budding flashaholics to this forum as the battle of throw vs flood rages over access to our band accounts.
Let the fighting cease, for the great equalizer has cometh forth (you petal freaks don't ruin my moment here), It's the T6VN. Yes, it has petals, albeit very sharply defined and nicely displayed, but petals nonetheless. Some of the pluses for T6VN are about 5,500 lumens of light that shares a near perfectly balanced mix of flood and throw, fantastic tint imo, 1,270 meters on the throw side, significantly smaller than K60 or K70, a driver that is both easy to use and has depth to it too, does well thermally, and has great run times. While I don't have exact numbers for you guys for some of these statements, I've found all of them to be true in using my own T6VN. My lightbox showed 5,700 lumens for my own T6VN (TM16GT 3,700), I got over an hour of turbo runtime (with cooling) on LG HG2 3,000MAh batteries without much loss (always use high drain with this light). After an hour the T6VN still was very bright on turbo.
So while Nitecore has a lot of Tiny Monsters, there's only need for one Tiny Godzilla. For me that Godzilla is T6VN. I wouldn't even bother saying all these things if I didn't really feel that the T6VN is the best big lumen production light in my collection. I've posted a video here with a little more T6VN compared with K60, K70 discussion and also beamshots. Any other T6VN owners want to chime in? Here's that video guys. It's a bit older and I feel like I should maybe make an updated version since all three of these lights continue to hold relevance and interest.
One thing of importance though to note about the T6VN is that it can't be locked out to prevent accidental turn on so should always be kept in a known safe location when stored. If it can't be stored safely then the batteries should be removed. Good neutral tint is first but safety is a close second guys.
Straight to YouTube...... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vX0Aw8WjzDo
OR
While it's granted that the TN42 was just released today and will likely beat the K70 for throw, the question of who can see that far, lit up or not, begins to have a certain relevance when we talk about that last lumen of light out at those distances. The K70 is clearly still royalty when it comes to throw. Of course not everybody wants to buy a flashlight that can verify the sex of an owl in a tree at 700 meters, basically to the exclusion of everything else around.
The K60 is a real gem when it comes to thoroughly illuminating everything directly in front of you at short to mid-range distances and even gets a little bit of light out to that 700 meter range as a bonus. However, while it can get some light out to 700 meters, that light is for the most part unusable, and a lack of real throw would be near the top of the list if creating an argument for the K60s shortcomings.
So on one side, a light that can instantly tell you what and all activity there is on your block for about six houses down, or on the other side, a light for determining if the owl in the tree 600 meters away is male or female. And the question of which of these two lights to purchase has brought more than a handful of budding flashaholics to this forum as the battle of throw vs flood rages over access to our band accounts.
Let the fighting cease, for the great equalizer has cometh forth (you petal freaks don't ruin my moment here), It's the T6VN. Yes, it has petals, albeit very sharply defined and nicely displayed, but petals nonetheless. Some of the pluses for T6VN are about 5,500 lumens of light that shares a near perfectly balanced mix of flood and throw, fantastic tint imo, 1,270 meters on the throw side, significantly smaller than K60 or K70, a driver that is both easy to use and has depth to it too, does well thermally, and has great run times. While I don't have exact numbers for you guys for some of these statements, I've found all of them to be true in using my own T6VN. My lightbox showed 5,700 lumens for my own T6VN (TM16GT 3,700), I got over an hour of turbo runtime (with cooling) on LG HG2 3,000MAh batteries without much loss (always use high drain with this light). After an hour the T6VN still was very bright on turbo.
So while Nitecore has a lot of Tiny Monsters, there's only need for one Tiny Godzilla. For me that Godzilla is T6VN. I wouldn't even bother saying all these things if I didn't really feel that the T6VN is the best big lumen production light in my collection. I've posted a video here with a little more T6VN compared with K60, K70 discussion and also beamshots. Any other T6VN owners want to chime in? Here's that video guys. It's a bit older and I feel like I should maybe make an updated version since all three of these lights continue to hold relevance and interest.
One thing of importance though to note about the T6VN is that it can't be locked out to prevent accidental turn on so should always be kept in a known safe location when stored. If it can't be stored safely then the batteries should be removed. Good neutral tint is first but safety is a close second guys.
Straight to YouTube...... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vX0Aw8WjzDo
OR
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