icefest wrote:I personally use a zebralight, as it's more correlated to my use style.
Biggles wrote:Well you couldn't get a more attractive and enticing place to lose your headlamp. I've lost a few torches and especially headlamps over the 45 years I have been walking, cycling and generally touring, second only to losing those damned small (very small!) Swiss army "toolkits". I have several (4 I think) of these nifty little lamps now; not cheap considering their size, and take up and weigh next to nothing:
https://www.paddypallin.com.au/petzl-e- ... dlamp.html
Iamspartacus wrote:
"Of course I can't help but compare all headtorches to the old Petzl's with the 9V batteries. And based on that benchmark all the new ones are great (remember the spare bulb in the back,and that little bit of sandpaper to clean up the contacts?"
That is a blast from the past Spartacus and yes, the old Petzl might just be the benchmark for all subsequent UL headtorches. I still have my original Petzl which I bought early '90s after being stuck out below Tarros Ladder all night because the feeble beam from my two dollar Coles special just wasn't up to it. That clunker of a 4.5v battery, 3LR12, had an alleged run time of 17 hrs (tell 'em their dreaming) and weighed 163 gms, from memory they were fairly expensive too. And yes, the clip for a spare bulb was a great idea, given their high rate of failure. That said, using the Petzl was was a quantum leap forward over trying to hold a 2D cell torch in ones teeth in the dark and rain while battling up a cliff. The good old days eh?
Regards
Greg G
gbagua wrote:The market has evolved so much now. Forget about Petzl. For children's campfires. *NU25 good for your campsite, not powerful enough and battery lasting when hiking in difficult conditions.
Please refer to these thorough guide:
https://www.reddit.com/r/flashlight/com ... _solstice/
They list all sorts of lights not just headlamps.
Highly regarded headlamps:
Armytek Wizard C2 PRO MAX (4000 lumens)
Armytek Wizard C2 Pro Nichia (1400 lumens)
Zebralight H600w Mk IV (1400 lumens)
Fenix HM65R (1400 lumens)
*Nitecore is a very reputable brand but I'd personally go for the more powerful units like the HC33 (1800 lumens) or HC35 (2700 lumens). You'll have enough light (you can actually light up an entire football field with these things, lol!) for an entire night if the need arises without any charging.
gbagua wrote:Yes of course. BUT you never know when you need to walk in the dark for hours in the middle of the bush (happened to me recently; luckily it all ended up well; however imagine if it didn't because my headlamp didn't have enough battery power to last me a whole night's walk!)
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