What is good lumen rating for hiking and camping?

Thanks for replies.
I haven’t been camping for last few years.
That was before I had decent (new LED) flashlights.
Since 2019, I bought quite a few flashlights and headlamps, although all budget ones but way brighter than my old D cell and 9 LED AAA ones.

I have two AAA flashlights.
One is Ultratac A7 and another is Enjoydeal.
The A7 is warmer (high CRI?) light with high, low and strobe mode with brighter center and lots of spill.
The $2 Enjoydeal is bluish light with just on and off mode and more throw than spill. Throws farther than A7.

As for AA, I have two Ultrafire Q5 SK68 clones. I like the size but I don’t have 14500 batteries to see how brighter these can get.
With AA, the AAA ones I mentioned above are brighter so I won’t be carrying these.

Then bunch of single 18650 and two dual 18650 flashlights, all are zoomies except one.
Then I have one cr123 weapon light that can be used as flashlight as I bought bunch of cr123 batteries and don’t use it much.

Those plus few 500 and 200 lumens headlamps so I think I’m covered for now.
We’ll try when I go out in the dark next time and I may hand few unwanted zoomies out to my friends.

^
My flashlight journey was started when I lost path in the wood with a group of people, without proper illumination devices.
All incand flashlights runs their batteries out and we managed to go back to basecamp with just one $5 AAA LED flashlight bought from dx.com some months earlier.

The flashlight was actually just a keychain that I put on my vehicle key and it helped us in the 5 hours walk down to the basecamp.

Yeh, like I said, even a backup AAA can keep you from walking off a cliff.

A good headlamp and a thrower like the GT Micro for weight savings while hiking. The Micro for longer distant sighting plus the ramping UI is great and I use my Armytek Wizard Pro because I really like the UI. Its main mode 2 at 200lms will go for 8 hours while main mode 1 at 70lms for 18 hours. It throws plenty of light with its defused lens at 70lms for me but these are my preferences and everyone’s will be different. A good hands free light is a must IMO. There are many great headlamps available from almost all flashlight manufactures nowadays. Good luck in your search for the perfect lighting :smiley:

I think I will take back my suggestions,
This guy knows best about montain lions.

Well, I used to mountain bike single track with a fenix L1Tv2 on my helmet so you really don’t need as much light as one would think. Remember the eyes adjust to lower light environments.

If I was going to night hike I’d use a floodier headlamp along with a handheld to reach out if needed. Probably would go with something like my armytek wizard pro and either a ZL sc63w, Sofirn c8f LH351d or my malkoff m361w/219. Along with a single AAA pocket/keychain back up. Nothing too bulky or huge but enough to light up a moderate meadow or field. Actually with a head strap you could shave weight and use the ZL as both a handheld and your headlamp. This would work very well…

Generally for back country I’d try to match battery types on my main two lights for interchangeability if needed. The keychain light I would keep AA or AAA for easy sourcing if recharging becomes an issue somehow.

If my life depended on it, I would only trust the Surefire Titan for AAA.
Also anything that RovyVon sells. They’re just costly, not expensive.
Having a Nichia 219C-700 lumens in my necklace, feels very safe.
I have a few of them. Good stuff. Now they have new models.
They got me again. Dayum!!! no willpower.

Cheers.

If a person just needed a light in the tent and around the campfire, 10 or 20 lumens might be enough. Walking down a dark path with night-adjusted eyes, even 2-3 lumens might do. Seeing a critter or something farther away, might need 200 or 500 lumens, maybe more if the light has no throw. Signaling for help, a throwy 1000 lumens could be handy. It really depends on a lot of things.

I think because most of us are connoisseurs we sometimes overlook the bigger picture. For thousands of years people have navigated rural terrain and camped with just a bare flame.

Up until fairly recently in human history, most handheld lights produced 50 to 100 lumens. This was more than sufficient back then. I don’t mean to be a party pooper but the reality is unless you’re involved in SAR, 2 lights are sufficient for navigation, a headlamp and handheld, especially if weight is an issue. Flood - throw it really doesn’t matter in the big scheme of things, although i would lean towards throw if i had to choose as the beam has hybrid uses. Then again, I’ve found when i’m really out in the wilderness, even my thrunite TN42 didn’t throw far enough and that is rated for over a mile!

I would recommend a light headlamp like the thrunite TH20 and a handheld like the Lumintop X9L or M2R Pro. All options have enough light for all uses. Just my two cents.

A few years ago on solo 10 day winter trips carrying all food, tent etc in Scottish Highlands and Iceland, I took a Zebralight H502 with a few spare AA batteries. It’s max output is about 270lms.

As others have said, don’t need a lot of light.

Nowadays I would take either my Zebralight H600c or Armytek Wizard Pro. And if I wanted to indulge a bit perhaps a small thrower like FW1A Osram with 18500 or 18350 tube. Or maybe GTMicro Osram. Family commitments have changed things about since then :person_facepalming:

Have enjoyed reading this. Many good recommendations. It occurs to me that I would be just fine with my normal walking the dogs in the city setup. Perhaps not as good as many of the suggestions, but certainly more than adequate for the task. I have an SP40 on my head. Always have a Ti3 V2 in my pocket. That alone would likely be good enough. However, my current EDC (besides the Ti3) is the SC31 Pro. While I agree that in the mountains it would be very nice to have a thrower, the SC31 throws amazingly well for what it is. I really doubt any animal would try, or at least be successful, in attacking the tactical strobe;-)

Interesting take at things.
However, just because cavemen used to walk for thousands of years, should we be okay with a cart instead of cars? :wink:
They didn’t have the technology and didn’t have choice besides flames whether it was enough or not, they just dealt with it.

Back to the lights, recently got Convoy S2+ and it’s pretty good for walking with a lot of flooded light.
This and another thrower (Modoao) should be enough plus have small AAA lights as well.

I always bring the same lights camping: a Zebralight H600w for the trails and an ArmyTek Tiara C1 Pro for camp. The Zebralight has some throw but a nice spill so it's great for the trails (or when nature calls late at night). The Tiara has a TIR flood that is perfect for doing camp chores.

And both lights have a broad range of brightness settings from a moonlight-strength perfect for a nightlight or a super-powerful turbo blast for trying to identify what just made that scary noise...

So, instead of choosing one light with a particular lumen rating, I think it's preferable to have two lights --one flood and one with some throw-- that adjust to give you the amount of light you need for different tasks.

No comment on the animals-and-strobe kettle of fish, but the SC31 Pro is perfectly serviceable. So go for it!

I like about 500 4000k very high cri and negative duv lumens on a 45 degree flood beam.

For me, it’s always all of them if you can afford :stuck_out_tongue:

But, get the longest running one and one you can throw

Hiking is a much more demanding application than camping. When you're in camp, even if all your lights fail, usually you'll be okay. You just go to bed, and wait for the morning light. On the trail, however, things can get very serious if your lights stop working.

That said, I often like starting a day hike in the late afternoon, watching the sunset on the mountain, and coming home in the dark. It's a great way to beat the crowds. It also puts you on the mountain during the best picture-taking time. That, of course, is the final hour or two before sunset, when the 'magic light" photographers love shows up.

In the 1990s and early 2000s, I used to carry a 2xAA headlamp, plus two 1xAA flashlights. I figured, hey, my spare batteries come with spare flashlights, so I should be okay. Frankly, however, that wasn't enough. The AAs just didn't have enough juice. I should have carried 4 to 6 spare batteries along with the ones already in the lights. I learned this lesson the hard way, on a 13-mile hike in Yosemite.. Nearly had to bed-down on the trail (without a sleeping bag!).

For serious hiking today, where you might spend 3, 4 or 5 hours in the dark, I strongly recommend Li-ion batteries. My personal choice (from the small set of lights I own) would be to carry the ZebraLight H600Fd Mark III headlamp as my main light and the ZebraLight SC62w hand-held as backup. The zebras are small, light-weight, and sturdy. On medium settings, they will last more than 10 hours each. Nevertheless, I would also carry an additional spare battery, sealed water-tight in a carrier, or possibly inside a third flashlight, such as the BLF D80 or a C8.

Although there is nothing wrong with having a tiny AAA as a last resort, my own preference is for all the lights I carry on a hike to share a common battery type.. That's why my "last resort," third flashlight would be a some sort of C8 that takes the same 18650 batteries as my ZebraLights. Heck, maybe the C8, which has a bit of throw, should be my second light.. That way, the SC62w could be my third, serving double duty as both a last-resort flashlight and a water-proof battery carrier.

With three 18650 batteries on board, I am confident I could hike all night, use however much light I need, and not come close to running out of juice.

I like Zebralight headlamps. I have 2. They both use rechargeable AA batteries. One was a flood and one was more spot but I liked the flood much better and ended up putting diffusion film over the spot one. 18650 would be more efficient but I just liked the size/weight on the forehead of the AA better.

I take a 18650 small flashlight with ramping levels and keep that in my pocket. I have diffusion film on that as well (just a more pleasing light). This flashlight on high is bright enough to see anything that I need to checkout for a decent distance.

I also have a small single AAA flashlight on a necklace (string) and wear it around my neck but under my shirt. I can even forget I have it on sometimes. It’s good to see around the tent, go to the bathroom, etc. It even has a super low level so even though it’s a single AAA on the low level it can last hours. I’ve walked around in a cave with it around my neck as a backup in case the headlamp went out. A little light for a long time is much better in a cave than a bright light for too little time:)

I don’t generally take backup batteries. The Zebralight headlamps aren’t much larger than the battery so I just keep an extra headlamp in my pocket along with the small flashlight.

If I was where I had to worry about animals or to see something a great distance away I’d just throw an aspheric C8 type light that I cobbled together into my backpack. It’s more like a laser so if you see something up ahead and you wonder if it’s an animal just point it and the emitter shape easily lights up most animal’s eyes since most are pretty reflective even when you can’t make out the animal.

I’ve done a lot of rock climbing where it got dark before we got off the rock or before we got out of the woods on the way to the car. Usually the Zebralight on 30 lumens (or less) is fine if the trail is pretty uniform. If you get to an area where there is more variation then I just reach up and set the beam to high for a few minutes. If the moon is out once you get out of the woods you hardly need a light at all.

Obviously lights last much longer on the lower settings, lower settings don’t mess with your dark adapted eyes as much and I just rarely need or want a lot of light when I’m out at night.

I walked a girlfriends dog on occasion years ago and I found the same thing applied there. I didn’t want to light up the whole neighborhood and draw attention to myself and a 30-50 lumen setting was fine and I’d go higher than that only when the terrain got uneven.

I’ve also found “spot” type beams are just ugly to my eyes with the big round outer circle and the bright spot in the middle. An aspheric for throw is fine when you need it and provides a lot of contrast by keeping everything else dark. Those C8 or larger reflector lights don’t do much for me unless you live in a rural area and need to light up the whole yard for some reason.

I did adapt one for a (scuba) dive light in our reduced vision PNW waters and it worked out well.

I generally need the following outputs while outdoors. Roughly.

1lm. Light duty tasks while in the dark. Think Beverage refill or pit stop.
30lm. General purpose like walking marked but rough paths, looking around the immediate area, etc.
500+lm (depends heavily on beam profile). Spotting things like that scary bump in the night or shining wildlife.

Depends… few lumens are enough to move arround the campsite, hundred or so for easy trails, few hundred for more technical trails and million lumens (not enough) for when I see eyes glaring at me from the darkness.

Usually it’s my dog but you never know… one day the poor bastad is going to get shot.