Do you guys generally use a lanyard on your lights?

Generally no lanyard for a small light. Many suppliers offer a lanyard and clip at the same time. Easy to use.

Yes but many fail so end up being replaced with paracord.
I had found a source of good lanyards but didn’t buy enough before they stopped selling them (or did they close shop, i forget).

Always. Especially on lights I use for looking at “hé what’s going on in my backyard”.

My larger lights that have big enough lanyard attachment holes get 1/8” nylon rope. Something similar to this:
https://www.amazon.com/Nylon-Rope-inch-Solid-Braid/dp/B01KCOIQ2C

pocket guy

rarely use a clip

even more rarely any kind of cord or lanyard

i used to, makes it easier to fish out of pocket but also gets tangled up with things

I use them. Only for outdoors. Especially for fragile lights that I want stay in mint condition.

I only use them on a flashlight that would hurt my toes if dropped . Not on the smaller ones .

Everything except a few of the headlights gets a lanyard. Mostly paracord even if I have to use a little loop of 2 mm paracord to tie the bigger paracord onto. On smaller lights that may be clipped or carried in pockets of some sort the guts are removed from the paracord so it will stuff or fold more easily. Larger lights I don’t remove the guts. I don’t do fancy knots and designs. They are all just a single loop with one knot large enough to get my hand in. It is rare that I actually put it on my wrist but the cord comes in handy for other things such as catching it if it’s about to fall or hanging it or pulling it from a pocket or additional grip in a cigar type grip to activate a tail switch by catching the cord with the extra two fingers.

I started out using lanyards, it just seemed smart as I often use lights and knives on or close to water. After some time decided them more of a hinder than a help so I removed the lot of them from lights and knives so now I don’t use them anymore and haven’t lost or dropped any so far.

Hmm. I voted “not know”, because I use the lanyard only if there is high risk of dropping the light or losing it in an unrecoverable situation.
Normally, it is too much of hassle to fiddle the hand through the lanyard and a light dangling around is too distracting or even dangerous.
Sometimes I have velcro attached to one IF25A to be able to fix it to the outside of a glove if needed. This gives free movement and keeps the light at hand.

I only use them on lights used outside, which isn’t many.

Agreed, the couple of times I dropped a light was fiddling around in gloves putting the lanyard on or off.

No, more often then not they’re just an extra nuisance for me. Either a pocket clip or a fob of some sort.

Dropping an expensive/pristine light is a heart-stopper. I use lanyards for the larger than EDCs (which usually are inexpensive lights).

Having said that, the many that have posted on their techniques got me thinking of better ways to harness these dangling reins.

Some of my lights (as 26650s) I don’t like the knot so I weld the ends butt joint. Using paracord, but not with inner strands. Don’t know how to describe but interwoven, not twisted.

The larger soda cans or throwers, using a lanyard w/ adjustment tension clip (someone might know their proper name).

Not fond of clips as they hinder the feel in my hand. However, the small 16340s I use for mounting on my cap.

I thought I could give the examples of….
flashlights with lanyards

lanyards without flashlights :smiley:

Nope…. never liked them.

And I never dropped a flashlight while using it. However I did miss the holster once and it fell to the ground with no damage done! Thankfully a light that goes in butt end facing down……OSTS TN31mb

Lanyard is the first thing to come off if it’s pre installed. I save it, but never use it.

That’s a good one and made me laugh, cheers to you :beer:

i’ve never used a lanyard and didn’t use one when working on a car and trying to trace the wiring colors into a connector that was behind the motor and close to the firewall—and then the light slipped out of my hand while contorting and trying to see down into that space.

i should have used a headlamp to free up my hands, but didn’t realize it was gonna be such a pain to find the harness. So you can probably guess the ending—i had to go get the floor jack in order to remove the bottom splash shield under the motor in order to recover the light which was still burning bright.

If i have to do something like that again, well i learned the hard way and will be using a lanyard that is firmly secured to my limp wrist. :laughing:

Hate lanyards, hate clips, hate “tacticool rings”. Always take ’em off if at all possible.

I don’t like all that crap stuck to a light.

Nope, can’t use them. If it’s a everyday light, the lanyard hanging out of my pocket will snag on something and send it flying into an unknown realm of the universe. If it’s a big light It will get snagged on something and send it into a unknown realm of the universe. I rip every lanyard out of the box and throw it away, along with the box. :slight_smile:

I dropped a new custom MTN flashlight way back when and put a nice ding on the tail. The flashlight survived no problem, but I sure was upset with myself.

Ever since then, all my flashlights have a lanyard. I personally prefer the style that comes with the Convoy flashlights.

When my kids were younger, I told them they need to use the lanyard when they borrowed my AA flashlights. None of them were ever dropped, surprisingly. The other cheapo ones sure got banged up.

And when I go jogging in these colder months after work when it’s dark, I put the lanyard around my glove so I don’t have to worry about the flashlight slipping and falling.