Reccomend me a flash light

I read the thread you mentioned … Thanks for your help.

Thers a few ssuggestions about few cheaps too within $50 or so . Ill see them all . I think crelant 7g5 v2 , small sun , tn 31 , fandyfire etc are to be considered .

I can recommend Klarus XT11.
I has quite a lot of spill and throws quite far - almost at par with Xeno G42.
It uses 1 x 18650, 2 x CR123, or 2 x RCR16340.
I just love this light.Plus it is very compacr.DD has them for $69.99.
With a 10% coupon the price is around $62.

Did anyone mention the Ultrafire HD2010?

It has a pretty big head, so it throws pretty well.

Foy’s comprehensive review here: Review: UltraFire HD2010

Seriously, 300 metres of throw mate. Not questioning your needs but thats in the area of SAR :slight_smile: For normal use a throw of around 150-200ish metres would do good :slight_smile: Anyways, I’m no expert so GL with your hunt!

Please enjoy your time here, magnolia!

We shoot thousands of rabbits each year including up to 600 per night using a variety of LED lights. The three I recommend for general purpose bunny shooting are also the top three on the budget thrower list - Small sun C10, Jacob A60, and the excellent Maxtoch SN6X-2 - also known as the Skyray STL-V2. The SN6X-2/STL-V2 is not only highly regarded by flashlight fans - it is a superb hunting light.

However - while the SN6X-2/STL-V2 will in perfect colour/background conditions show up large animals at 300m, it will only show rabbits out to 150m and even then you need to use a scope. From our experience to reach out 300m to see rabbits you’d really need an HID and one with a 6-7” reflector for very concentrated beam. Its not always easy to see them in daylight at 300m so you’d need super powerful light to show them up at that distance at night.

Its also not so easy to hit small rabbits at 300m at night, and given this I’d suggest you re-assess your torch criteria. The SN6X-2/STL-V2 will certainly pick them up out to 150 with scope in ideal conditions, and the Dereelight will go a little further. But remember you have to have a safe visible firing zone beyond your target, and only an HID will give you daylight at 300-400m.

Thank you for your recommendatoon .

I dont hunt or hurt animals but need something powerful to see objects clearly at that point to protect my farm , fruits fom few smalll and larger animals like rabbits , deer , monkey or so , They often come to my farm house and destroy crops as my farm is by a river and a forest .

Ive also thought of skyray stl v2 ,fandyfire stlv 2 /6 , smallsuun zy 13 , crelant 7g5v2 / 7g9 .
Please help me to choose the best one for me .

I don’t recommend trying to see rabbits at 300m. If a light is going to be powerful enough to light it up like daylight, it’ll either have insane throw, or it’ll be super bright to kill your night vision.
You’ll need something with 3500+ lumens, along with 200k+ lux to be able to see something that small that far away. The only way you’re getting there is through a HID spotlight (7inch reflector or bigger) or a shortarc spotlight.

It may be your dream to own such a powerful light, but you’re never going to get something with good runtimes that can throw that far that’s also smaller than the fenix TK70.
I recommend getting an SST-90 light such as a trustfire X6, modding it with a 9amp driver to push the lux past 50k, then you’ll have a light which has 2000+ lumens which throws further than an STL-V2 and lights up about triple the area.

But honestly, in my opinion I recommend stretching your legs and walking closer to those rabbits because you’re going to have a hard time finding your dream flashlight. I dream that one day a stable nuclear flashlight will one day be available. 1 billion lumens+ would definitely light up 300m like daylight.

Go for the 7G9, it has 65k lux and just over 1000 lumens. But you can get a collimator head with the 7g5v2 and increase its lux to around 130k, but diminishing the total output from 830 lumens to around 600.
How big do you want the hotspot to be?

Hot spot (the britest spot ? )should not be too tiny but little bit wider to cover a deer , aprox 30 X 30 cm or little less /more .
What is collimator head ?
Please reply which one is better for me .

30cm^2 is puny, and you will definitely not be able to find rabbits at 300meters. That’s almost like a laser beam.
The hotspot is where most of the beam is concentrated, in the middle of the beam and the spill is the light coming out the side.

The collimator head is specifically for the 7g5v2, and is the same as any aspheric lens which turns the light into almost a laser. It eliminates all spill and focuses about 50-80% (depending on lens size) of the total light into one hotspot.

here are pictures of a STL-V2, 7g5v2, and 7g5v2 with collimator lens attached.

No doubt youu are an expert in the field . And Im jus t a back buencher about flashlights who knows nothing .
Please say me clearly which flashlight would make me visible ani
mals at 300 mts to protect my crops and frucits . I just want to view them clearly - very clearly really and also f r com where to order it and the cells and charger also.

Again, 300 meters is a bit of a stretch for a single LED flashlight, even for a SST-90 Trustfire X6.

You might want to stretch your options to a HID light.

They’re about 125 bucks on ebay with free shipping.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Silver-Smart-Super-Bright-75W-55W-35W-HID-Xenon-7500Lumen-Torch-Flashlight-/320805041290?pt=US_Flashlights&hash=item4ab178748a

Thanks, but I’m really not an expert. Only a few months ago I had a very limited knowledge.
At 300 meters if you want a powerful LED light you’re going to have to spend a lot of money, upwards of $400 for a brand new light, such as the Olight SR95UT which puts out just over 200k lux.
You can however, get a 55W HID spotlight for around $100 which has I think around 400 to 500k lux, which will definitely let you look 300m out to your crops. And I don’t think flashing a light at some animals will do anything. There’s a possum which always eats lemons from our lemon tree and I blasted it with my 85W HID (225k lux) from about 5 meters away and it didn’t even budge. I stopped after about 3 seconds though because I didn’t want to blind it.

For anyone wondering, the X6 is not a light to be used for long distances. Stock version domed, it has a lower lux than the STL-V2 (45k vs 48k)but a higher overall output (1300lumens vs 700)which means that for slightly longer distances you won’t be able to make out things, but it’s much better for identifying objects because you can see a lot more due to it’s (slightly)wider and brighter spill.
Up to 300 meters though, I say it would be fine. ILF’s 350yard (320m) beamshots show the STL-V2 doing quite well, so you can expect the X6 to throw to about the same distance. But I don’t think less than 50k lux could identify a rabbit at 300m. I’m not completely sure but it depends a lot on your eyesight. I don’t think it would even be possible to see a rabbit at 300m in broad daylight though to be honest.

Thank you all for your siggestion . Ill think of a hid later.
Presently help me to decide or just say which between stlv2 and crelant 7g5 v2 / 7g9 is a better option .
Also from where to buy it and its cells,charger etc .

The 7G9, it throws the furthest and has the highest total output of those three.

Just buy either a FandyFire STL-V6 for around $45 shipped from Deal Xtreme, or buy the Small Sun ZY-T08 from Manafont for about $26 shipped. Both of these will light up objects at 350yds. I know that for a fact.

Ive also heard of them . In a review I saw that crelant 7g9 is better than them . Also 7g5 v2 with collimator head throws better .

Can these really light 300 mts ?

magnolia,

Let me try and show you some of the results that I have obtained at 350yds which will fulfill your 300 meter request.

All of these are at 350yds to the white horse barn taken on man exposure of 1…4 sec shutter, f/4 and ISO 400.

Small Sun ZY-T08

Fenix TK70

Crelant 7G5

EagleTac M3C4 new U2 version

Sunwayman T40CS

FandyFire STL-V6

Now you should have your answer where it is pitch black what you can expect.

All of these are just about what you will see live and in person if you have 20/20 vision.