koziy
(koziy)
10
I’ve done a lot of backpacking and thought about my ideal flashlight a lot lately. I have used various flashlights and headlamps through the years and a 3200 lumen hot rod flooder that eats up half its battery capacity in 5 minutes of use isn’t even something I’d consider. My basic criteria are as follows:
Headlamp. Must be a hands-free flashlight so you can set up camp or do camp chores in the dark. You can theoretically get by with a handheld light, but why torture yourself like that, honestly?
Waterproof. Absolutely no rubber flaps or easily preventable points of failure.
Pre-set modes, no ramping.
Intuitive UI, ideally separate power and mode buttons, no blinky modes whatsoever.
Low mode of 10-40 floody lumens for inside a tent.
Medium mode of 80-150 floody lumens for around camp.
High mode of 300-500 lumens for sporadic use while night hiking or checking on noises at the edge of camp.
A nice 4000-4500K tint can be a nice touch to set the mood in camp if you don’t have a fire, but is definitely not a requirement. I’d much rather take a headlamp in cool white with good battery life and a floody beam over some handheld flashlight with a warm tint but terrible battery efficiency.
I wouldn’t rule out packing a mini thrower when camping out west, but even then, I wouldn’t consider it essential. It can be nice to spot moose on the other side of a lake at night or confirm if a bear is trying to get down your food bag or if it’s just a squirrel, though.
My latest headlamp I’ve been testing is the YLP Panda 2M CRI, which is the best so far, although I haven’t used it enough to say for absolute certainty how good it will perform.
One more thing to note: In camp with other people, you’re going to want to turn your headlamp down, like headlights on a car, so as not to blind other people, and you’ll expect the same of them. I’ve found that a lot of, if not all of, those 90 degree headlamps create glare in my glasses when angled down like this, which can be especially annoying when camping and your glasses have dirt on them. I need the reflector or lens to be a a little bit projected out from my head so as to avoid this.