Yes, “high end” would be a good way to describe the Duo S. That looks super cool, although big enough of a head contraption that trade use is going to be the most practical for most people’s needs. I wish other headlamps had an auto-dim function for around camp when two beams cross.

Back in the incandescent era, I somehow was able to follow leaf-covered trails in autumn with a dim (probably 60 lumens on a full battery) Petzl incandescent headlamp. When I finally stepped up to a 360 lumen LED headlamp, which was a Fenix HP25, I felt like a whole new door had been opened up. Suddenly, I could see everything, certainly any faint trail at night for as far as I needed. I can totally understand wanting more light if you are bushwacking, although I don’t personally see the appeal of extended off-trail travel after dark, so I just do not do it.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not trying to say nobody should have 3200 lumens, and if some flashlight company figures out how to make a light capable of sustaining that level for long enough to be practical on the trail rather than sucking down battery charge rapidly and burning my forehead, I’ll be the first to buy it. I’ve been able to get by with a lot less, though, and there are some good options that output a lot less — there are also some not-so-good options that output 2000+ lumens. My most recent test headlamp was the Thrunite TH30, which can output 3350 lumens on turbo, and I tried an Acebeam H30 before that, which is in the same range. Keep in mind that’s not sustained lumens, at all, and if you use it on turbo continuously, you’re not going to have a good time in the woods. Overheating, rapid battery drain, low battery warning flashes, thermal protection that dims the light and limits your ability to use it on high again…. I just don’t think we’re there yet.

As for using strobe on animals, that’s a new one to me. I never thought to try it.