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Bushwalking gear and paraphernalia. Electronic gadget topics (inc. GPS, PLB, chargers) belong in the 'Techno Babble' sub-forum.

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TIP: The online Bushwalk Inventory System can help bushwalkers with a variety of bushwalk planning tasks, including: Manage which items they take bushwalking so that they do not forget anything they might need, plan meals for their walks, and automatically compile food/fuel shopping lists (lists of consumables) required to make and cook the meals for each walk. It is particularly useful for planning for groups who share food or other items, but is also useful for individual walkers.
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Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Thu 02 Jun, 2022 4:37 pm

Recommendations for headtorch than can deliver about 6 hours of reasonably consistent brightness.

Probably looking around the 400-500 lumen range. Should be atleast rain proof.

Flood and spot modes.

Dimmer that remembers the set level when turning back on would be nice.

Also nice but not mandatory would be rechargable.

I expect the options won't be light but should be comfortable for prolonged wear walking on and off track for about 6 hours. Don't want to be wearing a heavy hot sun on my head.

Key characteristic is minimal light drop off, no good pumping max lumens for 5 mins and then rapidly fades in brightness.

Preference for available in Australia rather than a overseas purchase.

Options?

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Thu 02 Jun, 2022 5:04 pm

You probably want to look towards the runner's lights as they tend to higher output and bigger batteries. The ANSI FL1 standard is a good comparison, but it gives you runtime until the output is 10% of the start, so often unregulated lights tend to look better than they should. I'd dig around on CandlePowerForums for the latest and greatest, they are very knowledgable, and I'll bet someone is keeping track of exactly what you are asking for.

The only other thing I can think of is that you would probably want a light that is running on 18650 lithium batteries over AA, just due to what you are asking for. charging in the field will be difficult, but spare batteries and a good charger at home is probably a more economical option.

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Thu 02 Jun, 2022 5:15 pm

Olight have a headtorch now that might suit what you're asking for. They're not super lightweight or anything but they function well. I have a tiny hand held Olight spotlight and it's great quality

For camping I use a Petzl something and it has a rechargeable battery that replaces the AAAs. I love it. I don't know the runtime though because I don't use if for that long at a time

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Fri 03 Jun, 2022 11:44 am

Thanks both.

I'm quickly learning that max lumens don't mean much. Most high lumen models drop down to 50% or lower of their max lumen level within a couple of minutes.

It's the sustained lumens that matters and the size of the battery has a lot to do with that. Some brands like olight have great regulators, the light output is quite consistant from 95% to 10-20% battery.

A few blog sites and brands are showing graphs on how their models perform on a timescale which is helping narrow the choice down.

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Fri 03 Jun, 2022 5:10 pm

OK, I'll bite.

After spending many, many years bushwacking, and, except in rare cases - for example, immediately following a catastrophic bushfire which has cleared out everything - I am almost always (make that always) thinking, "good grief this is slow, thank goodness I am not doing this at night."

Which makes me wonder, where, when, why - most importantly WHY - do you want to be bushwacking 6 hours in darkness?

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Fri 03 Jun, 2022 9:09 pm

A common gear-related mistake I see when assisting with SAR training for my local TAFE is folks who get really comfortable with a micro-light at night and think they can see farther than they actually can. Add a little mist or smoke, and put the victim just a little off the track, and they don't realize that they cannot see more than a couple meters. The combo that I promote is a flood headlamp for your own feet, and a hand-held spot "searching" light that helps you and your teammates comb an area. They don't have to be big, but bigger light=more runtime. Granted this is in a particular situation, training people who will be guides, and often the training is less "how to do this" and more "this is why you shouldn't do this". Not unlike a nighttime walker, but a different set of needs and considerations. My takeaway is that while most of us can "get by" with the same amount of light that we used to get from the big 6v box lanterns, it would be better to have more.

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Sat 04 Jun, 2022 6:49 am

sandym wrote:OK, I'll bite.

After spending many, many years bushwacking, and, except in rare cases - for example, immediately following a catastrophic bushfire which has cleared out everything - I am almost always (make that always) thinking, "good grief this is slow, thank goodness I am not doing this at night."

Which makes me wonder, where, when, why - most importantly WHY - do you want to be bushwacking 6 hours in darkness?


I regularly walk up Mt Bogong at night, although it’s only 2-3hrs of walking. Gets the miserable bit over and done with, so I can enjoy my time up top over a weekend. I just use one of those little Nitecore N25 lights - plenty of illumination for an entire weekend, including the walking bit.
A

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Sat 04 Jun, 2022 8:08 am

andrewa wrote:
I regularly walk up Mt Bogong at night, although it’s only 2-3hrs of walking. Gets the miserable bit over and done with, so I can enjoy my time up top over a weekend. I just use one of those little Nitecore N25 lights - plenty of illumination for an entire weekend, including the walking bit.
A



Lovely, glad that works for you. But you are walking on a trail I assume. I can imagine walking up Bogong at night off trail would take far, far longer, in fact, everything takes far, far longer when bushwacking.

I don't have a dog in the fight, I am just curious who plans to bushwack for 6 hours, because in my reality, that distance would be far quicker travelled in daylight.

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Sat 04 Jun, 2022 10:11 pm

Haha. I was only trying to give an example of why one might walk at night. The OP mentioned on and off track, rather than just bushwalking. I took an experienced bushwalking mate up there one night who was similarly surprised that I chose to walk at night!

However, I agree that bushbashing at night sounds less pleasant, unless it is in scrub where you wouldn’t be able to see your destination, whether it be day or night, and we’re working from GPS, or compass…

A

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Thu 07 Jul, 2022 11:53 pm

I'm a bit late to this post and recommending something from overseas (aliexpress) but by God I'm happy with the features and quality of the headlamps I got there (brand name sorfin). They were cheap about $30 and took 3 weeks to arrive.

Has 18650 rechargeable batteries and lasts surprisingly long for great brightness, water restraint and solidly built! Anyways, thought it might be helpful for other folks.

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Wed 27 Sep, 2023 11:52 pm

NITECORE.

This brand is just too good. Highly recommended.

I got the NU25 and about to purchase the NU33 as a backup.

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Thu 28 Sep, 2023 6:42 am

For a left-field solution, you could look at night vision goggles:

https://www.nightvision.com.au/product/ ... on-goggle/

This one claims 50 hours of use from 1 x AA battery!

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Sun 01 Oct, 2023 7:28 pm

This one claims 50 hours of use from 1 x AA battery![/quote]

Cool if they were worn like glasses!

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Tue 03 Oct, 2023 7:52 pm

Fenix 65 R, 60 R. Mill spec, huge battery life, rechargable Lasts for days on a 1860 34000 milli amp hr battery. Waterproof.

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Tue 03 Oct, 2023 8:03 pm

I like my Fenix it is NM23 uses one AA. I carry some spare eneloops. Previous one was similar but had an extreme spotlight mode.

Re: Headtorch for offtrack night walking?

Mon 06 Nov, 2023 7:46 pm

Something to consider is also the way the light is defused.
I trail run often in the dark and have done quite a few hours of scrub bashing in the dark. Sometimes intentional, many times not.
I have a number of headlights but the best one for offtrack stuff is the petzel bindi. I know it's not what your after. I only use it for known things and trail runs because it's a rather short battery life and it's got no spot light but the quality of the light it produces is far superior than the other headlights with more than double its lumens. Depth perception is heaps better and it seems to be easier to see with it.


So more lumens does not mean it's better for night offtrack.
Instead of a super long battery life, could a Non rechargeable light work? changing batteries every few hours?
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