i can't believe people still use alkalines with lensers . Just use rechargeable it gives constant output and is just cheaper not having to buy alkalines all the time.
Now the fenix hp10 does have 4AA compared to the h7's 3AAA . Still i ALWAYS prefer a light that is going to give me a constant regulated brightness for at least 2-3 hours. Instead of one that will dim as soon as the batteries start to lose power.
The h7 lost it's brightness very quickly compared to the hp10. The hp10 kept a constant 120 lumens for a good 6+ hours. by that time the led lenser looked like it had fallen to around 10 lumens on a fresh set of batteries.
having both brands of lights I prefer the fenix by a long shot. Led lenser's advantage is ofcourse is it's optics which can concentrate beam from spot to flood. That's where the advantages end... Fenix has higher IPX standard, regulated output, compatible with nimh or lithium batteries. I month ago I compared run times on my fenix HP10 and a led lenser H7.... two great headlamps. while the h7 had better optic's which made it seem brighter than the hp10 that only lasted for an hour.
The purpose of throwers is to see as far at night as possible. If you have flashlight with a lot of flood light, the reflecting light from close objects shrinks your pupils and worsens your night vision. Lenser wins here.
If you understand how your eye works than you should know that measured lux at hotspot are not all that matters.
Because fenix has both flood and throw at the same time, it's better as bike light for example. Otherwise, I find Lensers more useful.
@muzikmasteruk Consider the total amount of light being emitted by the TK35 versus the M14. The M14's light is concentrated down to a small point. The TK35's light is not only more intense in the same given area as the M14, there's also a very large amount of light being flooded around the central beam too. The M14 does not have any flood at all.
@chobbit1lc The TK35 is more of a "neutral" white with very little, if any, blue. Though they do vary from LED to LED in each flashlight. You may end up with one that's extremely white with no yellow or green tinting at all, or you could end up with one that looks very yellow or very green.
Are you comparing a 820 lumen flashlight to a 225 lumen lenser? The X21 is a better light to compare it with.
LordDarthMalak 3 months ago
i can't believe people still use alkalines with lensers . Just use rechargeable it gives constant output and is just cheaper not having to buy alkalines all the time.
LordDarthMalak 3 months ago
Now the fenix hp10 does have 4AA compared to the h7's 3AAA . Still i ALWAYS prefer a light that is going to give me a constant regulated brightness for at least 2-3 hours. Instead of one that will dim as soon as the batteries start to lose power.
Somegooddude 3 months ago
H7R+H14R beamshot video coming soon
Predator752 3 months ago
The h7 lost it's brightness very quickly compared to the hp10. The hp10 kept a constant 120 lumens for a good 6+ hours. by that time the led lenser looked like it had fallen to around 10 lumens on a fresh set of batteries.
Somegooddude 3 months ago
@Somegooddude HP10: 4 x 1,5V AA, H7: 3x AAA
Predator752 3 months ago
having both brands of lights I prefer the fenix by a long shot. Led lenser's advantage is ofcourse is it's optics which can concentrate beam from spot to flood. That's where the advantages end... Fenix has higher IPX standard, regulated output, compatible with nimh or lithium batteries. I month ago I compared run times on my fenix HP10 and a led lenser H7.... two great headlamps. while the h7 had better optic's which made it seem brighter than the hp10 that only lasted for an hour.
Somegooddude 3 months ago
30m
Predator752 4 months ago
At the beginning of the video - Whats the distance to the trees!???
FireCrack83 4 months ago
The purpose of throwers is to see as far at night as possible. If you have flashlight with a lot of flood light, the reflecting light from close objects shrinks your pupils and worsens your night vision. Lenser wins here.
If you understand how your eye works than you should know that measured lux at hotspot are not all that matters.
Because fenix has both flood and throw at the same time, it's better as bike light for example. Otherwise, I find Lensers more useful.
Impromate 5 months ago
Comment removed
Impromate 5 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Hi U got The Olight SR-90 (2200Lumen) vs Fenix TK-70 (2200Lumen)Video to show us at 200-300m Throw distance range?
Internet Photo Proven feedback "Top 3 LED Flashlight Max throw list ;"
1st: Fenix TK70, 1100m Throw range Max. $229
2nd: Olight SR-90, 1000m $460
3rd: Olight SR-92, 900m $360
TK-70 is the Best Throw Range.
Type this on YouTube: Fenix TK-70 / TK-70 vs Polarion PH-40
"In Future will be Olight SR-X6(6000Lumen) in Top List . Official production on sep 2011 Soon"
JohnJ512 6 months ago
Comment removed
JohnJ512 6 months ago
in this video they dont look THAT different except for the colour....
the tk should be considerably brighter.. why isnt it?
muzikmasteruk 11 months ago
@muzikmasteruk Consider the total amount of light being emitted by the TK35 versus the M14. The M14's light is concentrated down to a small point. The TK35's light is not only more intense in the same given area as the M14, there's also a very large amount of light being flooded around the central beam too. The M14 does not have any flood at all.
RB5566 8 months ago
Is the TK35 beam really as warm as it looks? I hate the cold blue of most LEDs.
I have a couple warm quarks. I'm looking for a high power light that is more neutral.
chobbit1lc 1 year ago
@chobbit1lc The TK35 is more of a "neutral" white with very little, if any, blue. Though they do vary from LED to LED in each flashlight. You may end up with one that's extremely white with no yellow or green tinting at all, or you could end up with one that looks very yellow or very green.
RB5566 8 months ago