ericedelman
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2008
- Messages
- 106
A few days ago I asked, Has anyone tried the $124.95 Snap-On Flashlight? . Well, since none of the 3 pages of helpful replies had actually tried the flashlight, I decided to get one, and it arrived today.
Snap-On ECFSN4AAAF, Flashlight, Inspection, Focusing, 4 "AAA"
My overall impression of the light is that is produced in of China's better sweatshops (factories). The fit and finish is first rate, even the packaging is nice (a box with a cutout piece of foam for the light and batteries). Batteries are included (four AAA Duracell). There is a lockable front focusing ring, a 2 level tail switch (100%/50%/OFF), and an interesting parabolic reflector that is recessed within the aluminum housing to protect it (the focusing mechanism).
From top to bottom:
Surefire E2 (incandescent - 60 lumens, 2 CR123 batteries)
Snap-On ECFSN4AAAF (LED - 200 lumens, 4 AAA batteries)
Surefire M3 CombatLight (incandescent - 225 lumens, 3 CR123 batteries)
Maglite (LED - 124 lumens, 3 D cell batteries)
And from left to right, the Maglite, Surefire M3 CombatLight, Snap-On ECFSN4AAAF, and Surefire E2.
Here are all four lights shining against a toolbox. Each light has fresh batteries. In order of output, the Surefire M3 is slightly ahead of the Snap-On. The Maglite and Surefire E2 are not even close.
Here is the Surefire M3 Combatlight and the Snap-On. Although slightly brighter, the Surefire has a runtime of only one hour with this 225 lumen bulb.
Conclusion: Not a bad light for $124.95. In comparison, the Maglite is around $35, the Surefire E2 is around $80, and the Surefire M3 is around $225. For around the same price as the Snap-On, you could also get a quality 200 lumen LED flashlight by Gerber, Pelikan, Streamlight, or Surefire. However, if you want the easier to find AAA batteries, this is a nice choice.
Snap-On ECFSN4AAAF, Flashlight, Inspection, Focusing, 4 "AAA"
My overall impression of the light is that is produced in of China's better sweatshops (factories). The fit and finish is first rate, even the packaging is nice (a box with a cutout piece of foam for the light and batteries). Batteries are included (four AAA Duracell). There is a lockable front focusing ring, a 2 level tail switch (100%/50%/OFF), and an interesting parabolic reflector that is recessed within the aluminum housing to protect it (the focusing mechanism).
From top to bottom:
Surefire E2 (incandescent - 60 lumens, 2 CR123 batteries)
Snap-On ECFSN4AAAF (LED - 200 lumens, 4 AAA batteries)
Surefire M3 CombatLight (incandescent - 225 lumens, 3 CR123 batteries)
Maglite (LED - 124 lumens, 3 D cell batteries)
And from left to right, the Maglite, Surefire M3 CombatLight, Snap-On ECFSN4AAAF, and Surefire E2.
Here are all four lights shining against a toolbox. Each light has fresh batteries. In order of output, the Surefire M3 is slightly ahead of the Snap-On. The Maglite and Surefire E2 are not even close.
Here is the Surefire M3 Combatlight and the Snap-On. Although slightly brighter, the Surefire has a runtime of only one hour with this 225 lumen bulb.
Conclusion: Not a bad light for $124.95. In comparison, the Maglite is around $35, the Surefire E2 is around $80, and the Surefire M3 is around $225. For around the same price as the Snap-On, you could also get a quality 200 lumen LED flashlight by Gerber, Pelikan, Streamlight, or Surefire. However, if you want the easier to find AAA batteries, this is a nice choice.


