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Recommend a flashlight for a farmer

mbunimog

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 27, 2013
Messages
124
Location
Frederick, Maryland
I have a LEDLenser headlight model H14R.2. 1000 lumens on boost and dimmer to reduce output to whatever you need. Up to 35 hours of battery life on 60 lumens, 12 hours on 450 lumens, and 6 hours on 1000 lumens. Adjustable for low beam to high beam. Fast focus with one hand. Rear red light. 7 year warranty
 
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WurthUSA

Active member
Joined
Jul 21, 2022
Messages
30
Mr. Wurth,

I'm unaccustomed to what kind of affiliate program GJ has, and what kinds of perks come with being an "affiliate", if such a things exists. All that said, please forgive me if I'm way off base here and this post is totally acceptable to the folks who run the forum.

It seems you have woken up a 2 year old thread to advertise your products. Now old threads get woken up by new members all the time, but usually it is innocent enough and doesn't really cause any problems other than some grumbling in the comments. In this case however, it appears you simply searched all threads for something with the term "flashlight", and jumped in to post your "Ad". What makes this worse is that there are other active threads on the front page currently discussing flashlights, where your post may have actually been relevant, but it would have taken the extra step of actually reading the forum to realize that.

I generally don't find subtle advertising by members who own businesses but otherwise actually contribute to the forum to be distasteful, but this comes off as having an intern performing a low effort search and just spamming the forum. This is the kind of thing that can actually be counterproductive to your purpose if it leaves a bad taste in members mouths.

Thanks for listening!
Hey, no worries we thought the deal was Würth mentioning. I can assure you we read every single post and thread to make sure we're providing maximum value. If this specific post left a bad taste in your mouth we apologize. Our only intention is to help make your jobs easier and answer your questions with relevant solutions. We appreciate and respect your passion. and the time you took to write this response. We'll reach out to you in a separate conversation and see if we can get to know one another better and send a little swag your way! Appreciate you.
 

Ryan

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 26, 2006
Messages
5,690
Location
Texas/Hawaii
Hey, no worries we thought the deal was Würth mentioning. I can assure you we read every single post and thread to make sure we're providing maximum value. If this specific post left a bad taste in your mouth we apologize. Our only intention is to help make your jobs easier and answer your questions with relevant solutions. We appreciate and respect your passion. and the time you took to write this response. We'll reach out to you in a separate conversation and see if we can get to know one another better and send a little swag your way! Appreciate you.

Please stop using the forum for marketing.
 

WWheeler

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 23, 2015
Messages
4,105
Location
Middleofnowhere USA
No one likes big or small Maglites anymore? The 3 D cell LED heatsinked light or the Mag Charger with LED?
The wearable headlamp for doing work on machines at night is a good idea.

MagLite ML300L in each of our vehicles. They're just super dependable and they don't eat batteries when left unused/uneeded for long periods of time (years) whereas every other battery flashlight I've ever used suffers from some kind of parasitic draw and eats batteries even when they have never been turned on. Nothing's worse than a flashlight that's dead when you need it.
 

Wakefield

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Joined
Aug 26, 2010
Messages
5,132
Location
Arlington VA (but would like to get out to country
When I was a kid Sears used to sell a "lantern" that was plastic,square with a convenient handle and held the 6 volt battery that contained 4 cells that were like D cells but taller and hence probably a bit taller. (Those 6 volt batteries and their contained cells was a subject in a thread here but I don't remember what thread it was. )Because of the size of the thing the reflector/head was bigger than that of an ordinary flashlight. Often at campgrounds there would be a slideshow or movie for the public,before it started kids would shine their flashlights at the screen as a sort of competition to see who had the brightest light. My square lantern often did well. That was in the days before alkaline batteries had become popular and before LEDs were known to the public except perhaps for little blue indicator lights on a stereo.
Someone ought to design one of those things using a good high output heatsinked LED. The bigger reflector would probably give it a leg up on the 4 cell LED Maglite.
 

Tennessee Cattleman

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 18, 2012
Messages
408
Location
East Tennessee
Surefire G2X TACTICAL works on the farm for me. It's small, powerful for it's size and takes 2 CR123A batteries. It's fairly reasonable on price, considering the quality of the product.
 
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F-22

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Jan 23, 2022
Messages
1,830
Really hard to beat a Wurkkos FC11 for 30€ with the cell. Famous old brands like Maglite are years behind the current top notch products. And alkalines are decades behind. A li-ion battery holds charge for years and has soooo much more capacity it's mindblowing.
That cheap Wurkkos will emit light for 11 days on the eco setting - and that's not far off of how much light a classic incandescent maglite would emit! And tbh the low lumen setting often ends up being really useful for nighttime walks, you don't want to blind everyone you meet. But double click it and it goes straight to turbo, it'll get hot and shine for an hour but it's really way too bright for most uses. It also charges via USB C like a phone.


A bit more top end would be a Zebralight SC64. It's not a huge difference from the Wurkkos, but their driver allows for sub-lumen operation. It'll glow for 4 months on the lowest setting and a week at 10 lumens (crazy efficient, the wurkkos glows for that time on 2 lumens...).

Or, a Hanklight. They're basically hand-built flashlights by a guy named Hank from China. The D4V2 is the "standard" enthusiast flashlight for most people.


The argument that you can just swap alkaline batteries and don't need to charge them seems so outdated to me. All these lights use standard lithium cells, the 18650 factor is most common (battery power tools, electric cars... everything uses them). Flashlights are one of the few products where they're user replaceable. You can have 2 or 3 18650 cells and just swap them out when needed. That said, if the flashlight glows for literally a week or multiple months... yeah, leave those alkalines in the stone age.
 

exmaxima1

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 25, 2011
Messages
6,339
Location
Midwest
Basically he needs both a worklight AND a small flashlight. There's millions of small mega-lumen flashlights but for repairing equipment at night a worklight is ideal. You typically get a broad spread of light (that doesn't hurt your eyes), a magnetic base, possibly an additional flashlight function, and a couple of brightness settings. I bought a modestly priced one from Menards and use it almost exclusively for every task around the house. Being able to fold it makes it very handy in tighter spots.

 

Citation

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 20, 2016
Messages
3,209
Location
Indy
I know this is a thread that was awaken with an ad but I'll comment anyway. I still stick by my suggestions from two years ago but some of them have been replaced with updated models. In the mean time, some vendors have started selling flexible headband type lights. I've got examples of both of these (not endorsing specific sellers)
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09MQD8LS2/?tag=atomicindus08-20

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09HXMNY9N/?tag=atomicindus08-20

The nice thing about these lights is the wide source helps prevent shadows when working in a small area. They are very floody in their output.

If you look around they are also under $10 on Amazon so they become a semi-disposable item.
 

IndyGarage

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 29, 2010
Messages
9,669
Location
Indy
Recently bought a couple of NEBO Big larry's, which have a very large LED cluster. They give out enough light to illuminate an entire campsite. They also have a big magnet on the end so they stick to things and a flashing red light for emergency. They run on 3 AA's.

Highly recommended.
 

Cooter Brown

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 6, 2017
Messages
316
I like the LED Maglite Mini Mag AA and AAA. Tough, relatively inexpensive, made in USA, except I think for the LED itself. I load them with lithium batteries. Plenty bright enough for my purposes. Unfortunately Home Depot, Lowe's, Walmart etc. no longer carry them and I can't find them anywhere locally. Shipping costs put them at around the same cost as other lights.

I wonder if they've had supply issues with the LEDs?
 

Rinspeed

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 26, 2020
Messages
1,815
Location
NY
I like the LED Maglite Mini Mag AA and AAA. Tough, relatively inexpensive, made in USA, except I think for the LED itself. I load them with lithium batteries. Plenty bright enough for my purposes. Unfortunately Home Depot, Lowe's, Walmart etc. no longer carry them and I can't find them anywhere locally. Shipping costs put them at around the same cost as other lights.

I wonder if they've had supply issues with the LEDs?




Cree has massive plants in NC and NY.
 
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