I own, and often carry, a lot of lights. The i1R2 probably hasn’t got the most hours on it, but in terms of the number of times it gets turned on, it’s by far the winner.
I own, and often carry, a lot of lights. The i1R2 probably hasn’t got the most hours on it, but in terms of the number of times it gets turned on, it’s by far the winner.
Not an answer, but a question.
OP, what do you use the 5 lumen mode on that flashlight for? Isn’t that like half a candle?
Not OP, but I use the 0.5 lumen mode on my lights to see with dark adapted vision. I really like to have a 1 lumen or lower mode on most of my smaller lights.
I was wondering the other day how many lumen the 1.5V incandescent flashlights from when I was a kid would have been. Maybe 5-7 on a new battery? If I need to walk around the house at night, the moonlight mode on any of my lights is fine.
Embarrassingly, a common use is reading small print when I don’t have, or can’t be bothered putting on, my reading glasses - so I guess the answer is to illuminate close up things. The second most common use is finding a keyhole in the dark.
The most common use of the high mode is when people say ‘oh wow, is that a torch?’ and I immediately blind them with it because I’m cool like that.
Not OP, but same light. If there’s no ambient light brighter than a moon or night light, the dim mode is bright enough for about a 5ft distance for me. If I’ve gone fully night-adapted, the dim mode is good for a large area. It has a relatively narrow pattern (center spot and weak flood) so it has decent throw so the “half a candle” has some reach. Some rough measurements put the spot at a 20deg beam and the spilled flood at 70. The bright mode can show me about a whole garage bay or bedroom. Again, we’re talking in very dark situations, not streetlit areas or lamp-lit rooms. If there’s that much light around, I’ll need the bright mode for areas and use the dim mode for closeups in shadows.