January 16th, 2013, 19:15 | #31 | |
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http://www.eotech-inc.com/products/l...x-led-long-gun You want a 200-250 lumen + light, when SEALS are using a 150 Lumen peak weapon light. 100 - 200 lumens is fine, but look up reviews within the flashlight community (of which is HUGE: http://flashlightreviews.com/) Best of luck. |
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January 16th, 2013, 19:48 | #32 | |
aka coachster
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A lot of cheap clones are no where near their rated output. |
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January 16th, 2013, 20:32 | #33 | |
Do note you are playing with fellow airsoft-brothers-in-arms and I'm sure none of them want to go blind. Do onto others what you would do onto yourself. Don't do things to others you wouldn't want done to yourself
Sent from my SGH-I757M using Tapatalk 2
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January 16th, 2013, 20:42 | #34 |
Not Eye Safe, Pretty Boy Maximus on the field take his picture!
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January 16th, 2013, 21:09 | #35 |
aka coachster
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January 16th, 2013, 21:45 | #36 |
As a Regular to UA, I gotta say. The lighting condition on that field is pretty good, I run without a flash light, or any light at all. Just not necessary for my play style. It really comes down to you, whether you want to run with one, or without.
Just remember to adjust your eyes before running into the hurt locker, lol.
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Armoury: Les Baer 1911 Ultimate Recon 5" GBB King Arms M4 Full Metal - CQB - modded |
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January 17th, 2013, 02:38 | #37 |
Najohn
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I have a Maglite L100 and L200. Each was under $50 bucks, both run on 3 AAA batteries, quality is just very good, has many functions such as strobe, sos, dim to bright options and more.
The brightness isn't bad either, the L100 (195 lumens) is a little less then the L200 (235 lumens ish). Both get the job done at the end though. For a begineer/if in need of one scenario, these flashlights have a ton of bells and whistles for a very affordable price. Defintely what I would recommend for the more cheaper route Last edited by Short Round; January 17th, 2013 at 02:54.. |
January 17th, 2013, 05:30 | #38 |
costco sells a 200 lumen Cree LED flashlight $20 for 3 of them. they are actually quite good. for a flash light. i plan on holding one or 2 and using them as a set down light.
set it to strobe, place it somewhere i'm not and wait for people to walk into it. lights only give away your position if you're holding on to it serisouly though. they are pretty good lights, and have a nice white beam. i'm thinking of rigging one up to a pressure pad, and building it into my f2000 handgaurd |
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January 24th, 2013, 12:32 | #39 |
I just purchased my first light, and was wondering if anyone has heard/seen a light being destroyed by incomming bb's? Additionally; pressure switch: extremely useful, or not so much?
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Guardians of Asgaard |
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January 24th, 2013, 13:06 | #40 | |
Tys
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Re. pressure switches. They're useful and convenient. Looks cool too. At times I've found the wiring to get hung up on gear/stuff...and I've had switches activated when I hadn't meant them (usually on a piece of gear). A push button tailcap is a no-brainer no-fail option. You have to position it so it's under your thumb with a certain hold on your gun though...but there's a gazillion mounts out there for that. If I can conveniently make it work without a pressure switch I will. Just my opinion...lots of guys will run theirs differently. |
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January 24th, 2013, 15:05 | #41 | |
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January 24th, 2013, 15:36 | #42 |
ChrisUK
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The TLR-1s defiantly comes in handy during CQB. The key I find is learning when not to use it and thus give your position away.
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Bookmarks |
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