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Thread: I'm Trying Out a New Carbine Light for "Inside the House"

  1. #1
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    I'm Trying Out a New Carbine Light for "Inside the House"

    https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/ne...series-lights/

    I purchased one of these over the weekend, and mated it with this bayonet lug mount.

    https://www.botach.com/kley-zion-bayonet-lug-mount/

    The whole point was to have a lightweight light and mount for inside the house.

    Now, if the theory is to blind an intruder with your weapon light, then this is definitely NOT the way to go. It is just bright enough to illuminate the target, and the red dot sight's dot is visible with either the red or the while LED.

    Pros:

    1. Very lightweight.
    2. Out of the way unless you need it.
    3. Easy to activate.
    4. Brightness compatible to use with an RDS.


    Cons:

    1. I had trouble mounting it to the KZ mount. Either the light's rails are out of spec or the KZ rail is out of spec. I had to tap it on with a rubber mallet and it was obvious the the rail was shaving material from the light.
    2. I uses somewhat of an oddball battery (2016). I would have preferred is use a 2032 like the RDS.
    3. It is definitely not bright enough to blind an attacker.
    4. It does not appear it would survive very much abuse.



    I'm also keeping my eye open for a better, brighter alternative in the same sized package.
    Last edited by Doc Safari; 06-24-19 at 10:24.

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by Doc Safari View Post
    https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/ne...series-lights/

    I purchased one of these over the weekend, and mated it with this bayonet lug mount.

    https://www.botach.com/kley-zion-bayonet-lug-mount/

    The whole point was to have a lightweight light and mount for inside the house.

    Now, if the theory is to blind an intruder with your weapon light, then this is definitely NOT the way to go. It is just bright enough to illuminate the target, and the red dot sight's dot is visible with either the red or the while LED.

    Pros:

    1. Very lightweight.
    2. Out of the way unless you need it.
    3. Easy to activate.
    4. Brightness compatible to use with an RDS.


    Cons:

    1. I had trouble mounting it to the KZ mount. Either the light's rails are out of spec or the KZ rail is out of spec. I had to tap it on with a rubber mallet and it was obvious the the rail was shaving material from the light.
    2. I uses somewhat of an oddball battery (2016). I would have preferred is use a 2032 like the RDS.
    3. It is definitely not bright enough to blind an attacker.
    4. It does not appear it would survive very much abuse.



    I'm also keeping my eye open for a better, brighter alternative in the same sized package.
    You just missed the PL-PRO flash sale. Would've been perfect size you were looking for but bright as hell.

    https://www.olightstore.com/pl-pro-valkyrie.html

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by Adrenaline_6 View Post
    You just missed the PL-PRO flash sale. Would've been perfect size you were looking for but bright as hell.

    https://www.olightstore.com/pl-pro-valkyrie.html
    Looks like a good suggestion. I had previously tried a Streamlight TLR3. Loved the size and weight but didn't think it was that abuse-proof.

  4. #4
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    Doc, thanks for posting your results. if you are looking for a lightweight relatively low output light that won’t wash your dot, consider the Inforce WML. You’ll get more overlap into the outdoor use in your other thread. I’m able to use one effectively with a LPVO.

    If you want all spill and little hotspot, but super durable, consider the Elzetta Alpha with flood lens. Its a very lightweight one cell light that you’ll have a hard time breaking. My Bravo/flood reaches at least 75m and does not wash my Comp M4S dot at the setting it lives at.

    You can also try cutting a makeshift diffuser and attaching to whatever light you like, to cut the hotspot, but retain much of the output.
    Last edited by 1168; 06-24-19 at 13:04. Reason: Add

  5. #5
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    I remember hearing about some issues with the WML. Are they mostly a thing of the past?

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Doc Safari View Post
    I remember hearing about some issues with the WML. Are they mostly a thing of the past?
    I think I remember parasitic battery drain being something that was talked about.

    I have two. They both work well. I’ve never beat on them enough to find the limit of their durability. I did have to change the battery in my most used one, possibly due to parasitic drain, possibly just due to use. It was dead when I picked it up to check that it was still GTG. Last used about a week ago. Battery has been in it for about 6 months and used occasionally. Its on a backup rifle, but also did a couple years on a primary rifle.
    Last edited by 1168; 06-24-19 at 13:35. Reason: Add

  7. #7
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    I put a small navigation light on the MLOK rail of my Shockwave 870. The intention was to support a door breach or sneak and peek situation at home... I was really trying to find a use case of the Shockwave. Now I just have the bulky Surefire fore-end, that is plenty bright for a 50 yard maximum gun.

    60 lumens was a lot of light 20 years ago.
    Today people have thousands of lumens.
    Various schools of thought, but I think moderation is right for the house. My two story house’s maximum 80 foot dimension is lit up more than adequately with 250 lumens. 800 lumens works fine for warehouse searches.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Doc Safari View Post
    https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/ne...series-lights/

    I purchased one of these over the weekend, and mated it with this bayonet lug mount.

    https://www.botach.com/kley-zion-bayonet-lug-mount/

    The whole point was to have a lightweight light and mount for inside the house.

    Now, if the theory is to blind an intruder with your weapon light, then this is definitely NOT the way to go. It is just bright enough to illuminate the target, and the red dot sight's dot is visible with either the red or the while LED.

    Pros:

    1. Very lightweight.
    2. Out of the way unless you need it.
    3. Easy to activate.
    4. Brightness compatible to use with an RDS.


    Cons:

    1. I had trouble mounting it to the KZ mount. Either the light's rails are out of spec or the KZ rail is out of spec. I had to tap it on with a rubber mallet and it was obvious the the rail was shaving material from the light.
    2. I uses somewhat of an oddball battery (2016). I would have preferred is use a 2032 like the RDS.
    3. It is definitely not bright enough to blind an attacker.
    4. It does not appear it would survive very much abuse.



    I'm also keeping my eye open for a better, brighter alternative in the same sized package.
    The M300 has all of those pros and none of those cons for 0.2 pounds more.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    Sic semper tyrannis.

  9. #9
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    Edited.
    Last edited by D.O.A.F.S.; 06-25-19 at 07:03.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Doc Safari View Post
    I remember hearing about some issues with the WML. Are they mostly a thing of the past?
    They were prone to cracking around the threads due to them being plastic. The newer versions are reinforced now.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro

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