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I think you first need to decide how powerful a lamp you want.
For camping, hiking, navigation, etc., a low powered/low price headlamp is plenty.
I use a high powered Princeton for bicycling at night, because I need a lot of throw. It's as bright as my Fenix E21 (which claims 150+ lumens), and the battery life with 3 AAs is good. The only downside is toggling through the "low" setting, and that the low setting has a strong blue tint.
I crashed my bike last month and came down on the lamp, and it survived.
Here is a good review of the Zebra Light.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dkhGGa857Gs
Go in peace, but be prepared for violence.
Dwood,
Thanks for the link, that was an excellent review and I am sold on the lamp. I like the fact that one can use it as a headlamp but with that clip, one could mount it to a chest rig (probably upside down) or a back pack strap.
Thanks again and I will pick one up soon.
my mother-in-law got me a streamlight sidewinder compact for christmas this year, i've just used it around the house and to work on computers at work, it works well for my needs.
Petzl is one of the industry standards. Hard to go wrong with one. I have an ancient Zoom, and a Zipka I like. However, DH's MyoXP has the annoying feature of draining the batteies even when "off". It is apparently something to do with the way the light is regulated.
Another nice headlamp to consider, is the Spark Headlamp.
SPARK
I have the Spark SD52-NW, which is on the large side, but extremely nice. Well made, good heat dissapation, runs on 2xAA, has a comfortable headband (as in you can sleep in it comfy), and comes with a couple interesting screw-on accessories--a strong magnet to attache the light to steel, such as the side of your car, and a small brass fitting for attaching the light to a small tripod.
The light is capable of running on 2xIFR14500 rechargeable lithium ion batteries, though most folk will prefer primary Li-ions or alkalines, or NiMh rechargeables.
Two broken Tigers, on fire in the night,
Flicker their souls to the wind...
-Roads to Moscow
Not Forgotten:
http://www.virtualwall.org/dk/KillenJD01a.htm
http://www.virtualwall.org/db/BoddenTR01a.htm
i use headlamps in almost every scenario that a person might usually dig for a flashlight.
i keep one in the car, keep one in the tool box, keep two in the hiking bag, keep one in the house. it's the best hands free lighting option for noncombat application. if you're going to use a flashlight for something other than combat, why not be hands free?
i use mostly the basic petzls because the battery life is really good and they use common alkaline cells. they're really cheap and they're the lightest (for ultralite hikers). the amount of light is "good enough," they do not have excellent throw, flood or beam spot and you wouldn't use them for anything besides chores, minor tasks etc. they're great for changing a tire in the dark by yourself, getting under a car without a gigantic shop light, soldering something without a gigantic bench light, walking around an unlit house after a power outage, hiking at night, cooking at night during camping etc.
if you are going through an area that might have anything besides stumbling hazards i would carry a nice handheld in addition to the headlamp. this also gives you multi-directional capability.
Finally got around to using my Princeton Tech MPLS this weekend at drill. I have to say, it crushes it my Petzl Tactika in most areas.
It has the best switch I've ever used. It's bigger than the Petzl, and easier to manipulate. It starts on low red one more click puts it on high red. Hold it down and it switches to white on that intensity setting.
The petzl starts out on a high setting, and clicks through to medium and low. To use the red setting you flip down a red filter.
I'm much less worried about light discipline with the Princeton Tech. The red function is also actually red, whereas the Petzl is a red filter that's not truly red.
The MPLS has more mounting options, and more angle adjustment.
I found the Petzl slightly more comfortable wearing on a bare head.
Definitely the giving the Nod to the Princeton Tech, but it's also ~$30 more expensive.
+1 for Petzl's. Reliable.
"War is a terrible trade. But when the cause is just, the smell of gunpowder is sweet."
-Miles Standish (American Colonial)
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