- Jun 15, 2008
- 4,654
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More leds is not neccesarily better. You want a tight focused beam and having lots of bulbs doesn't give you that. My 9led flashlight is my worst one for candling. The maglights seem to vary. Until recently my cheap 3 led one I got from walmart was best. It uses 3 AA batteries to power the 3 bulbs.
Earlier this summer we got invited along to explore some caves. Everyone had a flashlight so about 20 flashlights in all. Not having a chance to grab one from the house I stopped at a nearby target and spent 10mins deliberating over flashlights until everyone was ready to drag me off and leave me to wander around in the dark. I finally settled on a River Rock flashlight. Compact, 1w bulb, 1 AA battery, water proof, and nice thick shatterproof glass. It turned out to be the clearest, brightest beam of light we had even when compared to much larger flashlights. Someone even had a big bulky spot light with an incandescent bulb and my little palm length flashlight was providing more useful light than that. It kept getting run off with by various people whenever we found an opening to explore. So when I got home I decided to try candling eggs. It was perfect. The beam was a perfect width with nearly all the light being focused in the egg. I could even see well enough into the dark brown eggs to make out some veins. They also had a 2w version in the same size but the battery life was very short and I didn't want to get stuck in a cave with a dead flashlight.
Earlier this summer we got invited along to explore some caves. Everyone had a flashlight so about 20 flashlights in all. Not having a chance to grab one from the house I stopped at a nearby target and spent 10mins deliberating over flashlights until everyone was ready to drag me off and leave me to wander around in the dark. I finally settled on a River Rock flashlight. Compact, 1w bulb, 1 AA battery, water proof, and nice thick shatterproof glass. It turned out to be the clearest, brightest beam of light we had even when compared to much larger flashlights. Someone even had a big bulky spot light with an incandescent bulb and my little palm length flashlight was providing more useful light than that. It kept getting run off with by various people whenever we found an opening to explore. So when I got home I decided to try candling eggs. It was perfect. The beam was a perfect width with nearly all the light being focused in the egg. I could even see well enough into the dark brown eggs to make out some veins. They also had a 2w version in the same size but the battery life was very short and I didn't want to get stuck in a cave with a dead flashlight.