Tweakers always have several of these and some gas station knives on them. Sometimes with batteries in them, sometimes dope...
Tweakers always have several of these and some gas station knives on them. Sometimes with batteries in them, sometimes dope...
“There is no growth in the comfort zone.”--Jocko Willink
"You can never have too many knives." --Joe Ambercrombie
I'm not a bad guy but I have to get me another light. I have spent lots of time comparing flashlights and it's hard to weigh lumens vs size online. Unfortunately there isn't a lot to choose from local.
I haven't seem criminals use flashlights and the ones around here, prefer darkness to their advantage.
The one time I've hit someone with a full blast of about 750 lumens, when they weren't expecting it, it reset their OODA loop like flipping a switch. A moment before they were being super aggressive, the next second, they were blinking stars from their eyes and trying to figure out where I went. By contrast, when blasting someone expecting it and/or with a less powerful light, they tend to quickly look down or away, limiting the efficacy of the light. Smart folks will close one eye to maintain some semblance of light adjustment.
Long and short - IME - LOTS of light delivered unexpectedly works pretty well. Moderate amounts of light or lots of light delivered expectedly is a mixed bag of results.
So, powerful light and concealed.
Agreed.
I just added another light to my "arsenal" and this thing is truly a weapon;
Malkoff Hound Dog Super head on a MD3 body, powered by a pair of 18500 protected Li-ion cells.
It uses the reliable Malkoff high-low bezel ring for two output levels;
- High: 1,700 lumens with 75,000 lux. It gets about 30 minutes of runtime on the pair of 18500 cells.
- Low: 80 lumens with about 4,500 lux. More than enough light to navigate outdoors under any conditions, about 12 hours on runtime on the pair of 18500 cells.
This thing is a beast: a well-defined 7-degree hot spot with amazing spill. While not EDC size, it fits comfortably in a coat pocket or in a cargo pants leg pocket. With the optional Malkoff Tricap and equipped with a finger lanyard, it handles perfectly when used in conjunction with a pistol (wish I had this for the Low Light Pistol Operator course last year).
The heat in the beam this thing projects on high is telling: at close range 75,000 lux to the eyes is going to be devastating, whether they know it's coming or not. And of course, it's a Malkoff making it suitable as an impact tool.
It's a weapon.