Torch or no Torch

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I won't get in the water without a light. I keep it clipped and stowed to my shoulder harness. I consider it, like a buoy, to be basic safety equipment. Plus I spend most of my time either looking in nooks and holes in the wall or exploring the inner reaches of the reef. I use my light a lot and carry a second backup in my bag. At night I carry both.
Use lights with 18650 batteries (produced in mass for the millions of inhalers) which are cheap and the rechargers are everywhere.
 
I have a light with 18650 batteries (Li-Ion) also. Do you bring the batteries and recharger with you or buy them at destination?
 
I have a light with 18650 batteries (Li-Ion) also. Do you bring the batteries and recharger with you or buy them at destination?
I bring them with me in my carry-on. Most lights like the DGX 600 come with a small light weight charger. I top charge them every night after diving and keep a spare battery in my dry bag.
 
I bring them with me in my carry-on. Most lights like the DGX 600 come with a small light weight charger. I top charge them every night after diving and keep a spare battery in my dry bag.
Same here. Both my Volador and DGX came with nearly identical little chargers that hook up to a micro usb cord. I bring both to have a backup.

If you really want to avoid bringing the charger blocks, you can buy 18650 batteries with a built-in micro usb port. Nitecore is the largest producer currently.

Don't be surprised by how long all of these take to recharge over a micro USB. Figure something like 8 hours for a full charge. You can get plug in 1 or even 2 Amp chargers that will dramatically cut charging time, but at the expense of shortening the life of your battery.
 
Don't be surprised by how long all of these take to recharge over a micro USB. Figure something like 8 hours for a full charge. You can get plug in 1 or even 2 Amp chargers that will dramatically cut charging time, but at the expense of shortening the life of your battery.
That's one reason I use alkaline batteries.
 
Recreational dive perspective...
Day: 18650 torch clipped to the shoulder ring, spare battery in my room or drybag for quick turnaround at lunch. A second torch usually lent to my buddy, otherwise it comes with me on the other shoulder (mainly because why not?).
Night: Sola 1200 (rechargeable) and 18650 torch as backup. Possibly a second 18650 with me, depending on buddy's memory.
Everything recharged each night. I have an XTAR 4x charger I bring. Storage charge mode on the evening before flying out. (I just don't recharge the Sola. One hour night dive leaves it about at storage level / half full.)
 
2 Amp chargers that will dramatically cut charging time, but at the expense of shortening the life of your battery
Rechargeable cells are *designed* to charge at a rate equal to their capacity: the so called "1 C" rate. For example, 2A for a 2000 mAh capacity. I don't believe babying the charge at (0.1C or 0.2C) will increase lifetime but don't have a source to back that up at the moment.

Storage charge has by far the greatest impact on battery life. The worst thing you can do is leave them on a charger or stored at full charge.

Also realize the capacities of many rechargeable 18650 batteries are overstated. A legit 5000 mAh 18650 doesn't exist at the moment.
 
Rechargeable cells are *designed* to charge at a rate equal to their capacity: the so called "1 C" rate. For example, 2A for a 2000 mAh capacity. I don't believe babying the charge at (0.1C or 0.2C) will increase lifetime but don't have a source to back that up at the moment.

Storage charge has by far the greatest impact on battery life. The worst thing you can do is leave them on a charger or stored at full charge.

Also realize the capacities of many rechargeable 18650 batteries are overstated. A legit 5000 mAh 18650 doesn't exist at the moment.
Millions are used in Vapers. Needless to say there are a lot of false capacity claims and junk batteries out there. Do a little homework before purchasing.
 
I always carry a torch. Literally and figuratively speaking.
 

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