Capt Jim Wyatt
Hanging at the 10 Foot Stop
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This is what I use and the MAP is $499.00.
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I have used it as a primary a few times and it worked fine for me. MAP is $159.00.What are people's thoughts on using a Dive Rite CX2 light as a hand mounted primary for those getting started?
What are people's thoughts on using a Dive Rite CX2 light as a hand mounted primary for those getting started? Looks like a pretty sweet light, 1700 lumens at an 8degree beam with a 2.75 hour run time. I've never used one of course.
One of the cave instructors posted in a thread on the CX2 that he used it during shorter dives with students and it worked fine. The CX2 are my backup lights. Never tried it in a cave yet. Keep meaning to.
The FL instructor I did “intro to flow” with was interested in the CX2 as a possible option for cavern/intro students who are on a tight budget. I pulled it out in the cavern at Devil’s Eye and it did all right. I don’t know how it would work for an actual cave dive.It's not a constant output light which irritates me as I can certainly tell the difference in the beginning and the end. It's a great backup light, but I don't like them as primaries.
I would certainly say it worked "fine" but it wouldn't be one that I chose to use in a cave because of the beam angle. I actually prefer lights like the BX2 when teaching to have that "laser pointer" for signaling students. Weird because I don't like that sharp/tight hotspot for normal diving, but for teaching it's not bad to have at all.
Backup lights are perfectly adequate when teaching a cave course once you get to the point where you are acting as a guardian angel/devil for the students and aren't demonstrating skills that would dictate a canister light and frankly you can dive with your light off for most of their dive while you're observing since you aren't supposed to be part of the team that they are paying attention to. Light goes on when you need their attention and that's about it for me, you can use their lights to move around quite easily. The only caveat to that statement is if the team is full of powerful lights like a UWLD LD-40 you may not be able to signal them with a backup light and that's just something you have to pay attention to as an instructor and comes with experience. Doesn't matter how tight of a spot it has, 4000 lumen is a bright bloody light and while you can signal into it with experienced divers that aren't hyper focused on what's going on that would notice it, with new divers and especially students you often have to make some pretty exaggerated movements to get them to pay attention, even when you have the big boy light.
The FL instructor I did “intro to flow” with was interested in the CX2 as a possible option for cavern/intro students who are on a tight budget. I pulled it out in the cavern at Devil’s Eye and it did all right. I don’t know how it would work for an actual cave dive.
Great post, thanks!We are spoiled in 2022 with light options. I'm still a kid in the cave diving community, especially when compared to guys like @Bobby, @kensuf , and @Capt Jim Wyatt but when I learned over 10 years ago, HID was still king.
I actually learned on a 10w HID that has similar output to the single 18650 backup lights like the Dive Rite BX2. The CX2 is more comparable to an 18w HID in terms of total light output and would have been considered wicked bright back then. Lights that output like the LD-40 were unheard of. Diving with backup lights now is actually a cool experience and the caves appear very different when you go back to old school level of light output. There is a level of spookiness that they gain when you can't see from wall to wall and it certainly adds to the experience of the dive. While I love my LD-40 and wouldn't trade it for the world *at least until Bobby makes a better one*, I will do a lot of passages with it on low *comparable to a fresh battery in the CX2*, or even an entire dive on just backup lights, especially in caves like Peacock III and the Nicholson/Cisteen tunnels in Peacock which are just super cool when you aren't turning the cave to daylight.
of course. It's very easy when you haven't been around to see the changes in technology to have a skewed perspective based on only what is available today. @Bobby and I have actually had a lot of discussions about that with regards to rebreathers over the years and how easy it is to forget where we came from when you weren't there.Great post, thanks!
What are people's thoughts on using a Dive Rite CX2 light as a hand mounted primary for those getting started? Looks like a pretty sweet light, 1700 lumens at an 8degree beam with a 2.75 hour run time. I've never used one of course.