lairdb
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Hello scubaboard folks,
Although Wurkkos has been manufacturing dive lights for years, our primary focus has been on engaging with the BLF and Reddit/flashlight. This has inadvertently slowed progress in advancing Wurkkos dive light Development and limited our connect of divers' actual needs.
Like a couple of others have described themselves, I only do a few dive trips each year and don’t blog, so not a good review candidate — but I have a mild flashlight addiction and I’m a sucker for providing feedback that I can pretend might get used. Obviously this is for the diving I do — others will have other needs.
I have several dry-land Wurkkos, but no dive Wurkkos; my diving tends to want an auxiliary light size (e.g. 1x 18650 with bolt snap at the rear), easily turned on and off, easily stowed, used to look in crevices and underhangs or as a pointer.
At present, I carry two BigBlue AL1100; one on each shoulder d-ring. I’ve tried several others, but here’s the elements that have brought me back and left me with a crate full of decent but unused lights.
-Absolute disqualifier: the SOS setting (if present) must use an unusual press to reach it. It must not be part of the normal cycle. There are a bunch of lights out there that are hi-mid-lo-SOS-off; no no no no no no no. If there’s an SOS function, it should be mildly hidden (long press, 10x click, etc.)
-Easy turn off. Because I tend to briefly look in a crevice or point something out, then re-stow, I don’t want to cycle through settings and check the light before re-stowing. I like the BigBlue UI where after a couple of seconds of being on (during which pressing will adjust intensity) then the next press turns it off. Very quickly becomes second-nature to on-look at thing-off, or on-dim-look at thing-off, with no need to cycle through settings on the way to off, miss off and go through the cycle again, etc.
-One-handed operation. I get the simplicity of the screw-on designs, and the vessel integrity of the twist-ring designs, but as an intermittent light user, that’s two hands every time. With a body-forward button (or some other single-hand actuation) I can un-stow, on, look/signal, off, restow — all with one hand. My current lights almost never get unsnapped during the dive; just pulled out of the snoopy, pointed, activated, etc. all while still clipped in at the rear. (This is why I don’t favor tail-cap buttons for diving, as much as I prefer them for dry land.)
-Charge state indicator. As a on-look-off user, I don’t recharge between every dive, as long as the charge state indicator still shows good. Handy. (Also, I carry two, and on an actual night dive, three, so charge state of #1 isn’t as critical.)
Things I don’t have that I wish I did:
-laser pointer that actually works in clear-ish, bright-ish water. I’ve tried three lights with lasers, and in the videos they are great, and in the conditions I dive they are useless. I’m probably fighting both physics and safety regulations (and actual safety), but as long as I’m wishing…. (Maybe it would be more visible in bright-ish conditions by blinking, or pulsing, or pulsing in and out of perfect collimation, or alternating between red and green diodes, or…?)
-Easy flood/spot. Not sure how to solve this without mucking up the UI — the BigBlue flood/spot model has an adjustable lens; not bad, but two-hands, a little bulky, and artifacts when it’s a spot. Maybe it’s a separate emitter solution, with off-spot-flood-dim spot-off?
-Easy momentary/morse mode. Again, don’t mess up a simple UI — but an easy way to access a momentary mode would be handy. For my dive style, it might actually stay in momentary mode most of the time; if not, there are still times it would be handy.
-Easier recharge. This is lowest on my wishlist because my current (ha ha) state of affairs is okay: all lights are on 18650s, and I carry a lightweight dedicated single 18650 charger — but with USB C available, an on-board (on-board light or on-board battery) charge means would be handy. (And while we’re at it, anything that takes a charge should be able to serve as a power-bank. One of my 3 FC13s is always in my daily bag because it can power-bank as well as light.)
Don’t:
-Don’t put Anduril in a dive light.
-Don’t have SOS mode a part of ordinary use of the light.
-Don’t bother with a lockout (as long as a quarter-turn of the battery cap will do the same thing without compromising water-integrity.)
-Don’t overcomplicate the UI (see Anduril.) (There’s a reason the kitchen drawer has a TD02 and not an FC13.)
Wow — that was longer than I thought it would be.