OP
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2021
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Personal observations:
A bright light at night can be too bright for the limited purposes a civilian might use it. 300 lumens is sufficient; 1000 lumens is absolute overkill.
As well, if you are going to combine a (bright) light with a red dot sight, you must consider how a burst of light will interfere with your red dot.
A bright light with a fixed <4 MoA may wash out the dot. A variable brightness RDS will be slow if not completely fooled by the change from dark to light. A reasonable lumen light will reduce these problems somewhat. A thousand lumen light will exacerbate them.
A handheld light is more versatile than a weapon mounted light if you have trained with it. In truth, there are very, very few situations where a civilian needs to use a light, especially if their home has any light in it, like from night lights. Since we don’t have others in our home any more, I installed a 3-way switch from our bedroom to our living room. I would just turn on the living room lights from the bedroom. I’m not going hunting armed bad guys anywhere if more intelligent options are available.
For the WML to be useful without interfering with trigger work and grip, it should have a switch that allows on/off functions without using the trigger finger and without changing one’s grip. The light is not turned on and left on like in Hollywood. It is used in bursts. Extra junk like a pulsating strobe is unnecessary, complex and confusing. KISS. Ideally, it should be operational with either hand singly.
The only light I know that meets this switching criteria is a Surefire with an extension custom fit to your M&P grip.
DG Switches | Grip Switch Assembly for X-Series WeaponLights | SureFire
Most of what is available on the market is just a collection of cool factor gadgets that fails to meet actual need in use for a civilian. Light training is almost non-existent, but everybody is buying them. Lights add an incredible layer of complexity to shooting, especially if not properly switched. Most shooters are actually handicapped by a light in a threatening situation rather than being advantaged.
Know your needs and your limits. Gear is secondary to realistic assessment of needs and competent training with gear that should be no more complex than you can actually use to your advantage.
A quality RDS will be significantly more useful all the time compared to a WML. Prioritze.
Thank you, I will take this all into consideration. After going over some videos, price points, and need I think I’m going to go with Streamlight and a Holosun. I will look into a minimum lumens to just light up a basic hallway or room.