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Flashlights with coloured light have additional coloured LEDs (red, green, blue) integrated alongside the white-light LED. Press a button to switch light colour – without filter changes. Used in hunting (red/green do not spook game), astronomy (red preserves night vision), blood tracking (blue) and outdoor for map reading.
Red light preserves night vision adaptation significantly better than white. Astronomers, hunters and scouts use this – after reading maps you are immediately «night active» again, without 20-30 minutes of adaptation. Green light is among the most brightly perceptible for the eye (highest spectral sensitivity) and is loved in hunting – wild boar sees green worse than red, which makes stalking easier. Blue light activates fluorescence of blood traces on vegetation – standard for tracking handlers in hunting. Also in leak detection blue is used for UV-sensitive markers.
Different user groups benefit from colour-switch function:
Most important: which colours are needed. Pure red lamps are enough for astronomers and map readers. For hunters red+green is mandatory, for tracking additionally blue. Premium models offer all three colours plus white. Check light output per colour – coloured LEDs are often significantly weaker than the white LED (typically 50-200 lumens per colour vs. 500-1'500 lumens white). Pay attention to control logic: mode switching should be quick and intuitive, ideally with own side switch for colour. A memory function is valuable – the lamp starts at the last used colour, decisive for stalking or tracking (no accidental white light spooking game).
Red is standard. Deep red (660 nm) preserves night vision adaptation best. For map reading a low setting (1-5 lumens) is enough – more dazzles and impairs star visibility.
Multi-LED is faster in colour change and delivers cleaner light colour. Filter lamps are cheaper and have a stronger white LED – but changing filters in the field is impractical. For serious use (hunting, forensics) multi-LED clearly superior.
Coloured LEDs are generally somewhat less efficient than white LEDs of the same power. Practically not a problem – the lower brightness of colours has a positive effect, battery runtime is usually even higher than in white mode.
In normal use no. High output (e.g. 1000+ lumens) should not be directed into someone else's eyes – applies to all light colours. Blue and green light at very high output can stress the retina more than red – for professional lamps protective glasses are recommended.
Original goods from Swiss stock · Free shipping over CHF 100 · Personal advice
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