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Sold By | Sale Price |
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Walmart | $3.96 |
Product Name: | Cascade Mountain Tech 250 L LED Multi-Use Camp Light Three Positioning Features- Black |
Product Description: | The Multi-Use Camp Light features 2 light sources and 3 adjustable positioning fixtures. The Area Light has two settings of wide-ranging illuminations and an LED Spotlight which has a beam-focus feature that allows for quick beam adjustment. The three positioning features – Adjustable Kickstand Magnetic Base and 360° Rotating Hook – allow for use in any situation. The Multi-Use Camp Light features up to 250 lumens and up to 5 hours of light. The Multi-Use Camp Light Runs on 3 AAA batteries which are also included. This camp light can be used while camping hiking walking working under the hood of your car or in emergency power outage situations. Take this camp light with you for all your lighting needs! |
Product SKU: | 453634281 |
UPC: | 810080490338 |
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I really like them; they're very high quality and an impressive value at a unit cost of $5. The main body is metal. I have no way of testing the light output, but they sure seem to put out an impressive amount of distributed, diffused light - perfect for camping or power outages. The one thing I didn't like was the extendable frosted globe slides on a pliable rubber seal and seems a little wobbly when fully extended. In fact, I noticed that if I pulled hard enough, the frosted globe section would come right off. Now I see why: that design allows for a secondary function as a flashlight. Except the LED emitter on the earlier model I bought doesn't have a dished reflector.
This appears to be a refinement of the same basic design. It takes advantage of that removable frosted globe feature by incorporating a dished reflector around the LED emitter, so it doubles as a flashlight. At approximately the same $5 unit cost as what I got, this newer model is even better. I can't justify getting yet another Cascade Mountain 500 lumen lantern, but if I had to do it all over again, I'd definitely opt for this revised model with the secondary flashlight function.
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The flashlight takes regular batteries. I have kept a flashlight in my car, in Texas for 25 years.
Maybe rechargeable ones are different.
What exactly are you concerned about?
I really like them; they're very high quality and an impressive value at a unit cost of $5. The main body is metal. I have no way of testing the light output, but they sure seem to put out an impressive amount of distributed, diffused light - perfect for camping or power outages. The one thing I didn't like was the extendable frosted globe slides on a pliable rubber seal and seems a little wobbly when fully extended. In fact, I noticed that if I pulled hard enough, the frosted globe section would come right off. Now I see why: that design allows for a secondary function as a flashlight. Except the LED emitter on the earlier model I bought doesn't have a dished reflector.
This appears to be a refinement of the same basic design. It takes advantage of that removable frosted globe feature by incorporating a dished reflector around the LED emitter, so it doubles as a flashlight. At approximately the same $5 unit cost as what I got, this newer model is even better. I can't justify getting yet another Cascade Mountain 500 lumen lantern, but if I had to do it all over again, I'd definitely opt for this revised model with the secondary flashlight function.
I really like them; they're very high quality and an impressive value at a unit cost of $5. The main body is metal. I have no way of testing the light output, but they sure seem to put out an impressive amount of distributed, diffused light - perfect for camping or power outages. The one thing I didn't like was the extendable frosted globe slides on a pliable rubber seal and seems a little wobbly when fully extended. In fact, I noticed that if I pulled hard enough, the frosted globe section would come right off. Now I see why: that design allows for a secondary function as a flashlight. Except the LED emitter on the earlier model I bought doesn't have a dished reflector.
This appears to be a refinement of the same basic design. It takes advantage of that removable frosted globe feature by incorporating a dished reflector around the LED emitter, so it doubles as a flashlight. At approximately the same $5 unit cost as what I got, this newer model is even better. I can't justify getting yet another Cascade Mountain 500 lumen lantern, but if I had to do it all over again, I'd definitely opt for this revised model with the secondary flashlight function.
I have got the Duracell version of this from Costco 4 years ago. The battery life was amazing. I left it on overnight like a night light on low setting (8 hours x 3 days of camping) and still didn't need to change batteries.
Is this brand as efficient?
Is this brand as efficient?