SkyPup
New member
I have been using the Elusive Wildlife Technologies XLR-250 RED LED flashlight with two 18650 3,000 mAh batteries and it is an excellent hand held scanning torch for lighting up retinas. I also just ordered a green led replacement module from Jeremiah too as I hunt both coyotes and wild boars at night on my property.
The XLR-250 has a great red output out to around 225 yards which is excellent for me as that is the maximum range of my carbine weapon system (SIG 556), but I like to use it for a handheld scanner instead of a weapon mount.
However, I also have an Olight M-20 Crimson with one 18650 3,000 mAh rechargeable Lithium Ion battery that runs for almost 3 hours per charge on my SIG 556 as a weapon mount for taking the actual kill shot out to 225 yards. It is an awesome killer setup!!
The combination of using both of these RED LED torches works out perfect!
Canines see the same color spectrum as a Red-Green Color Blind Human does....
Instead of seeing the rainbow as violet, blue, blue-green, green, yellow, orange and red, dogs would see it as dark blue, light blue, gray, light yellow, darker yellow (sort of brown), and very dark gray.
In other words, dogs see the colors of the world as basically yellow, blue and gray. They see the colors green, yellow and orange as yellowish, and they see violet and blue as blue. Blue-green is seen as a gray.
The XLR-250 has a great red output out to around 225 yards which is excellent for me as that is the maximum range of my carbine weapon system (SIG 556), but I like to use it for a handheld scanner instead of a weapon mount.
However, I also have an Olight M-20 Crimson with one 18650 3,000 mAh rechargeable Lithium Ion battery that runs for almost 3 hours per charge on my SIG 556 as a weapon mount for taking the actual kill shot out to 225 yards. It is an awesome killer setup!!
The combination of using both of these RED LED torches works out perfect!
Canines see the same color spectrum as a Red-Green Color Blind Human does....
Instead of seeing the rainbow as violet, blue, blue-green, green, yellow, orange and red, dogs would see it as dark blue, light blue, gray, light yellow, darker yellow (sort of brown), and very dark gray.
In other words, dogs see the colors of the world as basically yellow, blue and gray. They see the colors green, yellow and orange as yellowish, and they see violet and blue as blue. Blue-green is seen as a gray.
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