How to Pick the Right Flashlight for Self-Defense

Bad guys are opportunistic predators who take advantage of the weak and unprepared. They’re no different than the predators in the wild, who pounce when the right opportunity presents itself. Bad guys like the anonymity of darkness and the surprise it affords them. One of the most overlooked and best personal-­protection tools at our disposal is light, and you should use it to your advantage.

Outdoor life reports

Most violent crimes occur during conditions of limited visibility. This gives human predators their best chance for success. It’s also why floodlights and motion-activated lights around people’s homes are popular and efficient protection tools. The same logic applies on the street.

Imagine a mugger lurking in a dark parking lot. He’ll target the car or person in the dimmest, darkest area. If you’re strolling across the pavement with a high-intensity flashlight, your chances of being attacked are drastically reduced. This is because light draws attention, circumvents the element of surprise, and eliminates the anonymity of a potential attacker. Light also conveys an impression of power and control.

A small LED flashlight in a backpack

A small LED flashlight can help you turn the tables on an attacker.

Richard Mann

The Three Ls

The characteristics of the best flashlights for personal protection can be represented by what I call the Rule of the Three Ls: lithium, LED, and lumens. Let’s examine each to better understand its importance.

Lithium

Since the 1950s, we’ve relied on alkaline batteries for flashlights. Their upside is cost and their downside is durability. They’re also prone to leakage. Ever opened a flashlight to find a mess of white corrosion? That’s alkaline batteries for you. Flashlights powered with alkaline batteries also dim slowly as the batteries lose juice, and the batteries degrade over time, even when they’re not used. Lithium batteries can provide twice the output of alkaline batteries and won’t degrade over time. However, when they do die, they die fast, and they cost twice as much as alkaline batteries.

LED

The most common flashlight bulbs are incandescent and LED. Incandescent bulbs provide high output for their size and produce natural-appearing light. They require periodic replacement and are not impact-resistant. LED bulbs are solid-state creations, last a long time, come in a variety of colors, are energy-efficient, and are very rugged. They’re also more expensive, but they deliver extremely long runtimes at low illumination levels.

Lumens

Flashlight output—brightness—is measured in lumens. The best flashlights produce consistent illumination across the entire beam—meaning the edges of where the light hits are just as bright as the center of the beam. Overall brightness comes from consistent beams, battery power, bulb quality, and the reflector design. Self-defense flashlights should have a minimum of 60 lumens, but twice that is a better place to start. This is enough brightness to search a building or temporarily blind an attacker.

If 120 lumens are good, 240 should be better, and 480 should be great…and so on up the line, right? Yes and no. As the lumen rating increases, so does battery draw. More lumens often means larger and heavier flashlights. The Surefire Hellfighter produces 3,000 lumens and is about the size of a roll of paper towels. It will melt a vampire and burn the hair off a werewolf, but you won’t want to carry it to town or even to the outhouse.

Weapon-mounted flash light
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