Like other BD lamps, the Storm locks off by depressing the power button for four seconds (a blue light will blink rapidly for three seconds when it’s locked off)-a very useful feature to prevent accidentally draining your batteries inside your pack. Hold two seconds to change between white and red LED modes, and double-click in red mode to switch to green and blue all three colors have a strobe option. In any mode, hold it down when turned on to dim and brighten. Press it three times to enter strobe for whichever mode it’s in. Depress the power button once for on-off, twice to change modes-for instance, from spotlight to proximity beam in white, or from red to green to blue when in a night mode. While the instructions can appear complicated at first glance, using the Storm is fairly intuitive and anyone who’s owned a BD headlamp of recent vintage will find it familiar.
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Sign up for my FREE email newsletter now.Īs with other BD headlamps, the Storm has a couple of features I use frequently: Power Tap technology, which allows you to switch instantly between a dimmed level (that you set) and full brightness simply by tapping the side of the casing and Brightness Memory, which lets you power the light on and off at a chosen brightness level without having to go to full power (draining batteries). The Storm is rated IP67, meaning it’s both dustproof and waterproof to one meter for up to 30 minutes.
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Night vision mode offers three colors: the most common, red, plus green (useful for hunters because it doesn’t disturb game animals), and blue (which cuts through fog). That’s brighter than most headlamps in this weight class. For starters, it sports 350 lumens of power in its two LED bulbs- a very bright spotlight and an excellent LED proximity beam for illuminating a campsite, tent interior, or a map or book page. Here’s why.įew backcountry headlamps have the Storm’s range of features and power, and perhaps none do at its price. Through all that field testing, the Storm proved itself one of the best high-performance headlamps on the market today.
I also used this ultralight headlamp in campsites from Idaho’s City of Rocks National Reserve and Yosemite National Park to backpacking the Grand Canyon’s Thunder River-Deer Creek Loop. (with 4 AAA batteries, included)Īs darkness and light rain both fell on a partner and I for the last couple of miles of a 27-mile dayhike the length of western Maine’s brutally rugged Mahoosuc Range, I slipped the Storm onto my head-which helped prevent my shuffling and occasional staggering from turning into falling.