I just bought one of these surefire flashlights and it comes with a laundry list of warnings…I bought it because I heard it was damn near the best flashlight one can buy, and for all intents it seems to be a darn good flashlight.
My queston is: With the high output, high energy flashlight is there any radiation coming from it? I know tactical teams use it all the time so I’m not too concerned but I was just wondering if there is ANY radiation coming from this thing?
It’s a LED flashlight. LEDs emits practically only narrow wavelength of EM - and it’s in visible light range. Visible light is not considered ionizing radiation so you can sleep well. You won’t get cancer from that thing
ETA - Out of curiosity, where you even get idea of flashlight emitting “radiation”?
Ignoring the obvious radiation from the LED, it’s close to impossible to make an electrical device that emits absolutely zero radiation. And while I’m not sure Used by Tactical Teams = Guaranteed Safe, it should not be at all difficult for a manufacturer to keep a flashlight’s stray radiation well within safe levels
There is a warning list a mile long with this flashlight, “Radiation” just popped into my mind as a possibility. No factual info at all just wondering about the amounts of radiation coming from an LED…
I will say it operates quite hot, but it’s a great flashlight.
Of an electromagnetic field, sure, but the magnitude of it largely depends on the current flowing in the circuit, which is going to be much less than, say, the average kitchen appliance powered by mains, and there’s no evidence that electromagnetic fields generated by current are harmful anyway.
Not if the photons are powerful enough to knock electrons out of their orbits and create ions. Such ionizing radiation (gamma radiation, x-rays, UV) is harmful in direct proportion to how energetic the photons in question are, with gamma being the most powerful and UV the least among ionizing radiation.
Visible light, though it is transmitted by photons, is not ionizing. If it were, life on Earth would be screwed. Radio frequency (RF) photons are much, much less powerful than even visible light, and so pose no danger whatsoever.
Surefire flashlights are awesome, but your only real concern is do not shine it directly into your eyes if you value not going blind. My brother bought one for one of his pistols and seriously, if you were in a dark room and got spot lit with that thing you’d be completely blind for at least five minutes.
I don’t know how that slipped my mind. Microwave ovens work by making polar molecules (little magnets, really) such as water vibrate. This vibration is heat, which gets transferred to other molecules nearby. It’s difficult to explain in the simplified “radiation is photons” model I used above and, frankly, without a good explanation of why “dielectric heating” works I’m lost myself. (The radiation’s frequency is not the resonant frequency of water. I get that much.)
I can’t find the exact warning sheet I got with the flashlight, but here is a list of downloadable user manuels with corresponding short-list warnings. Some of the flashlights have more warnings than others as they use different components with differing energies - that’s about as technical as I can get.
Q.E.D and others have vast amounts of knowledge about all things electrical.
The light itself was very expensive, but then I’ll probably have it forever.