The Nightstick TWM-30-T: Budget X300-T?
Introduction Nightstick has been been building a portfolio of pistol lights for years. Many of their offerings compete directly with Streamlight. You can see the
We test out six popular compact and subcompact pistol lights to see which one might work best on your carry pistol.
I test ten full size lights to the breaking point for vibration, thermal regulation, salt water immersion, shock, and impact. One light almost survives.
Olight has just launched their Baldr Pro R. Despite Olight’s confusing naming scheme, I think this full size light/laser combination is the best “Baldr” yet.
The market for full size lights in the $80-150 range is crowded. We recently reviewed a number of them. A recent addition to the market is the Nightstick TWM-30 with 1200 lumens and 9,379 candela. Is there room for another full size light? Let’s find out…
We recently wrote that Modlite PL350 PLHv2 lights did not meet the manufacturer’s claim of 1350 lumens output. We get another lab to test, and here are the results.
I purchased all 3 of the Modlite PL350 pistol light configurations. Here is what I learned when I ran them “head to head to head”.
At 1350 lumens, 54,000 candela, and a color temperature of 5800k, the $319 Modlite PL350 should be the best pistol light on the market. I purchased 5 of the lights at a cost of over $1609 and put them to the test to see if they live up to the hype.
If you’ve searched the Internet for information on compensators, you’ve undoubtedly run across the claim that they can blind you at night. We take a close look at this claim.
We know 18350 lights are coming from Modlite and Cloud Defensive. However, one 18350 light is on the market today… is this $50 light worth it?
With batteries providing the power source for pistol lights, see why 18350 batteries may signal a shift in pistol lights.