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  1. #11
    Honorary Member
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    Oct 2004
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    St Pete, FL
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    Quote Originally Posted by NitroxWarrior
    I've been looking at the dive lights made by halcyon, and good?
    They seem more expensive than the Dive Rite lights, and no more reliable. I am happy with my Dive Right light. I have a Wreck 10w HID non-focusable head.. which was just fine for me for years... but now I am thinking of an upgrade to a focusable light.


  2. #12

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    yah, well I dont have 400 to 600 dollors... so... yah, I dunno
    any online sources for used divelights?


  3. #13
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    Oct 2004
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    Gainesville, FL
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    918

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    Most lights you'd want to use as a cavern primary won't make good backup lights for cave. And most cavern dives aren't really very well lit in the daylight zone.

    If you think you might do cave later invest in a top notch cave light - they serve as AWESOME cavern lights. It's kind of cheating at the cavern level though if you can see everything well.

    Or if you plan to stay cavern for a while buy a GOOD cavern light - as bright as you can afford. HID or with as many D-cells as you think you can carry.

    Somebody's old canister light you can get cheep because they are trading up to HID would make a good cavern light.

    Even cheep HID lights come with chargers and batteries included. At the cost of D-cells you might do well to rent a canister light at $10 a day rather then replace batteries often. Rechargable batteries will save you the cost of the whole light in about a dozen trips.


  4. #14
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    Oct 2004
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    Third Stone From the Sun
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    97

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    You can find them around. I have an AUL that I'm selling, but the shipping with batteries would be pretty expensive. You should be able to find a reliable can light for $150, maybe less.

    Cheers

    Why is it that nobody ever says,"I wish I would have worked more!"?

    ><((((º>¸.·´¯`·.¸¸.·´¯`·..¸¸ ><((((º>`·.¸¸¸.·´¯`·.¸¸><((((º>

    Jamie Rumph

  5. #15

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    I plan on staying, near the cavern zone, Being in direct daylight is usualy prety impossible to do and still have fun. If you think about it, Technicly diving The Ginnie Ballroom is beond "cavern", but I really have no need to go to the point of what you guys go to.

    My dad has a huge cave light that lights ginnie up like its Open Water, so it would be nice to have a light like that but its just not afordable to me.
    (I can still borrow my dads LOL)


  6. #16
    Member
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    Oct 2004
    Location
    College Station Texas
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    178

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    [quote="NitroxWarrior"]I plan on staying, near the cavern zone, Being in direct daylight is usualy prety impossible to do and still have fun. ]


    In February 2004, I owned only a mask, fins, and a snorkel. I was OW certified and had no desire to get close in a cave.
    February 2005 , I am full cave certified and the only thing that I am not owning is a scooter.

    good luck with keeping yourself out of caves

    Human Evolution makes me wonder: from HomoErectus to HomeSapiens, from Dry Caves to Wet Caves. Nevertheless, from HomoErectus to HomeSapiens, from Org. Caves still to Org. Caves! DAMN ...

  7. #17
    Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Murfreesboro, Tennessee
    Posts
    3,270

    Default ditto

    when asked in class why i wanted to learn to cave dive, i replied that every time I saw a black hole in the rock i'd swim in.... thought it best to get some training. wish i'd done it years ago.


  8. #18
    Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Heber Springs, Arkansas
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    144

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    Just a thought, but I took a UK LC100 8 "C" cell HID and put a "Goodman-style" handle on it. If you can imagine having 10-watt HID power in a self-contained unit (no cannister or cords), a 3-4 hour burn time, easy to use with a reel, and costing less than $200 brand new, well you're starting to get the picture. After proving itself reliable and hassle free on less critical dives I even began using it as my primary cave light. Team members using even 18-watt HID cannister lights agree it gives great illumination and my light signals are clear and easy to see. I have even used it successfully for in-cave photographic illumination with good results. If you are interested in going this route, just e-mail me at agarrett(AT)alltel.net and I can send you a picture or two of the light with the handle I made for it. I'm very happy with how it turned out and how well it works.

    "See! If GEICO had taken THAT approach instead of saying it's so easy a CAVEDIVER could do it, I wouldn't be having an existential MELTDOWN right now!"


 

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