One-stop tool for all your lighting needs: headlamp, flashlight, bike light, signal light, safety flasher, lantern, and a magnetic area light. SNAP RGB is just like SNAP but enhanced with additional red, green, and blue color modes. 300 lumens, a 155-hour runtime, and one simple switch for activation and switching between the modes. This kit also includes all the mounts needed to turn the light into whatever you need. Made in the USA.
Princeton Tec first upgraded their original SNAP by adding 100 lumens, bringing it up to 300 lumens. For this RGB model, they also added red, green, and blue light. The lamp features a magnetic head unit that can be easily detached from its base, making it the ultimate multi-use light; headlamp, flashlight, or lantern. This kit has a two-way carabiner mount and clip for hanging the lamp on your pack or using it as a lantern. And with the handlebar attachment, you can mount the lamp to your bike or any similarly-sized pole.
Snap RGB has six modes, High, Low, and Flash mode for the white plus red, green, and blue modes. You can easily adjust your light’s brightness to illuminate greater distances or to conserve battery power plus use different colors for special needs with a single button.
Mode | Lumens | Runtime | Beam distance |
---|---|---|---|
High spot beam | 300 | 10 h | 50 m |
Low spot beam | 10 | 155 h | 7 m |
Flash mode | 300 | 130 h | 50 m |
Red high spot beam | 5 | 160 h | 4 m |
Green high spot beam | 5 | 160 h | 4 m |
Blue high spot beam | 5 | 160 h | 4 m |
This lamp has a Maxbright LED, which is the highest quality LED Princeton Tec offers plus colored Ultrabright LEDs. To avoid confusion, Max is more than Ultra and requires to be yelled louder. It produces a powerful, white light, and the beam pattern combines focused narrow and wide beams. At close range, the wide beams simulate normal daylight conditions so you can take advantage of your peripheral vision, while focused narrow beams provide distance illumination. Dimmable LEDs provide the precise output needed for a given task and help conserve battery power for maximum efficiency.
The lights with an IPX4 rating are designed for water resistance to splashing and quick dunking. If the light is submerged for a longer period of time, remove the batteries and inspect the cabinets for signs of battery leakage. If water has entered the housing, dry the light thoroughly and replace the batteries. If you leave the light in the water for longer than that, you might need to say bye-bye to the lamp. It isn’t a U-boat, you know.
Different color but the same idea: