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1. Soldiers buying NightStar flashlights for themselves
"Thank you. Currently, only the green one (LED) is alive and, of course, the old white (LED) one from your first run. The red (LED) one may still be alive but is listed as MIA in Baghdad. The white (LED) was stolen and my green (LED) is still good. For the record the Captain (my Boss) stated that was the best damn flashlight he had and he will order a new one (he is not getting mine.)"
"Thank you very much for the recent, updated samples. Despite my attempts, all but my green one (my new favorite) have been deployed out. ...Your light is just what we have needed for years. A good bright light that requires no logistical support beyond it's initial purchase. Thank you again and I intend to order a few more myself as they are still way better and cheaper then any thing on the market. And, of the one's you gave me, 1 will be in Iraq and 1 in Afghanistan by the end of the month I will give you the feed back as I get it. (And yes I told them to shake them.)"
2. Combat and Hostile Situations
Vibration Proof - "Oh, and as an aside, you can point out your lights are immune to vibration. C-130H kill small electronics by vibrating them apart. That's why my team gave up on Maglights. 20 flight hours and they were done."
Explosive and Hazardous Areas - "...plus as it in non-sparking, mine has been used while clearing Clandestine meth labs (a huge problem on the east and west coast. This may be a selling point with LEA groups as even the best Surefire (flashlight) can spark off a meth lab and, bang, there goes the house and the Team.)"
SEAR Tool - "…used it in black-out combat op's in the bush. Mated the round flashlight lens to the face of my compass in the dark, lit it for 30 seconds, turned it off and stowed it. My compass’ face was hot for another cycle in the drive to our target. …not spotlighting myself or buddies for IR scopes."
Diving Light - "…found out that it was already part of your original plan, but it makes a great dive light."
Baton - "A hell of a good baton with that huge magnet. It acts like a pool ball in a sock. Even better if you have it looped with 550 cord like a medieval mace that "lights up and puts lights out."
Translator stick - "...same as above but with multiple applications to get your point across (the point is please don't steal from the nice nurse trying to patch you up.)"
Booby Trap Killer - "Wrap in bubble tape, tie 200ft of 550 cord to end, throw while lit into dark building or down road. The magnet is powerful enough to (A) trip magnetic AP and (B) AT mines as well as those Yugoslavian fast fuse mines that detect electrical output (usually from a human body.) I was wrong. We did kill one of the hot boxes I found that way. My Lt. reminded me. We killed one in Macedonia by chucking it into a building and setting off a MRUD (low powered copy of a U.S. claymore mine) that was under the floor boards. Make sure that when you try this trick you have a sand bag wall or a ballistic wall shield up."
Depth check/sounding light - "(A) Wrap in clear plastic, (B) tape up good, (C) tie knots every 10ft in your 550 cord, (D) drop in water till you hit bottom, (E) pull up, and (F) count wet knots. Your light can go down darn deep and while we do use chem sticks for this tied to a rock we don't always have chem sticks as they are one use items."
Medical Tool - "I know one medic used the magnet to pull spall metal (that turns liquid from impact then hits you and solidifies as it cools.)"
3. Operations
FOD Tool - "Use it for your morning FOD walk it will pick up any little non-aluminum metal bits out of the cracks in the runway."
Magnet tool - "Retrieve dropped small metal items from tough to reach places (A) using 550 cord and (B) dropping the light down into wherever you lost whatever and (C) fish it out (have used this to fish keys out of a drain grate)."
Bluetooth Blocker - "For OPSEC with computers; just put the light about 3 ft anywhere near your terminal and even on an open network - it scrambles the EM transmissions. This prevents people with bluetooth from riding your band width."
Night Missions - "My guys love them. We all use them, and now that you make colors, we wont need to use colored cellophane for night missions."
4. Cost Savings
Batteries / Re-supply - "First I would like to praise your flashlight. I am a flight medic who frequently spends long amounts of time in back woods of 3rd world areas where batteries are non-existent. All the cool little tactical LED Surefire lights that cost $200 and are made of titanium-whatever don't do you a bit of good with no batteries. Your light, on the other hand, has worked forever in every condition from the Arctic cold (we are the air wing that rescued that doctor off the South pole) to the heat of Oman. And while I still carry a Photon and a few chem sticks (you always need a plan B and C) I rely on your light as my primary."
Budget Reduction - "On a bigger scale is ________. They are always looking for ways to cut there budget and this fits the bill. Plus they are cheaper then mag lights (the current standard the mini mag with colored lenses.)
All Environment Light - "…as I already stated in my last letter, "Polar cold, Desert heat, Tropical salt water & humidity" (Philippines/Panama, hate them both, like a dry heat.)
Reduce Battery Use - "His agency is definitely looking for something like this they must kill 36 D cells a night per border station and even rechargeable batteries only live about 3 weeks."
Our Favorite Email
(Note: This email resulted in a major redesign of our products to incorporate a sealed, maintenance free body, repelling magnets in lieu of rubber bumpers or metal springs and extensive marine, environmental and climate endurance testing. We replaced his light under warranty, sent him two more and thanked him for the work he does for our country.)
"Hello My name is ____ ___ _______ USAF with the ___th medical wing.
First I would like to praise your flashlight. I am a flight medic who frequently spends long amounts of time in back woods of 3rd world areas where batteries are non-existent.
All the cool little tactical LED surefire lights that cost $200 and are made of titanium whatever don't do you a bit of good with no batteries.
Your light, on the other hand, has worked forever in every condition from the Arctic cold (we are the air wing that rescued that doctor off the South pole) to the heat of Oman. And while I still carry a Photon and a few chem sticks (you always need a plan B and C) I rely on your light as my primary.
Any way I lost the reflector off mine while cleaning it out. It's an old all black model that says patent pending I think I have had it for a few years but I found it in a crate off junk parts and was originally told it was broken (ha ha they just didn't shake it up they tossed out about 25 of them. I grabbed them all and handed them out any way. My guys love them.
We all use them, and now that you make colors, we wont need to use colored cellophane for night missions.
If I can buy the part, great, if not I will just buy a new one. But, the old one is so nice and heavy and looks a lot bigger then your new ones... plus, the one I have now has been all over the world with me. So I would like to keep him in the game.
I will be heading over to the big sand box again in about 60 =or- days so If I cant get a spare part I will by a new one.
Oh, and as an aside, you can point out your lights are immune to vibration. C-130H kill small electronics by vibrating them apart. That's why my team gave up on mag lights. 20 flight hours and they were done.
The down side is your magnet is so damn strong we have to keep the lights away from our computers and med gear. However, that's a small price to pay. lol. Thank you, SSGT _________ ___________, ___th MDS, ____@_____.com."
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Copyright © 1997-2008 Applied Innovative Technologies, Inc. All Rights Reserved Fort Lupton, Colorado USA
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