![]() More affordable without much sacrifice of features. ![]() Good for the overall lifespan of the cell if you can wait but Olight’s competitors lights that are using the same battery are generally charging at 2A which is plenty safe for this battery. This is a pretty slow, very conservative charging speed for such a large cell. 9A which resulted in a total overall charge time of 6.5 hours for the 5000mAh 21700 battery. The Seeker 2 Standard is using Olights MCC1AL magnetic charging system. Recharging is pretty much the exact same as the Seeker 2 Pro. The light also features a lockout mode and timer that’s available. ![]() For tubo just double click and for strobe just tipple click. The light does have memory mode for low through high. When the light is on it starts in low, and then you can hold the button and it will cycle from lowest to brightest, just stop on where you want to be. From off if you long press on the button the light comes on in moonlight, which on this light is a little bright for my liking. UI on the Seeker 2 Standard is is very similar to other Olights and the same as the Seeker 2 Pro, and that’s great because it’s a simple UI that I like. Outputs are listed as the same for all modes except turbo with the differences being only 200 lumens. The slight differences in output are not that noticeable and I will trade it for more runtime. The Seeker standard ran in high for just past 100 minutes, very similar to the Pro, but then it saw 2 pretty major decreases in the next 50 minutes but then ran on low power that was usable for over that 250 minutes mark. Turbo seemed to last slightly longer as well. Total runtime was more then 250 minutes for the Seeker 2 Standard. Runtimes on the Seeker 2 are also longer due to the different LED. Beam pattern on the Seeker standard has a more defined hotspot and appears to be more focused. Tint wise the Seeker 2 Standard has a tint that’s a bit whiter especially at lower power where as the Seeker 2 Pro is a little warmer/rosy tint. Olight doesn’t give us the model of Osram used in the light unfortunately according to official literature. The Seeker 2 Standard is using a triple configuration of Osram LED instead of the Cree XP-L HD’s used Seeker 2 Pro. The Seeker 2 Pro weight in with battery at 197g while the Seeker 2 standard came in at 186.5g. I was a little surprised at the weight difference between the two lights. Both lights roll around very easily when on their sides Diameters of the head were identical at 35.4mm, the body tube at 27mm. Length of the Seeker 2 came in at 126mm vs the Pro’s 128mm. While these are really nice features I have no trouble with the standard button. The Seeker 2 Pro has nicer feeling rubber/silicon button as well as 4 LED’s on each side for battery power indicator and brightness status indicator. It has a hole in the center for an LED for battery status indicator. On the Seeker 2 Standard the switch is more like recent Olights, it’s a more plasticy slicker feeling.
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