I like to use green because it’s brighter. I have never spooked deer until I’m walking past them and they wind me. I have walked by them at 20yds and they never move when they are up wind.
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I just hold the lens of my flashlight in the palm of my hand so I can adjust the light output to almost nothing with the squeeze of my hand. Works to get to the stand and last year I walked within 20’-30’ of a young mule deer buck that was feeding on corn and he never stopped chomping as l walked by.
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Originally posted by Greenheadless View PostEither red or green work. Deer and pigs cannot see either. I have researched the matter due to LED lighting we used for projects that have to be “wildlife friendly”.
Red light is good enough to get to your set up and nice to leave on while you get set up.Last edited by Big pig; 08-31-2019, 10:44 AM.
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Originally posted by Greenheadless View PostEither red or green work. Deer and pigs cannot see either. I have researched the matter due to LED lighting we used for projects that have to be “wildlife friendly”.
My experience tells me red is better then green. I prefer our 40KAP headlamp for walking to my stands, I use white and just turn it way down with the dimmer knob but I have plenty of customers that use the red and green and even with red and green they turn them down because they are very bright at full power. The colors are interchangeable. The white also makes for the best tracking light I've seen.
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Originally posted by gonehuntin68 View PostI'm sorry to tell that deer and pigs can see Red and Green lights. What they see exactly is debatable and we will never know until we can talk to them but I know for a fact there isn't a color we can see that the animals can't.
My experience tells me red is better then green. I prefer our 40KAP headlamp for walking to my stands, I use white and just turn it way down with the dimmer knob but I have plenty of customers that use the red and green and even with red and green they turn them down because they are very bright at full power. The colors are interchangeable. The white also makes for the best tracking light I've seen.
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Originally posted by Greenheadless View PostAt what nm range in the scale are you stating they are seeing green and red. Is this is a photopic measurement or scotopic? I am curious where you cite your information from.
When you buy LED's from the manufacturer, they have data sheets that tell you the nm of the LED's and that is where I get my information on the nm of the light. Most Red LED's are in the 615nm to 630nm range and most Green LED's are in the 515nm to 530nm range. The problem with those ranges is those are the dominate range and all LED's will have bleed over into the lower and higher ranges and this could be what the animals are seeing. Until we can talk to animals, we will never know for sure what they are seeing when a red, Green or infrared light hits them.
Don't believe me that there is bleed over of all lights. Have you ever seen the red glow from the LED from a infrared light coming on. The reason we see the red glow is because it's the bleed over of it in the red wavelength. If it didn't have bleed over into a lower wavelength then we wouldn't be able to see it. Even a 940nm IR led has bleed over all the way into the red wavelength we can see. it's not near as much as the 850nm but it still has it. So if a 940nm has bleed over down to around 670nm that we can see, it's safe to say that Green at 520nm and red at 620nm would have bleed over all the way down to range animals can see.
Now with all that said and with all the animals I've lit up, Red IMO is by far the best color we can see that is least likely to spook any animal and is the color I use when hunting at night. Sure there might be a time when green wont spook them and red will but overall, you will spook less animals with red then green.
I think your a bit confused when asking "Is this is a photopic measurement or scotopic". If not, please explain to me how you can measure the nm of a light with photopic or scotopic meter. When you measure light with a Photopic or Scotopic meter, your measuring the lux not the nm wavelength. We use Photopic meters to test our lights lux. This is how we can list the distance our lights shine and it's a fact not some made up number.Last edited by gonehuntin68; 09-01-2019, 11:57 AM.
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