In a very low light situation, if I bath my adversaries eyes with bright white light for a second or two and turn off the light how much damage to my night vision did I loose as opposed to my adversaries night vision?
There are too many variables there to answer the question including how quickly your eyes adjust in the dark. Are your eyes already dark adapted? How much reflective light came back in your direction? Did the light shine directly into their eyes? It's not a one size fits all solution, but if the adversary got the bright light directly in his eyes and you didn't, you would be at an advantage - for how long? Depends.
In general, if your using a good quality high output, meaning over 1000 lumen handheld, at an intermediate distance of 10-20 yards, your opponent will lose 90%+ of their sight for a brief, 4-5 seconds, while you'll lose 10-20% for half that time. In other words unless you're so close the amount of light reflected back is equally blinding then reflected light is not an issue
Amazing informative series
MUST watch for all EDC
Glad you thought so! Thank you!
Hello dear, can you put more techniques for us in the video, that is, from the beginning to the end, thank you very much
Sir, the technical purpose of SWAT force in the production of types of weapons or pistols. Thank you if you can guide me
Would you say ring-like attachments are helpful on a handheld?
yes. I like them.
Yes they are a good tool to add,
In a very low light situation, if I bath my adversaries eyes with bright white light for a second or two and turn off the light how much damage to my night vision did I loose as opposed to my adversaries night vision?
There are too many variables there to answer the question including how quickly your eyes adjust in the dark. Are your eyes already dark adapted? How much reflective light came back in your direction? Did the light shine directly into their eyes? It's not a one size fits all solution, but if the adversary got the bright light directly in his eyes and you didn't, you would be at an advantage - for how long? Depends.
In general, if your using a good quality high output, meaning over 1000 lumen handheld, at an intermediate distance of 10-20 yards, your opponent will lose 90%+ of their sight for a brief, 4-5 seconds, while you'll lose 10-20% for half that time. In other words unless you're so close the amount of light reflected back is equally blinding then reflected light is not an issue