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Loosing your night vision is be a problem, but it can be mitigated. A trick we used to use in the Army (Cav Scout) was to close your sighting eye but leave the other open whenever an “unexpected” (read start cluster) light source appeared.
Larry Robertie Cheeky Monkey Boston, MA
From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Phil Agur
Harvey,
Just be careful when you use it. Once you turn it on you lose your night vision so from then on you only have limited range tunnel vision until your eyes recover. Sometimes in a light mist, haze, or fog they illuminate the particles in they air and you really can’t see very far at all unless the first mate holds it way off to one side so you’re not looking down the beam.
Phil Agur s/v Wing Tip Commodore, Call Sign WCW3485 IC27/270A
www.catalina27.org Vessel Doc# 1039809 -----Original Message-----
Hi Ralph, Harvey Rosenberg C-27TR #6023, 1985, M-18, Stony Point NY
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- RE: catalina27-talk: 12 Volt Searchlight Larry Robertie
- RE: catalina27-talk: 12 Volt Searchlight Harvey Rosenberg
- RE: catalina27-talk: 12 Volt Searchlight Chris Maddox
- RE: catalina27-talk: 12 Volt Searchlight Mark Tamblyn
- Re: catalina27-talk: 12 Volt Searchlight BobDeurer
- Re: catalina27-talk: 12 Volt Searchlight Harvey Rosenberg
- Re: catalina27-talk: 12 Volt Searchlight Harvey Rosenberg
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- Re: catalina27-talk: 12 Volt Searchlight TTagg65796
- Re: catalina27-talk: 12 Volt Searchlight Harvey Rosenberg

