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Originally Posted by ThunderStorm
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You can't judge the brightness of the new super-bright LEDs by the number or size of the batteries. For example, I've got a super-bright LED pocket flood-light that I bought at Bunnings for about $5 which runs on 2 AAA batteries, and puts out about the same overall light to illuminate a room as a 60W incandescent bulb. The LED strip is as intensely bright to look at as looking directly at a halogen globe from the same distance - truly dazzling, even in broad daylight!
The rated lumens is the only measure of overall brightness. While the cheap Chimes LED torches on eBay are often over-hyped, anything that claims 300 lumens will be way too bright to use as an aid for your night-time astronomy.
As others have said - you want a low-power torch, not high power. Some of the headsets that have both white and red LEDs can be ideal - only use the red "night vision" LED lights around your telescope, and keep the white LEDs for camping and car maintenance. I've got a cheap LED headset which i just painted over the lens with several coats of red permanent marker pen, and it does the job for me.