A Huricane lamp that will keep alight in a force 4 !?!

I deduce that the Colemans lantern is a pressurised petrol lantern. I think I would avoid that on my boat and I suspect others would too.

On a small boat the Tilley lantern is too big to stow. I have one that we bought in our camping days which now lives on the garage shelf and is only used during power cuts. I really could not think of any way of stowing it safely on the boat. The same would apply to the Colemans lantern but compounded by the fact that it contains petrol or something similar.

The problem with many of the alternatives to a lantern sold as an anchor light is compliance with the requirements of the "Colregs" regarding visible range. Largely a load of nonsense in a safe anchorage somewhere but in the event of a "mishap" one would be on the losing side of any legal wrangling if not using a lantern that complied with the colregs. On Windy Mere you may have your own regulations to comply with?

The basic hurricane lantern does not comply with any regs either and the only situation in which its use, or that any other alternative to an approved anchor light, can be justified is when it is when it is not practicable to use a lantern which does.

I have a hurricane lantern and it blows out in anything above force 0 which, coupled with my limited electrical power, is why I am looking at LED lanterns. I have only once seen a "brightness" figure for an LED camping type lantern; I think from Maplin although I cannot find it in my out of date catalogue. In theory it should have been bright enough to satisfy the visible range requirements of the colregs.

Sorry Phil not all directed at you personally.
 
you're right Lakesailor - a full tank of fuel in a Coleman will last all night, but unfortunately the pressure in the tank won't last as long. It'll still need pumping.

Vic S - for safe stowage add a hook to the deckhead. My everyday lamp is secured this way with a bungee around the tank and down to another hook below. It can still swing enough to remain level, but not enough to get alarming! You can then benefit from both the warm light and around a kw of heat - as well as no battery draw for lighting - great on a small boat, though as you say not a lot of good for an anchor light..
 
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for safe stowage add a hook to the deckhead

[/ QUOTE ] In a small boat there really is no space to do that!
 
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On Windy Mere you may have your own regulations to comply with?

[/ QUOTE ] Yes we do. Anything that glows basically. However that Halfords light is far brighter than any other boat's 360 masthead lights that I've seen.

tritonofnor. Good point. I hadn't considered that. Fishermen I know swear by them, but they are at hand to pump all the time.
 
I agree with all hear!! The tilly is far to big!But dose work well! I have a smaller optamist in brass but that dosent last nearly as long as the tilly did.I had a proper parafin(petrol lamp) anchor lamp but it was stolen!

Huricane lamps are dangerous!!They have far to much parafin in there resovior and if they fall on deck will burn he boat! Overboard with them both German and Chiness

When im at anchor mostly i do as others. If its a busy anchorage i light the optamist or a gas lamp which at a price will stay lit all night! If im econmicaly challenged i light a oil anchor light (padlocked to the forestay)and if worried and sleepy add a strob velcrowed to the forstay Both last all night!
 
Having shore fished for the last 40+ years I have owned and used various lamps. I've got 2 Tilley lamps and 1 Tilley heater, 1 Chinese "Anchor" lamp, all use paraffin as a fuel.
A mate has a Colman petrol lamp.

Advantages/dis-advantages.
paraffin lamps need preheating to light.
Petrol one doesn't.
all have fragile mantles.
If you fill the lamp to capacity (12 hr burn) you WILL have to re-pressurise it at least twice during that time.
They all give out way to much light for an anchor lamp - the Chinese Anchor lamp will give off 400CP. The boat could be seen from miles away and give the impression that it's a working boat.
I have known the paraffin lamps to "burst" into flame if the jet gets blocked or the pressure gets to low.

What I use is an all round white on the top of the mast - 1 bulb and a decent set of boat batteries seems to cover me for the night without draining the bats to much!!!!

Peter.
 
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Advantages/dis-advantages.
paraffin lamps need preheating to light.
Petrol one doesn't

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You miss one very important pro/con: Petrol ones use a highly flammable fuel, paraffin ones don't.
 
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