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Top 3 Smallest Dive Lights

A dive light is an indispensable tool for any scuba diver and its benefits are well documented. While a bigger dive light is essential for good navigation, carrying a smaller dive light as a backup is important as well. What if your big dive light fails on a night dive? A small light is also easy to carry and more convenient for exploring tight spaces like cracks and under rocks. Here are the top 3 smallest dive lights that you will find on the market.

Scuba Mini U-Beam 5 L.E.D Light

This dive light is highly rated because for such a small light, it gives out a lot of light. It is also cheap and a great alternative to more expensive dive lights. It is compact and can be neatly tucked away in a PC pocket. In general, it is a good secondary light and great for looking into small areas.

 

Innovative 4 Inch Chemical Light Stick

If you are diving with friends or in a group at night, this is one light you want to have around. It is a handy beacon light that glows brightly enough to help your friends locate you in deep darkness if you get lost. It is cheap, reliable, and will offer you everything that you want in a light stick.

 

Tovatec Fusion 1000 Rechargeable Dive Light

The Fusion 1000 has a solid construction, an impressively strong beam that you can adjust from a spot to a wide beam, and batteries that seem to last for ages. The powerful beam means that you can use it as your primary dive light whether you are cave diving, assessing a wreck or just exploring a reef.

Consider adding one of these small lights to your scuba diving gear collection and be sure to enjoy a better and safer diving expedition.

NightDiver-Scott: Scott first experienced the thrill of exploring the ocean while snorkeling during his senior class trip in high school. After that, he threw himself into diving, working diligently to become a master scuba diver so he could achieve his goal of diving for a living. And that’s exactly what he’s done –a commercial diver by day and a PADI diving instructor by night, Scott loves taking his dips after the sun has gone down, and because of this, he’s super particular about the quality and functionality of the dive lights he uses.