Brinyte T28 Artemis Field Test: Alligator Hunting in Florida

Brinyte T28 Artemis Field Test: Alligator Hunting in Florida

📅 September 2025 · Florida ⏱ 14 min read 🐊 Alligator Hunt 👤 Ethan · Field Test Engineer
⚡ Quick Answer

If you need a reliable alligator hunting flashlight — one that scans 700+ meters, switches colors instantly, and dials down to 2% without spooking your target — the Brinyte T28 Artemis is worth a hard look.

I took one to Florida in September 2025 with Mike, a guide who's been running alligator spotlight hunting trips for 15 years. The T28's 125,000 candela white spot found eyes at extreme range. The rotary color switch let me go from white to red without fumbling. The stepless dimmer kept me from blowing out the gator's night vision. The 21700 5000mAh battery ran all night. At $119.95 for the base kit, it's one of the more versatile gator hunting light options I've tested in this price range.

1. The Test: Florida, September 2025

📌 Who I am — and why this test matters

I'm Ethan. I've been doing product field testing for seven years — everything from tactical optics to outdoor gear. I joined Brinyte in March 2024 as a field test engineer. My job is to take our lights into real-world conditions and find out where they hold up and where they don't. This was my first alligator hunt. I'm not a guide. But I know how to test gear in the field, and I know when something actually delivers.

Mike's been guiding alligator spotlight hunting trips in Florida for 15 years. He's seen every light on the market — halogen spots, HID rigs, cheap LEDs that promise 700 meters and deliver 200. When I told him I was bringing a $120 LED with a 700-meter rated beam and three colors built in, he gave me the look. You know the one.

💡 Field note: Mike's initial skepticism is exactly why I wanted him on this test. If a 15-year guide says a light works, that's real credibility. If he says it doesn't, back to the drawing board.

"We'll see," he said.

The plan was simple: run the T28 as my primary gator hunting light for an entire night hunt. No backup. No second light. If it failed, I'd be dead weight in the boat.

We launched around 8 p.m. from a ramp on the St. Johns River. Florida's statewide alligator harvest program runs roughly mid-August through November and is one of the few programs in the country where night hunting alligator with artificial light is the standard, permitted method — provided you're carrying a valid harvest permit and CITES tags. That's part of why we picked Florida for this test rather than, say, Louisiana, where the commercial/recreational alligator season restricts harvest to daylight hours (sunrise to sunset) — night hunting with a light isn't part of the legal method there. The water was dark, the air thick with humidity, and the bugs were relentless. Good conditions to find out what this light could actually do.

2. Specs That Matter for Gator Hunting

Before I get into the hunt, let's talk numbers — because how many lumens do I need to spot alligator eyes isn't quite the right question. It's about candela and control. Here's what the T28 Artemis actually delivers, straight from Brinyte's published spec sheet:

Mode Brightness Peak Intensity Beam Distance Runtime (Max)
White Flood 1,000 lm 160 min
White Spot 560 lm 125,000 cd 700+ m 160 min
Red Flood 150 lm 295 min
Red Spot 80 lm 19,500 cd 280+ m 295 min
Green Flood 230 lm 325 min
Green Spot 120 lm 28,750 cd 350+ m 325 min

Runtime measured with included 21700 5000mAh battery in flood mode at 100% brightness, per ANSI/PLATO FL1 standards.

The 125,000 candela white spot is the headline number. In open water, that's the difference between seeing a set of eyes at 200 yards and seeing nothing. The 700+ meter throw means you can scan an entire basin in one sweep. And the tri-color system — white, red, green — lets you adapt to the phase of the hunt without carrying three separate lights. The T28 uses dedicated SFT-25R white, XPE2 R5 red, and XPE2 R5 green emitters rather than a filter over a single LED, so you get full output on every color, not a dimmed-down version.

One more thing worth flagging: the zoom head runs on a TIR optic, not the older Fresnel-style lens you'll find on cheaper hunting lights. That's why there's no dark "donut hole" in the beam when you zoom — output stays consistent from 6° spot all the way to 70° flood.

But numbers don't tell you how it handles on a rocking boat with wet hands. That's what I came to find out — the true test of a waterproof flashlight for swamp hunting in real conditions.

3. On the Water: Finding the First Set of Eyes

We ran the boat about a mile into the marsh, then Mike killed the outboard and switched to a trolling motor. In gator hunting, noise is the enemy. The T28 doesn't make any — no rattles, no loose parts, no switch clicks that carry across the water. This is what a LED headlamp for alligator hunting can't match — the silence and the throw of a dedicated handheld. If you're debating gator hunting headlamp vs handheld flashlight, the handheld wins for scanning every time.

I started with white light on flood, dimmed to about 60%. The 1,000-lumen flood lit up the boat and the water immediately around us, giving me a clear view of the reeds and logs. Then I twisted the head to tighten the beam to spot, pushed the brightness to 100%, and swept the far bank. This is where you need a boat spotlight for night hunting — something that can cut through the dark water and reach the shore. The T28 delivered.

The beam cut through the humidity and settled on the far shoreline. Two red-orange dots. 80 yards out. Floating just above the waterline.

Why do alligator eyes glow red or orange at night? It's the tapetum lucidum — a reflective surface at the back of an alligator's eye that bounces light back through the photoreceptors, helping the animal see in low light. The side effect is that a bright beam aimed at a gator reflects straight back at you as a reddish-orange glow. The T28's beam catches that reflection well even at distance. Do alligators see red light, or are they color blind to it? The honest answer is that the science here isn't fully settled — vision researchers have found evidence of dichromatic (two-cone) color vision in alligators, which suggests they do perceive some color, though exactly which wavelengths they're most sensitive to is still being studied. What guides like Mike report from experience is behavioral, not biological: a dim red beam is far less likely to trigger a flight response than a bright white one. The best light for alligator eyes is the one that gives you both reach and control — exactly what the T28 does.

"That's a good one," he whispered. "Six, maybe seven feet."

💡 Field note: Mike's advice — "wave the light on and off its eyes, don't hold it steady." The T28's momentary switch made this easy. Tap on, tap off, find the eyes again. No fumbling with mode buttons, no accidental strobe.

I locked the beam on the eyes and started dialing the brightness down. The T28's stepless dimmer runs from 2% to 100% with no detents, no clicks, no sudden jumps. I took it from 100% down to about 30% — just enough to keep the eyes lit without flooding the area with light. The gator didn't move.

That's the first lesson. Bright spotlights can cause an alligator to quickly submerge. If you blast a gator with 100% power at 80 yards, it's gone. The T28's dimmer let me stay in control. How many lumens do I need to spot alligator eyes? The answer isn't just about lumens — it's about candela and control. 125,000 cd gives you the reach, and the dimmer gives you the finesse.

4. The Approach: Why Red Light Matters

We needed to get closer. I was at 80 yards with a crossbow — too far. The gator was lying in about two feet of water, partially hidden by overhanging reeds.

I rotated the head ring from white to red. The T28's rotary color switch is one of its best features — you don't click through modes, you just twist. It's a mechanical selector, not an electronic one, so there's no delay, no mode memory confusion, and no accidental white flash when you're trying to stay dark. White to red in half a second, by feel, in the dark.

The red LED runs at lower output by design — 80 lumens spot, 19,500 candela, 280+ meter throw — and that's exactly what you want for an approach. As I mentioned above, we don't fully know how alligators process red wavelengths, but the practical result Mike's seen over 15 years of guiding holds up: a low-intensity red beam lets you close distance while preserving your own night vision, without the gator bolting the way it often will under a bright white light. In this phase, you don't need to see the gator's whole body. You just need to keep the eyes lit and the boat aligned.

We closed to 45 yards. The gator hadn't submerged. Mike handed me the harpoon line and took the light. He kept the red beam low, just skimming the surface, illuminating the eyes without hitting the body.

"That's the trick," he said later. "You don't light up the whole gator. You just keep the eyes in the bottom edge of the beam."

The T28's 6°–70° zoom made this possible. At 70° flood, the whole bank lit up. At 6° spot, the beam tightened to a tight pencil that put light exactly where I wanted it — nothing more, nothing less.

📌 Best color light for alligator hunting, by phase

White for scanning and ID (maximum throw — 125,000 cd / 700+ m). Red for approach (19,500 cd / 280+ m — preserves night vision, less likely to spook). Green is worth trying in low-visibility conditions where less backscatter off the water helps (28,750 cd / 350+ m). The T28 gives you all three on one rotary switch — no second light, no filters to lose in the dark.

5. The Shot: Zoom, Dim, and Execute

At 40 yards, Mike killed the trolling motor and let the boat drift. The gator hadn't moved. I took the T28 back and switched to white spot again — 100% power, 6° focus — for final positive ID.

At 40 yards with 125,000 candela behind it, the white spot lit the gator up like it was noon. I could see the ridge of its back, the width of its head, the position of its front legs. Positive ID, confirmed — the kind of detail you actually need before taking a shot, not just a vague silhouette.

I dialed the brightness back down to about 20% and switched back to red for the shot. The gator still hadn't moved.

I took the shot. The harpoon hit just behind the head. The gator rolled, the line went tight, and Mike started hauling. It was over in about five minutes — a clean seven-foot gator, right on target.

Mike looked at the T28, then at me. "That's a hell of a light," he said. "I've been running a $300 halogen spot for years. That thing's a third of the price and does three colors."

I didn't argue.

📌 The verdict from a 15-year guide

"That's a hell of a light. I've been running a $300 halogen spot for years. That thing's a third of the price and does three colors." — Mike, Florida alligator guide

6. Battery and Charging: All-Night Runtime

We were on the water for about six hours. I used the T28 for scanning, approach, and shot illumination — mostly red at low-to-moderate brightness during the long approach stretches, with white at full power for spotting and final ID.

The 21700 5000mAh battery never showed any sign of low charge. I didn't swap cells. I didn't plug it in. It just kept running. Brinyte rates flood-mode runtime at roughly 160 minutes on white, 295 minutes on red, and 325 minutes on green — and since most of a gator hunt is spent in red or dimmed white rather than full white flood, one charge comfortably covers a full night out.

When we got back to the ramp, I pulled the battery and checked the voltage — still well above the cutoff. The charging port is built into the light itself (hidden USB-C, about 3 hours for a full charge), and the cell is a standard 21700 — no proprietary charger to hunt for at camp.

💡 Pro tip: If you're running a multi-night trip, the T28 kit is also available with a spare 21700 battery as an add-on. Swapping a charged cell takes about ten seconds, and it's cheap insurance against a long night running longer than expected.

7. The Tradeoffs: Be Honest About IP66

No light is perfect. Here's the one thing about the T28 that you need to know before you buy it for alligator hunting.

It's IP66, not IP68.

The T28 is dust-tight and rated to handle powerful water jets and heavy rain, with 1m impact resistance — it shrugs off splashes, mud, and a hose-down. But it's not a dive light. If it goes under for more than a few seconds, you're taking a risk. If you need something rated for full submersion, look at a dedicated dive-rated light instead.

Here's how I handled it: I kept the included lanyard looped through my belt rather than just around my wrist, and treated the light the way I'd treat a phone near water — close at hand, never set down loose on a wet gunwale. I also kept a spare 21700 battery in a dry bag in case I needed to swap.

Does IP66 make it a bad gator light? Not really. Most gator hunting happens from a boat, not in the water — splashes, rain, and wet hands are the real-world conditions, and IP66 handles all of that without issue. If you're the kind of hunter who regularly drops gear overboard, or you're wading rather than boating, a dive-rated light is the safer call.

I'd rather a manufacturer tell me a light's real limits than have it claim a rating it doesn't actually meet.

📌 Honest tradeoff

IP66 means it handles rain, mud, and splashes — but it's not a dive light. In gator hunting, you're on a boat, not in the water. For most hunters, IP66 is plenty. If you're regularly dropping gear overboard, secure it to your belt or PFD and keep a spare battery dry.

8. White vs Red vs Green: Best Color Light for Alligator Hunting

This is the question I get most: what color light works best for alligator hunting? Based on the spec sheet and this field test, here's the breakdown:

Color Spot Brightness Peak Intensity Beam Distance Best Use
White 560 lm 125,000 cd 700+ m Scanning, ID, final shot alignment
Red 80 lm 19,500 cd 280+ m Approach, stealth, preserving your own night vision
Green 120 lm 28,750 cd 350+ m Low-visibility conditions, reduced backscatter

Do alligators see red light, or are they color blind to it? As covered above, the underlying vision science is still being studied — there's evidence alligators have at least some color perception, but no settled answer on exactly which wavelengths they respond to most. What's well established from guides and night hunters in the field is behavioral: a low-intensity red beam is far less likely to spook a gator into submerging than a bright white spotlight. That's the practical reason red works for the approach phase, regardless of the exact biology behind it.

In practice: use white to find them, use red to close the distance, and keep green in your back pocket for hazy or low-visibility nights.

9. The Verdict: Who Should Buy the T28 for Alligator Hunting

Bottom line: The Brinyte T28 Artemis is one of the more versatile alligator hunting flashlights I've tested in the sub-$150 range. The 125,000-candela white spot finds eyes at extreme range. The rotary color switch lets you go from white to red without fumbling. The stepless dimmer keeps you from spooking your target. The 21700 battery runs all night. At $119.95 for the base kit — less than half the price of a comparable halogen spot — it covers scanning, approach, and final ID in one light.

Buy the T28 if:

  • You hunt alligators from a boat at night
  • You need one light for scanning, approach, and final ID
  • You want white, red, and green in one package without carrying extra filters or modules
  • You value stepless dimming and silent, click-free operation
  • You want a 21700 battery with USB-C charging and no proprietary parts

Skip the T28 if:

  • You hunt somewhere your state restricts artificial light or night harvest for alligators — rules vary a lot by state and season, so check current regs before you buy gear around a specific method
  • You need a dive-rated light for frequent submersion, not just splash protection
  • You want a rail mount included in the box — the BRM12 quick-release mount is an add-on option, not standard in the base kit
  • You only hunt in daylight and don't need the color flexibility

If you're weighing this purely on legality: Florida's statewide harvest program is built around night hunting with a light and a valid permit, which is part of why it was the right place to run this test. Louisiana's season, by contrast, restricts harvest to daylight hours — so a high-output night light isn't the deciding factor there the way it is in Florida. Texas also has alligator hunting programs that use artificial light in some areas, but permitted methods and hours vary by region, so check with Texas Parks & Wildlife for your specific county before planning around it. None of this is legal advice — always verify current season dates and permitted methods with your state wildlife agency before you hunt.

Physical specs: Length 182mm, head diameter 54mm, body diameter 25.4mm, net weight 222g (excluding battery). Compact enough to pack easily, rugged enough to handle the field.

Ready to Upgrade Your Alligator Hunting Flashlight?

The T28 Artemis — tri-color, 125,000 cd, 700m throw, 21700 battery. Built for hunters who need one light that does it all.

See T28 Artemis on Brinyte →

10. Frequently Asked Questions

What color light is best for alligator hunting?

White for scanning and ID, red for the approach. White light gives you maximum throw — the T28's 125,000-candela white spot finds eyes at extreme range. Once you've spotted your target, switch to red. A low-intensity red beam is far less likely to trigger a flight response than a bright white spotlight, which is why it's the standard choice for closing distance.

Do alligators see red light, or are they color blind to it?

This isn't fully settled science — researchers have found evidence of dichromatic (two-cone) color vision in alligators, suggesting some color perception exists, but there's no definitive answer on exactly which wavelengths they're most sensitive to. What's consistently reported by guides and hunters in the field is behavioral: alligators are far less likely to submerge and flee under a dim red beam than under a bright white one.

How far can you see alligator eyes with a flashlight?

With a high-candela light like the T28 (125,000 cd), you can pick up alligator eyeshine at long range on a clear night — the tapetum lucidum behind a gator's retina reflects your beam straight back at you as a reddish-orange glow. On the Florida test, we picked up eyes at 80 yards with no trouble, well within the light's rated 700+ meter throw.

Is the T28 waterproof enough for alligator hunting?

IP66 — yes for rain, splashes, and mud; no for submersion. The T28 handles wet hands, rain, and boat splashes without issue. If you frequently drop lights in the water or wade rather than boat, pair it with a lanyard secured to your belt or PFD, and keep a spare battery in a dry bag.

What's a good rechargeable flashlight for alligator hunting?

Based on this field test, the Brinyte T28 Artemis is a strong option under $150: 125,000 cd, 700m+ throw, a tri-color system, and a USB-C rechargeable 21700 battery, for $119.95 in the base kit. The standard cell and built-in charging port mean no proprietary charger to track down at camp.

Can I legally use a light like this for alligator hunting in Texas, Florida, or Louisiana?

It depends entirely on your state and season. Florida's statewide harvest program is built around night hunting with artificial light under a valid permit and tags. Louisiana's recreational/commercial season restricts alligator harvest to daylight hours, so a night light isn't part of the legal method there. Texas has alligator hunting programs in some counties that involve artificial light, but rules vary by region. Always confirm current season dates and permitted methods with your state wildlife agency — this article isn't legal advice.

About Brinyte

Brinyte Field Testing Team — I'm Ethan, one of the field test engineers at Brinyte. I've been testing gear in real-world conditions for seven years and joined Brinyte in March 2024. My job is to take our lights into the field — swamps, open country, dark water — and run them until they prove themselves or fail. This was my first alligator hunt. It won't be my last.

Brinyte was founded in 2009 and holds ISO9001 certification and 30+ patents.

👉 About Brinyte | Hunting Lights

"Engineered for the mission — proven in the field."

Founded 2009 · ISO9001 · 30+ Patents

© 2026 Brinyte — Shenzhen Yeguang Technology Co., Ltd. This independent field test is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Alligator hunting regulations — including season dates, permitted hunting hours, and equipment rules — vary significantly by state and change from year to year. Always verify current regulations with your state wildlife agency before hunting, such as the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Background on alligator eyeshine and the tapetum lucidum: National Geographic — American alligator.

📅 Published: June 27, 2026 | Next scheduled review: December 2026

Founded 2009 · ISO9001 · 30+ Patents · "Engineered for the mission — proven in the field."

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