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Brand | Eveready | Eveready | Dorcy | Dorcy |
Name | Floating LED Lantern, 80 Lumens Readyflex Lantern | Readyflex Floating Lantern | Battery-Powered 100 Lumen Floating Lantern | Mini LED Lantern Flashlight |
Price | $497 | $546 | $891 | $997 |
Ratings | (130) | (54) | (20) | (10) |
Included | Batteries | Batteries | No additional components or accessories are included | Batteries |
Casing material | Plastic | Plastic | Plastic | Plastic |
Lumens | 80 | 80 | 100 | 27 |
Flashlight type | Handheld | Handheld | Lantern | Handheld |
Flashlight Features | Nonslip Grip | No Additional Features | No Additional Features | No Additional Features |
Power Source | Battery | Battery | Battery | Battery |
Battery Size | D Battery | D Battery | AAA Battery | AA Battery |
Bulb Type | LED | LED | LED | LED |
View Product | View Product | View Product | View Product |
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | |
Brand | Eveready | Eveready | Dorcy | Dorcy |
Name | Floating LED Lantern, 80 Lumens Readyflex Lantern | Readyflex Floating Lantern | Battery-Powered 100 Lumen Floating Lantern | Mini LED Lantern Flashlight |
Price | $497 | $546 | $891 | $997 |
Ratings | (130) | (54) | (20) | (10) |
Included | ||||
Casing material | ||||
Lumens | ||||
Flashlight type | ||||
Flashlight Features | ||||
Power Source | ||||
Battery Size | ||||
Bulb Type | ||||
View Product | View Product | View Product | View Product |
Goo Gone
no
There re ally is not a bulb that I have seen. You may have to Call the manufacture for the answer.
It is less expensive to just replace the lantern. The lantern is so inexpensive, it isn't cost effective to replace battery, although, the battery is replaceable.
Take the lantern to Home Depot and get an Associate to help you.
Unscrew the black lens cover, it's a right hand thread.
2 or 4 D cell.
Hi Ty: The ad blurb is confusing but let's chalk it up to "sales speak". The batteries that are in the lantern when purchased are two d cells. They appear to be the chemical composition of the original flashlight cells that have been around for many many years. Two old chemistry "d" cells = 80 hours. Then the ad blurb says 350 hours with 4 alkaline "D" cells. That change in battery chemistry and the doubling of batteries is where they get 4 Alkaline "d" cells = 350 hours. Now I haven't left the ones I purchased on for 350 hours, 350 /24 = 14 days! Or Two Weeks and a little! But if you want to??? I purchased two of these and swapped the provided batteries into one lantern so it had four. The other empty lantern I put in 4 new alkaline "d" cells. Wrote the battery expiration date on back of the lantern with majic marker and put it in the car trunk. If I get stuck on the road, I'll hope I'm rescued before two weeks elapse. I never believe the ad blurbs, I always remember the disclaimer, "Your mileage may vary.". This is a good light with a LED bulb that maximizes both light and time you get light. Your choice of batteries, the temperature, om/off during life of batteries, how you use the light, all these will effect "run time" . I'm sure some Everready lab ran the tests, or some engineer plotted battery drain by the LED lamp consumption and came up with those figures. I'm happy with my purchase and don't feel misled by the advertising. I've exhausted 6 volt lantern batteries in these "style" lights, and was glad for the last few minutes of fading illumination while stuck on the road with a broken down car. Use good batteries and don't worry about how many weeks you can have illumination. It's an emergency lantern and your care of it will be the real "burn time" determinant. .
Try changing the way the batteries are in and that they connect properly. I had trouble with mine at first and it took a few tries. If that doesn't work, HD will replace it. If you go into the store, have customer service set it up for you to be sure it's working before you leave the store. It's a good light that lasts a long time. Good luck.
i is set up to run on fewer batteries if needed - also affects the brightness