Petzl NAO+ Review
Our Verdict
Compare to Similar Products
This Product
Petzl NAO+ | |||||
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Awards | Best for Stunning Performance | Best for Waterproof and More | Solid Performer at a Good Price | Best Headlamp for General Purpose Use | |
Price | $200 List $179.99 at Amazon | $89 List | $44.89 at REI Compare at 4 sellers | $37.39 at REI Compare at 4 sellers | $24.95 at REI Compare at 3 sellers |
Overall Score | |||||
Star Rating | |||||
Bottom Line | Impressive light output, but who can afford $200 for a light that is not top performing? | A stunningly bright light that offers impressive battery life. If you can afford it, it won't disappoint | You can't go wrong with the Storm, high performance, quality optics, and durable design | Offering excellent optics, a bright wide beam, and strong performance for the price, the Spot is one of our favorites | The $20 Tikkina is a great light around the campsite, for general use, in your thingy drawer, or car glove box |
Rating Categories | Petzl NAO+ | Zebralight H600w Mk IV | Black Diamond Storm | Black Diamond Spot | Petzl Tikkina |
Trail Finding (35%) | |||||
Close Proximity (20%) | |||||
Battery Life (15%) | |||||
Weight (15%) | |||||
Ease of Use (15%) | |||||
Specs | Petzl NAO+ | Zebralight H600w Mk IV | Black Diamond Storm | Black Diamond Spot | Petzl Tikkina |
Measured Beam Distance | 116 m | 121 m | 91 m | 94 m | 62 m |
Claimed Distance | 135 m | Not specified | 85 m | 80 m | 55 m |
Measured High Mode Run-time (ANSI) | 1.6 hrs | 3.1 hrs | 5 hrs | 2.9 hrs | 3.5 hrs |
Claimed High Mode Run-time | 1.5 hrs | 2.9 hrs | 40 hrs | 30 hrs | 60 hrs |
Measured Low Mode Run-time | 35 hrs | 232 hrs | 42 hrs | 9.7 hrs | 223 hrs |
Claimed Low Mode Run-time | 8 hrs | 203 hrs | 120 hrs | 175 hrs | 220 hrs |
Measured Weight | 6.7 oz, 190 g | 4.5 oz, 127 g | 4 oz, 112 g | 3.1 oz, 89 g | 2.9 oz, 83 g |
Battery Type | 2600 mAh lithium ion | 18650 rechargeable Li-ion | 4 AAA | 3 AAA | 3 AAA |
Water Resistance | IPX4 splash proof | IPX8 waterproof to 2 meters, 30 minutes | IP67 waterproof to one meter and dustproof | Splash proof (dubious IPX8 claim) | IPX4 splash proof |
Manuf Claimed Lumens | 750 lumens | 1400 lumens | 350 lumens | 300 lumens | 150 lumens |
Beam Type | flood/spot | flood | flood/spot | flood/spot | flood |
Red Light | no | no | yes, red/green/blue night-vision modes | yes | no |
On Switch Lock | no | yes (tailcap lockout) | yes | yes | no |
Our Analysis and Test Results
The Petzl NAO+, with reactive lighting, an app, and bluetooth connnectivity, is one of the most technologically advanced light to be marketed to the general public. Cavers and divers have even more elaborate lights, but they are not really appropriate for general recreational use.
Performance Comparison
Trail Finding
This headlamp has an excellent trail finding beam and scored a 8 of 10. The light is even over distance and powerful. But, its utility for trail finding is hobbled by relatively short battery life in high mode. In the beam comparison photo with the Zebralight H600 Mk IV below, you can see the NAO can't quite keep pace despite its $200 price tag.
Close Proximity
The quality of the NAO's beam is excellent. However, Petzl's otherwise innovative reactive lighting technology is distracting. In the NAO+ and Reactik+ lamps, Petzl uses a forward facing light sensor to adjust the beam strength in order to maintain even lighting. This, in theory, saves battery by avoiding excess lighting. However, with any other light source nearby (like a campfire, other headlamps, or even reflective surfaces), the instrumentation gets confused and the light flickers annoyingly. Even when the light doesn't flicker, the stepped changes in light prove to be distracting at close distances. The good news is that the reactive technology can be overridden to fix the brightness to a preselected level. In this configuration, both of Petzl's reactive lights cast wide, even flood beams for close proximity use. The reactive mode is the default, which means effective close proximity lighting requires extra steps initially. Also the reactive mode increases the price considerably. However, if the other attributes of the NAO+ work for you, realize that you can make the light work well in close proximity situations.
Battery Life
The NAO+ was one of the lowest performers in our ANSI battery life test. The fact that it throws a long beam and can be locked off in a backpack help justify and defend the low battery scores, but the fact remains that if you run this in high mode it will not last very long. In high beam mode, as shown in this battery life vs. beam distance graph, the NAO+ beam power falls off a cliff after 1.5 hours and is only as bright as most lamp's flood mode after that. The Zebralight shines for 3.1 hours on high mode, with an impressive beam which is dramatically better than the NAO+. An hour and half of high beam, for such an expensive and heavy headlamp, is a bit hard to swallow. Yes it's cool that you can charge the NAO+ from any USB source, but if you only get a few hours of use between chargers, that power source better be handy!
Weight
At 190 grams (6.7 ounces) this is one of the heavier headlamps. The unique headband carries the weight well, but we still feel this headlamp is more weight and bulk than most people want to move around with.
Ease of Use
The reactive technology is very cool in theory and no other manufacturer in our test offered it. Turn on this mode, and the light chooses the best brightness for your needs: high beam for trail finding and low beam for close proximity and battery saving. In practice, we found reactive worked pretty well for trail hiking, but around camp this technology can be as annoying as it is useful. For starters, this and the Petzl Reactik+ (which also uses reactive lighting) are some of the few headlamps where we felt we needed the manual in order to operate. Once through the learning curve, the reactive technology was frustrating around camp. As you mill around people, the kitchen, and campfire, the lighting mode is constantly changing and not always where you want it to be. We didn't like the frequent changes in lighting level when working in close proximity situations.
Best Applications
We're at a loss to pick exactly what the NAO+ excels at. So many lights with almost as bright a beam are half the weight. With the short battery life, this is really for short excursions near a USB charging port.
Value
This $200 light is one of the most expensive tested. You can buy one of our every award winner for just a little bit more. If the reactive lighting worked a little more smoothly and there was some decent life in the rechargeable battery, the cost could be worthwhile. However, Petzl has some kinks still to resolve.
Conclusion
This is one of the most innovative headlamps ever designed. Everything about it is cool from the look, the headband, the built-in USB plug for charging, and the reactive lighting. Unfortunately, it's hard to recommend this headlamp because the battery life is so short and it is dramatically more expensive than many headlamps that scored higher. The Zebralight is the natural choice for someone looking for performance and willing to pay for it — it outperforms the NAO+ at half the price. If you do love the reactive technology, check out the Petzl Reactik+ which is about half the cost and weight but has double the high beam battery life.