Infrared Night Vision Video Camera Light
External Seller Information

Infrared Night Vision Video Camera Light

SpiritShack — IR Video Camera Light

£39.99

United Kingdom

External seller information. PRN does not sell this product and does not imply endorsement.

Camera-mountable infrared video light for improving night vision image clarity during investigations

External seller

Seller & availability

External seller information. PRN does not sell this product and does not imply endorsement.

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Field reference

Potential Field-Use Benefits

A camera-mounted infrared light providing a wide beam for video work in darkness. A lighting accessory; any anomalies in footage should be checked against dust, insects and reflections.

PRN has not tested or reviewed this product. This information is provided for reference only.

Technical

Specifications

LEDs3 IR LEDs
Size70 x 30 x 100 mm
Lumen150lm
Power3x AA batteries
Weight120g
Mounting1/4 screw or hot shoe
Beam Angle120 deg
Wavelength850nm
Battery Lifeover 10 hours
Output Power9W

Understanding the tech

How it works

Accessories are supporting equipment, not detectors. Broadly they fall into: Audio aids — external microphones (including wind-resistant designs) capture cleaner sound for a recorder; noise-control units reduce unwanted input; ghost-box / spirit-box speakers make those devices' output louder or clearer in the field. Illumination — infrared (IR) illuminators, torches and night-vision lights emit near-infrared light that IR-sensitive and full-spectrum cameras can "see" in the dark, while staying invisible to the eye; LED headlamps provide hands-free white light. Power and logistics — USB power banks keep devices running; walkie-talkies coordinate the team; filming rigs mount a phone with light and mic. None of these instruments measures an environmental quantity, so none can "detect" anything on its own. Their relevance to an investigation is reliability and signal quality.

Use with care

Limitations

Accessories cannot detect — an external mic captures sound but does not interpret it; an IR light reveals what a camera can see but adds nothing evidential by itself. Some accessories actively create artefacts in other devices. An IR illuminator lights up airborne dust, insects and moisture, which then appear as "orbs" or streaks on the camera it is paired with. A speaker amplifying a spirit box amplifies its radio noise too. Radios add EMF/RF. Walkie-talkies and any powered accessory emit fields that can move a nearby EMF meter or contaminate an audio recording. Quality varies — cheap mics add hiss, cheap lights flicker, power banks can introduce electrical noise.

Read the data critically

Common false positives

These false readings are caused in the paired devices an accessory supports: IR-light "orbs" — dust, pollen, insects and moisture lit by an IR illuminator close to a camera lens. EMF/RF contamination from walkie-talkies, power banks and other powered accessories near a meter or recorder. Added audio noise — hiss, handling noise or speaker feedback introduced by a mic, rig or speaker. Lens flare and reflections from torches and headlamps. Best practice: keep IR illuminators off-axis and away from the lens to limit orbs, keep radios and power banks clear of meters and mics, and remember that an accessory's job is to make the primary instrument more reliable — it never supplies evidence on its own.

PRN has not tested or reviewed this product. This guidance describes the device class and is provided for reference only.

Paranormal Response Network is not a seller, reseller, certifier, or safety authority for any equipment shown here. Listings may include vendor-submitted, sponsored, affiliate-linked, imported, or externally sourced information. Presence in this directory does not mean PRN has tested, endorsed, or approved any product or vendor.

Paranormal Response Network is not a seller, reseller, certifier, or safety authority for any equipment shown here. Listings may include vendor-submitted, sponsored, affiliate-linked, imported, or externally sourced information. Presence in this directory does not mean PRN has tested, endorsed, or approved any product or vendor.