Thanks to members LED1982 and Xeray, I and member Froggy Taco had the opportunity to see, handle and shoot these two excellent lights at Froggy's friends rural property. All the beam pics are from Froggy's camera and knowledge base as they put mine to shame. The target trees are at 990 Yard and 1230 Yard distances. Each light was shot hitting the target trees at both the 50 Watt and 70 Watt settings. NOTE: I highly suggest viewing these when your room is darkened and there is no other screen light reaching your eyes - use your hands to block all but the light from the pic itself. It makes a very big difference - at least for me. Things that are plainly not visible when viewing normally during the day with high ambient light are plainly visible when using the method I suggested. Also, it will make it appear that these two lights are not performing as good as they do if not viewed as suggested. I did my very best in trying to end up with posted pics that represent what we saw. I would probably have used the next brightest version of the pic for normal ambient light viewing. Froggy used 1.6, 2.0 and 2.5 second exposures at f/7.1. I then picked the one most representative and used it. No Photoshopping here. The camera used is an Olympus OM-D E-M1 with an Olympus M.Zuiko Digital ED 75mm f/1.8 lens. The temp was about 47 with light winds so you might see some particulates in the beams.
Up first, some static pics of the two lights together to illustrate relative size. The head of the SuperLight is HUGE. Handles and batteries are the same size and in-fact, the batteries are interchangeable, they have the same part number on the back. You want to be sure to have a good grip on the SuperLight when handling it. It is heavy although I didn't find it too heavy when walking around with it for a short time. For actual longer use, I'd definitely want to use the shoulder strap. Both lights use the upgraded ballast developed by Xeray - this particular Superlight being upgraded by Xeray prior to shipment to me. Both of these lights would be excellent for Search and Rescue - with Superlight being able to "see" further down the road by an estimated 300-500 Yards.
The first two daytime pics are of the range. However, the pic is from a shoot a couple years ago and this time, we were about 100' left of the position from which these pics were taken so relationships of objects is a bit different. Also only the middle red circle is relevant as it is the 990 Yard target tree. The 1230 Yard target tree is the more fuller, darker, taller vertical foliage tree just to the left of the left red circle. (I forgot to get a new daytime shot) The white objects in the foreground are stacks of shipping containers for scale.
Xevision XV-LX70 -50 Watts @ 990 Yards - The target tree is not the lower, more easily seen tree but is above it. See below pic and it will be clear. Again, use the recommended viewing procedure and the target tree will appear out of nowhere.
XeVision XV-LX70 SuperLight - 50 Watts @ 990 Yards
Xevision XV-LX70 -70 Watts @ 990 Yards
XeVision XV-LX70 SuperLight -70 Watts @ 990 Yards
Xevision XV-LX70 -50 Watts @ 1230 Yards. We really could not see the tree and the pic represents this.
XeVision XV-LX70 SuperLight -50 Watts @ 1230 Yards
Xevision XV-LX70 - 70 Watts @1230 Yards. Use the recommended viewing procedure to see the target tree.
XeVision XV-LX70 SuperLight -70 Watts @ 1230 Yards. The trees to the right of the target tree are 1254 Yards distant. The trees to the left of the target tree are 1278 Yards distant.