Fenix HM55R

$74.49
VAT 0% - Duties and fees included in the cart.

This product is not shipped to United States

Light, powerful and versatile - a rechargeable headlamp with 1200 lumen output and red light.

The rechargeable HM55R is a high-quality choice for hiking, job sites, trail running, fishing, or even Nordic walking—and it makes a great gift, too!

Fenix’s dependable headlamps are under continuous development. In this lamp, packed into a weight of just 105 grams, you get a narrow long-range beam, a separate close-range work light, and a red light. On the lowest brightness setting, you can handle camp tasks for a very long time—under optimal conditions, this setting provides a battery life of up to 141 hours.

In normal use, the HM55R runs on a rechargeable type 18350 battery, which you charge via the USB-C port on the side of the lamp. If charging isn’t possible while on the go, you can swap in a CR123A battery.

The lamp has enough power that its built-in brightness reduction feature is genuinely useful: if the light head is too close to a surface for more than 1.5 seconds, it automatically reduces brightness to 30 lumens. This helps prevent burns and stops objects from becoming dangerously hot. The lamp also automatically restores higher brightness when appropriate.

Full technical specifications, brightness levels, and runtimes are shown in the additional image.

  • Long-range beam: four brightness levels from 30 to 1200 lumens, 6500K color temperature
  • Flood/close-range beam: three brightness levels from 5 to 350 lumens, 5000K color temperature
  • Red light: steady and flashing modes, both 5 lumens
  • Headband includes reflective elements; adjustable length 50.5–64.5 cm
  • Charging time approx. 2.5 h
  • ANSI/NEMA FL-1, RoHS, and CE certified
  • 5-year warranty against manufacturing and material defects
  • IP68 protection: fully dustproof, withstands temporary immersion in water
  • Package includes the headlamp, headband, Fenix ARB-L18-1600P Li-ion battery, USB-C charging cable, spare O-ring, and user manual

Note: In the ANSI FL-1 standard, battery runtime is measured until only 10% of the initial brightness remains.