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Reliable 220-lumen headlamp with excellent runtimes and dual white/red modes for serious backcountry trips.
Overview
The Minion 220 Headlamp is a dual-output lighting system built for backpacking, backcountry camping, and extended wilderness trips. It pairs a bright 220-lumen white Cree XP-G LED with an independent red-light mode, solving the classic camp dilemma: bright enough to cook and navigate after dark without destroying night vision or waking sleeping tentmates. Constructed from impact-resistant plastics with a comfort-engineered elastomer headband, it's built for the full range of park camping—from car camping trips to multi-day backcountry permits.
Who It's For
This headlamp is for backcountry campers, trail runners doing dawn starts, and anyone managing multiple nights under stars on a permit. The 28-hour high mode run time and 120-hour low mode make it reliable for longer trips where battery availability is spotty. Skip it if you hike only day trips (AAA-only minimalist headlamps are lighter) or need a true navigation beam reaching 150+ meters for technical night scrambles—the 118-meter beam is good but not exceptional for scramble-in-the-dark route-finding.
Key Features
- Dual white and red LED modes: 220-lumen white mode for camp setup and navigation; independent red mode for night-vision preservation during late-night tasks. SOS strobe in both.
- Three brightness levels plus strobe: High (220 lm, 28h), Medium (91 lm, 55h), Low (9 lm, 120h). Low mode stretches a single battery set across multiple nights if you're patient with light.
- Comfort headband with dual adjustable straps: Elastomer construction distributes weight evenly. Comfortable enough for 4+ hour overnight trips without pressure headaches.
- Weather and impact resistant: IPX6 waterproof rating handles rain, splashes, and river crossings. 5-foot impact rating absorbs drops on rocks or from gear drops.
- 50,000-hour LED lifespan: Cree XP-G LED outlasts years of backcountry use. Unlikely to fail during a trip; more likely to lose batteries first.
On the Trail
You're on a four-day backcountry permit in Grand Teton, camped at Polecat Lake. It's 10 p.m. and you need to cook dinner, then set up bear rope before dark. High mode illuminates your bear bag setup and stove, throwing 118 meters of light across the lake. After eating, you switch to red mode and low brightness to find water at the creek without disturbing the two tents nearby—red light takes the edge off your night vision. By day three, you're using medium mode conservatively to extend battery life. The 55-hour runtime on medium gives you enough flexibility to catch a sunrise hike before striking camp, still with light to spare for emergency navigation if you extend your day.
Pros & Cons
- Excellent runtime on low and medium modes stretches battery life across multi-day trips
- Red LED mode preserves night vision during camp chores without waking tent neighbors
- Waterproof and impact-resistant design handles trail conditions reliably
- Comfortable elastomer headband stays in place without pressure points during long wear
- AAA batteries drain quickly in high mode; high brightness requires frequent replacement on long backcountry trips
- Red LED is too dim for actual navigation; only suitable for close-quarter camp tasks
- Heavier than pure minimalist AAA headlamps if ultralight backpacking is your priority
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use rechargeable AAA batteries in the Minion 220?
Yes. Rechargeable AAA batteries work, though they have lower voltage than disposables and may reduce output slightly. Standard alkaline AAAs perform best and are lighter to pack multiple sets for multi-day trips.
Is IPX6 waterproof rating safe for river fording and wet camping?
IPX6 handles splash and heavy rain, and brief submersion in moving water during a creek crossing—don't intentionally hold it underwater. For genuine water sports (paddling, wet wading), use a dry bag as extra insurance.
How does the red LED compare to white for general camp navigation?
Red preserves your natural night vision for walking around camp without adjustment; white requires pupils to re-dilate after use. White is brighter and reaches farther but washes out night vision for 20–30 minutes. Use red for close tasks, white for longer paths.
Bottom Line
Reliable 220-lumen headlamp with excellent runtimes and dual white/red modes for serious backcountry trips.


