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Night races and 24-hour endurance events like World’s Toughest Mudder are growing fast in OCR, and they introduce a gear requirement that daytime racers never think about: lighting. A good headlamp is the difference between navigating a dark trail with confidence and face-planting into an obstacle you didn’t see coming.
OCR headlamps need to survive conditions that would destroy most hiking lights — full submersion, mud coating, impacts from obstacles, and hours of continuous use. Here’s what to look for and three options that deliver.
What to Prioritize for OCR
Waterproofing: IPX7 minimum. OCR water crossings will submerge your head. Your lamp needs to keep working.
Brightness: 200-400 lumens is the sweet spot.
Battery life: At least 4-6 hours on medium brightness.
Secure fit: The headlamp must stay on your head through crawls, climbs, and water crossings.
Weight: Keep it under 200 grams.
Top 3 Picks
1. Petzl Actik Core — Best Overall
Price: ~$80 | Lumens: 600 max | Weight: 88g | Rating: 8.5/10
The Actik Core is the headlamp you see most often at endurance OCR events. The rechargeable core battery is convenient and can be swapped for standard AAA batteries mid-race — a huge advantage for 24-hour events. At 88 grams, it’s barely noticeable on your head.
2. BioLite HeadLamp 800 — Best for Comfort
Price: ~$70 | Lumens: 800 max | Weight: 150g | Rating: 8/10
BioLite’s design distributes weight evenly with a moisture-wicking headband that’s genuinely comfortable for extended wear. 800 lumens at max output is the brightest on this list.
3. Black Diamond Spot 400-R — Best Value
Price: ~$50 | Lumens: 400 | Weight: 75g | Waterproofing: IPX8 | Rating: 7.5/10
The budget pick with a notable advantage: IPX8 waterproofing — truly OCR-waterproof without caveats. At 75 grams and $50, it’s the lightest and cheapest option here.
Race Day Tips for Night OCR
Angle your beam slightly down. You want to see the ground 10-20 feet ahead, not blast light into the distance.
Bring a backup battery or second lamp. A dead headlamp at mile 8 of a night race is a miserable experience.
Red light mode is your friend. Use it at aid stations and in the starting corral to preserve your night vision.
Secure it properly. Over-the-head strap engaged, band tight, lamp positioned on your forehead.
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