In today’s article, Randall Chaney reviews the SureFire Mini Scout Light Pro. This tactical flashlight has a low-profile mount for easy attachment to your defensive rifle. Its hybrid beam promises excellent lighting from close- to longer-range engagements while offering good lighting of areas on the periphery of the beam. Chaney sets out to test these things and help us understand who might benefit from this weapon-mounted light. SureFire provided a Mini Scout Light Pro to the author for testing.
I was very excited when the SureFire company sent me a weapon-mounted flashlight to evaluate: the Mini Scout Light Pro. My experience with their quality Made-in-the-USA illumination products harkens back to my first SureFire 6P handheld model, purchased in the early 1990s. The 6P still rides with me. I did not doubt this new LED light could provide superior service for decades.
To carry my Springfield Armory SAINT Victor on police patrol duty, I needed a light affixed to my rifle. Having recently qualified with the gun and having enthusiastic approval from our armorer of my SAINT’s effective and unmodified condition, I began collecting a few things to bring the long gun up to street standards: the light, a two-point sling, and an optic.
Mini Scout Pro Design — Keep It Simple
My modus operandi when it comes to weaponry has gravitated to simplicity. The Mini Scout Pro can be situated on any MIL-STD-1913 or M-Lok rail, holding the light tight to the foregrip with SureFire’s Low Profile Mount. Since my SAINT has a full-length M-Lok, that was the direction I intended to go. The installation was straightforward. Choose the mounting method, grab a slotted screwdriver and Allen wrench, and get busy. Yeah, read the instructions first, though.
The Mini Scout nestled on the upper left side of the rail at 10 o’clock, conveniently close to my front sling swivel. I placed both where my support side hand naturally rests in the shooting position. This led to the protected tailcap pressure switch on the flashlight being accessed intuitively with my left thumb. See, simple!
This arrangement reminded me of the useful SureFire M500A that rode on my SWAT rifle many, many years ago. My left hand accessed the M500A’s on-off and pressure switches in the same manner. That old light was quite big compared to today’s weapon-mounted offerings, but it was built like an MRAP and took many hard knocks without damage during search warrants and high-risk entries. The same held for the SureFire weapons light mounted on the MP5 sub-gun that I carried for a few hundred operations. Tough stuff.
Satisfied with the placement of the Mini Scout Pro, I performed some simulated building-clearing maneuvers at the workplace and my residence — with an unloaded SAINT, of course. Unlike the ancient M500A, which weighed much more with its larger head and three 123A batteries, the Mini Scout tipped the scale at a minuscule 3.65 ounces. This lack of heft upfront led to a nimble handling SAINT — again, keeping it simple. No added toys to bulk up my gun.
Using the SureFire Mini Scout Light Pro
“Tactical lights” can be overpowered for practical purposes. Watch someone try to write on a field interview pad with their thousand-lumen torch, and you can see the blinding disadvantage of too much light. The same goes for searching inside buildings, where many officers find themselves. A flashlight that can reach the other side of an enormous warehouse can be problematic in close-quarters room clearing. I found the 500-lumen Hybrid Beam Pattern of the Mini Scout Pro to be just right. It excels at throwing enough light for positive identification as well as a useful peripheral spill for good situational awareness.
This same scenario can play out in home defense, where you may have to clear your castle with the equipment at hand. With good instruction, sound tactics, repetition, and muzzle discipline, an interested learner can maneuver comfortably indoors with a properly accessorized, light-bearing long gun.
The Mini Scout Pro is capable, with a Mil-Spec aluminum body that is hard coat anodized in either black or tan. Because the internals of the light are protected with O-rings after the threads, the Mini Scout Pro’s IPX7-rated liquid protection guarantees flashlight functionality after one hour of submergence at a three-meter (3 ft, 3 in) depth.
The single 123A battery (SureFire makes these, too) will run for an hour, which is more than adequate since the Mini Scout Pro should normally be used intermittently. Most structures have enough ambient light for slow, methodical movement. The weapon light should not be left on continually. That would draw unwanted tracking from a bad actor. As our high liability instructors used to say, Light then move. Search with the light, but move in darkness for safe concealment.
I can appreciate a good weapons light. My first SWAT rifle in the 1980s was a wooden stocked .223 caliber short-barreled gun that was more intended for hunting animals than armed criminals. It had no light mounting capabilities. Rifle-toting building searches were performed in whatever natural light existed. Sans that, bring another guy with a handgun and flashlight or leave the rifle in the trunk. Obviously, this dilemma has been solved.
Final Thoughts on the SureFire Flashlight
With all of its positive attributes, the SureFire Mini Scout Light Pro is a solid piece of gear. It will stay on my SAINT Victor for duty use and I do not take that lightly. The MSRP of the Mini Scout is $369.00. My old SureFire 6P is still going strong after over 30 years. The only adjustment I made was to buy a SureFire P60 LED to replace the 6P’s original incandescent bulb. The LED has never failed. All things equal, if the Mini lasts as long as the 6P, it would set me back about 12 dollars per year. I think that is a pretty darn reasonable investment.
SureFire is a business built on new ideas and corporate courage. In the last 40 years, they have innovated laser sights, weapons lights, handheld flashlights, suppressors, hearing protection, lithium batteries, and high-capacity magazines, among other products. The company touts, “If it bears the SureFire name, it is proudly designed and engineered with only the finest materials, then rigorously tested and precision-assembled in the U.S.A.” The Mini Scout Light Pro is without a doubt a credit to its lineage.
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