Stanley 369 6-LED Flashlight #95-369
- White LED flashlight with 6 LEDs
- Reliable illumination with option to use 3, 6, or 9 batteries
- Low-power indicator light flashes so you’re never caught unexpectedly in the dark
- Requires 3-9 AAA batteries (not included)
- 9-5/8-inches long, 2 inches wide, .53 pounds; limited lifetime warranty
Amazon.com Product Review
As with other LED flashlights, your batteries will last longer in the 369, and the bulbs will give you years of operation before burning out. And LED bulbs are almost indestructible: you’d have to hit them with a hammer in order to break them–and you’d have to get through the shatter-proof polycarbonate lens first. In other words, you can depend on this flashlight to work when you need it.The 369 is designed to be used with three, six, or nine batteries, depending on your needs. If you wanted to have a flashlight for emergency illumination, for example, you’d use all nine batteries; if you wanted a lightweight flashlight for work, you’d use three. For extra reliability, the 369 has a built-in warning light that lets you know when your batteries are running low.Like other LED flashlights, this one gives you a much “cleaner” bright spot than conventional incandescent models. Even so, it seems like the light should be brighter, especially considering t… More >>
Stanley 369 6-LED Flashlight #95-369

This is piss poor marketing! No instructions and no clue as to where the battery compartment is located or how to insert batteries!
I bought this light because I had purchased several of them a couple of years ago for Christmas presents and they were the best light at that time. I needed a gift for a friend so I ordered this one. I have discovered since that there are much brighter,much lighter flash lights out there. I will be upgrading.
Michael J. Blaisdell
I mistakenly bought this thinking it was the version with the tripd legs and the tilt head, but it’s not. The fact that it’s priced only about 10-15% lower than the tripod fooled me.
That being said, it’s a good flashlight, but not a great flashlight. There are comaprable conventional hand lights for less money.
I have the tripod version, and it’s great. Picked it off this website to give my son for Christmas- and screwed up by not taking enough time to drill down the descriptions. Got the non-tripod version, for tripod version price. OK flashlight. Not what I had planned as a gift. Mildly pissed off. Don’t pay over $19!
Cheese Louise! I would think that someone would have talked this up already! Max Life? Why run all nine batteries when only only three meets the voltage requirement? I use the three in the barrel that has “MaxLife “389 Tripod” emblazoned on it. The other two legs have batteries in them, but I’ve placed a small square piece of electrical tape on the cathode end of one of each of the cells in both legs. I’d draw ya’ll a picture but what you’re doing is “keeping” both of the remaining two legs as “spares” so that when the little red light starts to blink “low bat. -lo bat.” you can change over to one of the “fresh” legs! Just remove the small square piece of electrical tape (removing any “glueish” residue that may have oozed onto the ends of both or either of the “conjoined with tape” batteries) and popping them back into the fresh barrel. Take the tape and put it onto the end of one of the batteries in the “spent” barrel” and this will preclude the spent batteries from being in parallel circuit with the fresh batteries. If you happen to be located or nearby an official “alkaline battery disposal location”, you could leave them there; otherwise take them home, remove them and reload the spent barrel with fresh batteries. By putting the tape back over the spent batteries column, you prevent the fresh batteries from draining into them, what with their affinity for electrons and such. So! Now you’ve got a fresh set of batteries always available! The two spares should give you the applause and amazement due to such a prepared flashlight person, should you be with a group of others when the little red light goes blinkety blink. Haywire, in Gasquet, CA