A lot of this post is a rehash of stuff I've posted before, probably on this thread too, but I'm trying to be of some assistance to
addysdaddy so here goes....
addysdaddy said:
I'm running out of patience in my search for an inspection light. I just received two versions of the light listed below - the larger output version being 180 lumens and the other half that output at 90 and neither one impresses me. I also purchased the HD high out halogens are they are less then ideal as well,... Don't know what to do next??
Besides what
TOGWT posted about doing the inspections in an otherwise dark environment (yeah, that can be easier said than done!), two things come to mind- 1) the need for "distant point-source" illumination and 2) the importance of *contrast* as opposed to "mere brightness".
- Point-source illumination is basically the exact opposite of what that multi-LED light provides; I do better when all the light is coming from a single point (like one LED vs. many, not that I do much with LEDs myself).
And that "point" often has to be a fair distance from the surface being inspected; that's the "distant" part of it.
A single 60W lightbulb can often show marring quite well when used in an otherwise dark shop. It's like "a tiny little sun", sorta simulating the way the (real) sun or a streetlight lets you see that marring when the conditions are right.
-Contrast vs. brightness is trickier for me to explain, and I'll probably do a poor job here

When you fire up that bright halogen (not that I don't use 'em myself) it can make things reflect/etc. so much that you "wash out" the tiny little imperfections you're trying to see.
Again, a single 60W bulb, *at a distance, in a dark shop* can often show flaws that bright halogens won't. Funny and counter-intuitive, but true IME.
Note that I have a number of silver vehicles and a white one. I have very little trouble seeing *everything* with my incandescent lights, but I still have to work at it. Viewing distance and angle, illumination distance and angle...there are lots of variables to tinker with and it can be hard to say which variable(s) will prove to be critical in any given situation.
Heh heh, I can even leave that fancy SunGun of mine in its case most of the time, though it's a pretty exact example of point-source illumination.