No. Its virtually identical light pattern and brightness. I think the 28 led's must be a bit brighter.fini said:Presumably it lights up a much larger area though, or is it exactly the same as the 28 LED torch?
Well, the luxeon is better at lighting up at a distance. The 28 led has a better spread up close. For camping and festivals I'd of thought the up close would be more useful. Plus its probably going to last longer.Evo said:So if I wanted a small decentish LED torch that took an AAA battery or two which would you recommend? The kind of thing I can slip in a pocket when camping/festivals etc.
MikeHunt79 said:Fenix Digital L0D CE - Awesome torch
Adam W said:Seoul p4s are brighter than crees, i imported them from germany.
I have just gathered all the materials for my project.
List so far:
3 x 28 to 25 mm copper 'fitting reducers' (these are the light bodies.)
3 X brass plumbing compression discs (heatsinks with thermal contact to copper bodies)
1 x 1000ma buckpuck constant current device to drive LED's
3 x Seoul SSC p4 u bin 240lm LED's.
3 x Fraen narrow beam 10deg optics.
1 water proof switch.
2 x 7.4v LiPo batterys (4000mah)
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The optics fit perfectly in the copper reducers, and amazingly the brass heatsinks are snug fit on the elbow of the reduced diameter, at the perfect height for the led to sit.
![]()
Give me a couple of weeks and i will have constructed it
The LED's will be wired in series, controlled by a 5k pot
The 'heatsinks' fit snug in the thinner section of the reducer, and will be glued in with arctic epoxy (home made out of arctic silver and heat resistant epoxy). Then the copper housing will conduct the heat away.
Bug One said:Its amazing how cheap these things car, considering the work that must go into making them, then flying them half way across the world.
alexthecheese said:Suddenly I want an LED torch. What's that all about?
Adam W said:Seoul p4s are brighter than crees, i imported them from germany.
I have just gathered all the materials for my project.
List so far:
3 x 28 to 25 mm copper 'fitting reducers' (these are the light bodies.)
3 X brass plumbing compression discs (heatsinks with thermal contact to copper bodies)
1 x 1000ma buckpuck constant current device to drive LED's
3 x Seoul SSC p4 u bin 240lm LED's.
3 x Fraen narrow beam 10deg optics.
1 water proof switch.
2 x 7.4v LiPo batterys (4000mah)
The optics fit perfectly in the copper reducers, and amazingly the brass heatsinks are snug fit on the elbow of the reduced diameter, at the perfect height for the led to sit.
Give me a couple of weeks and i will have constructed it
The LED's will be wired in series, controlled by a 5k pot
The 'heatsinks' fit snug in the thinner section of the reducer, and will be glued in with arctic epoxy (home made out of arctic silver and heat resistant epoxy). Then the copper housing will conduct the heat away.
Bug One said:Right, I've just got back from a few nights camping.
I can now definiatively say that the luxeon is far superior. I was worried about battery life so I bought spare batteries. Didn't use any of them.
It was funny seeing the torch compared with all the other guys maglites. You just can't compare them. When this torch was on, you couldn't even tell the maglites were turned on. The only thing that beat this was my 2 million candles torch. But its big and impractical and has poor battery life.
I would hole heartedly recommend this torch. 3 aa's offer perfectly decent battery power and life. The beam output is exceptional. Its rugged and well built. What more could you want.![]()
5w Luxeon Torch
Hmm. I think around 10 days. Would be lucky to get it before wednesday.Ev0 said:How long did it take to arrive, I need one by next wednesday :/
You'll be needing some pila 168s batteries from jsburlys.saitrix said:I am looking at the Fenix P3D CE RB100. Now it needs 2 CR123A's, does anyone know of a cost effective solution for it? If so, where from?