Discussion : - Utorch UT01

Thanks I’ll do that!

The switch on the board gets a bit of center so the boots rubber nub doesn’t get good contact to the switch on the board, actually the rubber nub on the boot is really to soft and bends to much, so you have to take the retainer and boot off and get the switch centered and then it will work great, I did a picture write up during a group buy for the UT01 & 02, it was a buy put together by George, I think I’ve spelled his name wrong but it’s close,

Edit: By the way to take that retainer off if you don’t know, I take a small screw driver and carefully pull back from the sides of the boot to pull the boot edges out from under the retainer and then with the boot out I can take a bit bigger screw driver and gently pry up around the retainer to remove it being careful not to bend it, it’s soft alum, the retainer is just pressed in.
Then take your small screw driver and put it on the side of the switch box, it’s normally off center to the left of what would be centered but anyhow then gently just pry it over until it’s centered then put the boot on and then press in the retainer and your good to go.
I’ve had very few that I’ve had to do that more than once, great little lights or they were anyhow.

However, I could not withstand this yellow color and today I replaced the diode on XP-L HI U6-3A. The end result is pure white in NW 5393K and a bit more focused beam. I did the same with Lumintop SDMini, which only occurs in CW 6500K. It bothered me too and the same diode was also in it.

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after:

before:

after:

Good day
my Utorch UT 01 NW worked perfectly for 7 days.
Then the problem is not possible to switch on with the button.
if I want to turn it on, I have to let go and tighten the battery cover.
does anyone have similar problems?

Yes, I have that kind of problem with my UTorch UT01. Occurs relatively frequently (lately more often than not).

Sometimes, not possible to switch off, then after unscrewing, may not be possible to switch on. But wait some time, and it mysteriously works again. Thus far, it hasn’t gone totally unusable (I don’t EDC this “intermittently-working” flashlight, it’s now relegated to testing purposes only)

Okay, thank you for the answer. - I will wait.
Utorch is good - power and light color NW, I use ENELOP 2450 and SOSHINE 900 mAh 3.7V batteries, this battery probably wants batteries at higher current consumption probably buy efest.
the bug has one advantage - the flashlight does not turn itself in the legs ...

Utorch ut 01 is a good torch at a good price - thanks to the BLF Forum.
I have the same problems.
yesterday she woke up and works well with ENELOP.
my conclusion: I need a good battery - tried someone Efest 700 mah ???
Thank you for your response

I just did the switch mod and it made a big difference, it’s working great now!

I used a 1.15mm thickness plastic I shaped into a disc. 1.5mm was too thick for mine. Could probably even go a little thinner, it’s almost too sensitive.
Thanks komeko!! :+1: :+1:

Simple and effective :slight_smile:

I’ve had this exact problem with the Lumintop EDC05.

Had to send it back.

I think some of these problems is just a design flaw, that could have been easily solved. If you look at the switch location.

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Now look where the rubber plunger protrudes into the switch, see that channel right below the plunger, in the far left of the pic, that’s cut into the shelf that holds the led board. It looks like it was drilled there to add clearance for the plunger.

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The plunger is slightly in the shelf for the led, The switch sets away from the shelf a little (probably for variance clearance) and the switch actuator isn’t set at the end of the switch but the middle, so the switch actuator is about half way miss aligned with the plunger. I noticed this when I made my own BLF A6 driver work in this light as I was taking measurements for my switch location. The factory switch doesn’t set right up agaisn’t the shelf like the plunger does. All the factory had to do was drill the switch boot hole 1 mm towards the driver and It should have lined up perfectly. :person_facepalming:

>> All the factory had to do was drill the switch boot hole 1 mm towards the driver and It should have lined up perfectly.

So could we just enlarge the hole a bit?

No I don’t think so, I think if you did that the switch boot/bezel may no longer fit.
If it did fit there would be a open gap around part of the switch.

The switch on mine is not perfectly centered in the hole but that didn’t matter after doing komeko’s mod of a plastic disc inserted between the boot plunger and switch. Not only did it take up the gap between the plunger and switch (which was too long) I believe it also corrects the mis-alignment of the switch with the hole.

I think what corrects the mis-alignment with this mod is than I made the circumference of the plastic disc nearly as big as the hole in the body, (much wider/larger than the white button/acutator on the switch)

The plastic disc acts as a “contact plate” that in effect enlarges the surface of the internal switch button/acutator to correct the mis-alignment offset in the hole. You could even glue the plastic disc on to the end of the switch.

The thickness of the plastic I used was 1.15mm, the switch is super sensitive now, I might try a bit thinner plastic (.75mm - 1mm) But the thickness may vary between lights as komeko used a 1.5mm and that would have been way too thick for my light.

I used plastic cut from one of those bread bag closures from a sack of Bagels!

The only way I see to fix it, besides the disc fix would be to disassemble the light and unsolder the switch or lift up as you heat the soldering to try and get a little more of extra height. The switch would need a small gap under it. This will still not be perfectly lined up but close. Also moving the switch towards the outside ring takes the play out of the plunger, much better response, but if you move it to close the plunger becomes to responsive as it probably will have some pressure already pushing on the switch.

Interesting… I have dozens of plastic bread tabs. So its the rubber “eraser” thing that shifts off kilter relative to the switch… correct?

Curious, do you have to do a complete tear down for this mod? Is it possible to remove the rubber boot-eraser, and glue the bread-tab shim piece from the outside of the light?

How do you remove the rubber switch boot?

thanks!!

Now you know why you’ve been saving them… LOL :smiley:

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Yes, the “eraser” or “nub” attached to the back of the rubber switch boot, it’s not hitting directly center on the internal switch because the switch is off center. On mine there also was too much gap between that nub and the switch I was having to press really hard to even work the switch.

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No tear down at all, you don’t even have to open the light. All done from the outside of the light. The rubber boot can be pried out easily with a small screwdriver, I sort of “pulled” from the edge with the screwdriver tip, being VERY careful not to poke a hole through it.

You probably could also use small plier or tweezer and just pull it out, but I wasn’t comfortable with doing that because it seemed a higher possibility to poke through the rubber. But I could be wrong the rubber may be tougher than I think it is.

Maybe better if you have one of those plastic tools for working on cell phones, I have those somewhere but I couldn’t find them so I used a small metal flat blade screwdriver.

No need to glue the disc, I didn’t glue mine and komeko said nothing about gluing, but it was an idea I had. It would be best to try first without gluing to get the correct thickness of the plastic, if it’s too thick it will be too sensitive. When you get it to your liking you could glue it, but I don’t see it being necessary at this point.

It’s best if you have a caliper or micrometer to measure the thickness of the plastic so you can try different thicknesses to get it right. Those bread tabs come in different thicknesses, the one I have in it now was the thicker type, I may try one a bit thinner at some point because it’s quite sensitive now.

Make the disc a little smaller than the opening, then just lay the disc in the opening (over top of the internal switch button) then tuck the rubber boot back in under the rim.

For me it worked great, works every click - every time, no problem. Completely fixed it, went from “un-usable hate it” to “use it every day - luv it” :heart_eyes:

You could also try this without disassembly (post by T18 #165 above): Discussion : - Utorch UT01 - #165 by T18

I tried it but the switch wouldn’t move over, I didn’t want to put too much pressure on it for fear of breaking loose the switch or components inside, so I did the disc mod.

Just got my fourth.
Put in wire in tailcap and running great. Had good luck.

Is there a solution for the problem where if you turn the light off, it won’t turn back on until you break the circuit by loosening the tailcap and then re-tightening it? Both of my UT01s do this, but only with my 14500 cells (unprotected).

Seems there’s been a few with this complaint, I haven’t seen a fix posted. I think I recall someone did say it may be the type of battery. Sounds like a driver issue to me. I would definitely file a ticket for refund or replacement.