What did you mod today?

Measure pin 7 with your multimeter ground on pin 4. Also measure both sides of the diode using pin 4 as your ground reference.

That yields 0V with the emitter connected, and 0.40V with it disconnected.

The diode reads 3.96V on the left, and 3.85V on the right with the emitter connected. Left 4.03V and right 3.92V with the LED disconnected.

Yes, my DMM has a diode test mode.

I removed the diode from the board and it reads OL in one direction and 0.22V with the leads reversed.

I have nothing then, as it is testing fine. Do these driver not utilize pin 7 for ADC low voltage protection? Anyone with more knowledge want to chime in?

I appreciate your help! :+1: I enjoy learning and troubleshooting.

You could do some continuity and resistance testing and see if all the resistors are intact. I know you said you did some testing, I am just not sure if you tested those.

Modified my new Emisar D4S with Samsung LH351D 5000k 80CRI emitters and 18 ga leads. With a new LG HG6 20650 freshly charged it makes 5920.2 lumens. :smiley:

Put an LH351D 5000K in an V11R but most of my hobby time today was spent making this thing.

@DavidEF knows what it’s for!

Looks like a reflector in an optic.

Looks like The Terminator.

Today I put together:

Very nice, floody beam pattern, without any visible tint shifts. On the highest mode after 5 minutes flashlight body is warm, but not too hot to hold.

The tricky part during the build - centering ring goes flat side towards the shelf, included oring (in the set from kiriba-ru) goes under the lens, stock oring goes above the lens, under the bezel.

Album with pictures

Left: stock D4, 219C 5000K, Carclo 10622 (~350 mA); right: M2, Optisolis 4000K, Carclo 10623 (~450 mA):

Modded my mini GT with a dedomed XP-G2 S4 2B.

My mini GT was in pieces. It started with a severely unresponsive switch, and Neal asked me to find out where the problem was. So I opened the (unglued) bezel and because the centerpiece was so tight in the reflector opening, the unscrewing of the bezel twisted the led from its solder pad. So I had the mini GT in pieces with two problems now. I ordered a batch of new switches from aliexpress, which will be a separate project, but in the meantime I tried a dedomed XP-G2 S4 2B in it, recovered from a Emisar D4 in which I swapped the leds for warm white ones for a friend. The XP-G2’s seems the good old stuff. I reflowed one on the miniGT board and made a complete mess of the hot dedome (I started it too hot) lots of silicone left on top of the phosfor. So I heated the board up again, took it from the hotplate and started rubbing off the silicon from the phosfor with a wooden toothpick, trying to stay clear of the bond wires (hail my quality stereo microscope). Got most of it off with rubbing and blowing, but have some doubts if remains will shorten the lifetime of the led. Anyway, the led lives and worked surprisingly well in the miniGT, a perfect beam and 229 kcd on a 30Q at 30 seconds. Just the switch is still broken, it did not fix itself by disassembling the driver :frowning: .You can see in above picture that the centerpiece tries to shear off the led again, but perhaps my reflows are stronger than Lumintop’s. :wink:

Nice, though at First I was hoping that you put it into a full size GT. :wink:

That would have been a centering hell :confounded:

(edited above post: forgot the calibration error of my luxmeter, corrected the throw to 229 kcd)

Definitely, at least few hours.

My USBasp arrived today, so I decided to take my Emisar D1 apart. Worked like a charm. Stupid thing is I’m still waiting for my SOIC8 clip. So I’ll probably order one from Amazon with evening express, cause I caaan’t waaiiiit now. :smiley:

Some glow stuff

That Meteor looks awesome, ah who am I kidding, they all look awesome. :stuck_out_tongue:

Today I wrapped 3 30Q’s from NKON with clear wrap (also from NKON), the first time I used the hot air thing for anything, it went easy :slight_smile:

As you can see they are going to live in the ROT66, with the wraps it is a very snug fit, no rattling (was not a problem anyway).

Always a good idea to number the cells and date them, so you can keep track of the characteristics and see if some rotation helps keep em balanced. I also like to write the IR on them from the first charge to be able to see if they are degrading over time and hard use. :wink: