It aims to be a smaller Q8 with built-in charging over USB-C, and that is a good description of it.
As a side note, the SP36 button LEDs are in low mode here. On high mode, its button is the brightest of the bunch. Easily bright enough to use as a firefly mode or a low moon. However, I wouldn’t recommend leaving it on the high mode, due to the amount of power it uses. It’s almost as much as moon mode. I measured the following:
At 4.2V:
Moon mode: 1.96 mA
Button LED (high): 1.54 mA
Button LED (low): 0.08 mA
At 3.3V:
Moon mode: 1.32 mA
Button LED (high): 0.78 mA
Button LED (low): 0.05 mA
FWIW, the estimated runtimes with 3x3500 mAh cells are:
Moon mode: ~9 months
Button LED (high): ~13 months
Button LED (blinking): ~8 years
Button LED (low): ~18 years
So I’m setting the default to low during “off” mode, and blinking during lockout.
With the driver loose like this, something got shorted while putting the battery tube on… and it turned the red LED+ wire into ash. But that was the only part damaged, so it was easy to fix.
So, although it would be nice if the driver was screwed in like the Q8… without that, the driver glue is kind of necessary. Hopefully the next version can replace the glue with screws. Until then though, don’t expect to do any modding without doing like djozz did earlier in this thread. It looked like quite a bit of effort to get the driver out.
Thanks ToyKeeper for the work on the SP36. I think the SP36 is worth developing well because Sofirn already made a good start with designing it as it is, it has a nice size-performance ratio (better than the Q8 for me) and personally I like reflector beams better than TIR beams (and reflectors look a lot better too ) . They could have made the design a bit more exciting (the ROT66 has that extra glamour) but because of the plain design it feels more like a working light to me, while I’m afraid to use my ROT66 in fear of scratching it :innocent: .
Now that I know how to do it, it is pretty straightforward, the main obstacle is that you need a pretty powerful solder iron (mine is 80W with a quality chisel-style tip) to attach the handle to the brass ring. My driver btw clamps well in place when pushed back into the head.
Btw, with a good mains USB charger plus short USB->USB-C cable (both Blitzwolf), the charging speed that I got was 1.95A, so the 2A charging that I was told by Barry it should have is met if the conditions are good.
I let the SP36 charger top off some cells. It runs at about 0.7 A when plugged into my USB hub, but that’s not surprising. Just slow, when divided between three cells. Anyway, it terminated right at 4.20V. I don’t know if this is normal or if I was just lucky to get one with an accurate chip, but it’s nice that it did exactly what it’s supposed to.
Samsung 25S will deliver the most power for the longest time, at a better price typically. There is a new 24S that might best it if it can be found. Either of these will outperform the Sony VTC5A which itself outperforms the 30Q or VTC6.
It seems that there were just two samples made of the SP36 and I have one and ToyKeeper has the other. So Sofirn had no SP36 samples themselves to make pictures of for use on the website. By request of Barry I made new pictures of my SP36 sample this morning and sent them to him, but it appears that they already made the page with my old BLF pics.
I was a bit upset when, the day after posting my D4S review, I found Neal using the same pictures to sell it.
Have been considering some sort of watermark system ever since then, if I can find an easy way to do it which doesn’t require manually editing each image and doesn’t significantly reduce image quality. Will probably just need an ImageMagick script of some sort, but I haven’t done it yet.
Thanks for the heads-up. I’ll bug Sofirn about the usual GPL stuff, since there doesn’t appear to be any source code available from the product page. It talks about Narsil, but doesn’t actually provide a copy or a link.
Barry told me that the SP36, even in promotions will at least be a bit more expensive than the Q8, and that is fair enough since the USB-C charging adds some development and production costs, and can be considered as a valuable extra feature. Time will tell if it is also as robust as the Q8 (I have not seen much wrong sofar but I can not test everything).