What are the inherit dangers of modding?

  • solder that “pops” and jumps in your face, always wear eye protection
  • solder fumes
  • not wearing gloves (lead, flux, all the chemical coatings, cleaning agents,…)
  • burnt myself many times while soldering or using hot air

And, as mentioned before, I have accumulated a huge load of equipment I barely use except for modding every other month. Approximate number of drivers: 21 - all unused and/or not working.

Literally 50 bags with parts that came through the years. hundreds of resistors, capacitors, cables, wires, optics, and even unused hosts.

The way I managed my mods was very wasteful and I hope to remedy that somehow. Also lost my interest in modding lights or even collecting them. After you have done all the mods you wanted to do, what else is out there? I have 600$ in unused lights in boxes (good lights, but most of them not “modern” lights; solarforce, older skyray kings, lots of convoys and thorfire)

Never had solder “jump”, isn’t it the flux at a too high temperature?

As for the dangers not related to tool use… i think the main one is making a short with the reflector. sometimes even with a centering ring the joints are too fast and touch the reflector.

I would say, damaging a flashlight :frowning:
Yesterday I was attempting at modding my Olight S1R Baton I with a LED swap and ended up damaging something, as now the Moonlight mode doesn’t work properly. Other lights, drivers, leds and switches have been damaged along the way.

BUT, as some have already mentioned, spending money and getting addicted is the worse evil you’ll find existing when you have been bitten the “modding” vampire :smiley:

I don’t know how it happened, maybe someone else can pitch in. The LED wire came off of the solder joint on a copper dtp board while soldering and I heard a “pop” sound before very hot solder splatter was all over my face. Just happy I wore goggles.

Because the parts are so small, our faces are very close to the soldering action.

With age come (a few) advantages. I have to use a desk light with a 4” magnifying glass :wink:
So my eyes are well protected. And the rest…… Does not matter any more. Did I say age?

So true, and parts are relatively cheap. This is a hidden safety hazard as you’ll likely punch a wall for having to wait

Haha, I have a rule when using a soldering iron or a knife, that I don't do anything else while I'm holding the iron or knife. For the iron, that means if I drop something, I put the iron in its stand before I grab what I dropped. For a knife, that means I fold it or put it somewhere safe (for example, not somewhere it will be bumped off and fall on my foot) if it's not a folding knife.

I know I would burn myself or something else important if I got distracted while holding the iron.

Modding opens the potential of:
-my flashlight burning my pockets
-people who used my light will drop my light due to it being too hot.
-people leave my hot lights on because they didn’t know / too scared to hold a hot light
-inviting more people to turn on the light while pointing at themselves to test power (I still don’t get why people try that every single time)

For personal danger, I couldn’t think of any other than shorting the battery due to my incorrect installation/solder
Usually the dangers are affecting people who used my lights irresponsibly

For me, as has already been said by others;

  • Addiction
  • Aquiring more “spare” parts than could be used in two lifetime’s
  • Spending far to much money in the process

Same with guns, ammo, knives, & fishing equipment. :person_facepalming:

:money_mouth_face:
:money_mouth_face:

The most likely danger is creating a short. Does this imply that the battery can explode, catch fire etc? I shorted a protected cell and all I saw was flickering and sudden shut off but would that have been as graceful ifni were to have shorted a unprotected cell?

Guess that just depends on how long you short it.

When i test a light after modding i do it by bridging the tube and negative end with something so that if i see it’s not turning on i can instantly cut power.

Can obviously use a voltmeter and test for continuity as well… but i’m lazy.

The one samsung 30q that i shorted a bunch of times for maybe a second every time is still fine.

Burning up stuff, including pants
Spending on equipment and parts
Wasting time on it
Spending hundreds of hours and not ending up with anything much better than you could have just bought :slight_smile:

(i’m not a modder, though i am an electrical engineer, just not interested
so far)

wle

I find this thread rather enlightening but also frightening to someone like myself who would love to try modding lights, but doesn’t know where to begin or where to get the info to begin. I often thought about starting a thread for novices like myself, but after reading this thread, it would seem that if you don’t know what you are doing it would safer to get started.

I just started modding a few days ago. When i realized the hidden dangers, I thought this would be a good forum to document what others experience so when you dive in, take all this stuff into consideration.

For example, a hidden danger on he convoy is shorting the battery as you put the reflector in. If your solder is a bit high, you run the risk of the solder touching the reflector. This is hidden and wouldn’t have been on any newcomers mind.

No one has mentioned any hidden dangers like overdrawing a battery that’s not designed for your setup. Not sure what the danger is there but I cant imagine it’s a good thing.

HaHa! Yep! :partying_face:

This is for you BUDDY ———- 1-800— HELP— FAST—- Sounds like you need an INTERVENTION

Thanks my friend. That came in the nick of time. :+1:

I called & talked a couple of hours with them. They said I sounded like a hoarder too possibly. Imagine that…… :smiley:
Asked if I be interested in a possible TV series they are about to do on the subject. I told them sure… they could probably devote at least a complete season between here & Orange Beach of me dealing with my ’stuff’.

Could be turning lemons into lemonade if it plays out…. :wink:

Yeah this sounds about right.

And then you find yourself spending your time here on this forum when you should be working. :stuck_out_tongue:

I’ve done the majority of the ones mentioned, plus:

  • Cracked lenses cause I think I can balance them upright on reflector while unscrewing bezel
  • Metal shavings in thumb/hands from filing/sanding. You know, the kind too small to remove but annoying enough to cause bumps.
  • E-switch wires are the devil sometimes
  • Losing sleep trying to finish a mod at 1 or 2AM and going to bed defeated because one of the above 100 things happened
  • Stripping retaining ring threads beyond repair
  • Ruin a $15 tool trying to open an $8 light

All are so brutal. Here I am at 12am scared about inserting a vtca5 into a just built c8 with an xhp50.2. I need some electrical tape so I can put behind the reflector.