I don’t think it’s quite a deal breaker for me, but it’s certainly a reason to keep using my FW3A. It’s the primary reason I keep using my FW3A instead of my D4, even slightly moreso than the fact it runs Anduril.
On the bright side, with Anduril on the new D4 I should be able to cap the ramp at something reasonable like 300 lumens to limit how much power I fritter away. The new option to make it always switch on at any desired level (such as max regulated) will be really useful too.
Don’t worry, the 3-channel driver is nice but also overrated. Sure it is a nice thought to have it in your light, but the slight efficiency gain you get in medium modes will not be noticable in your runtimes.
I seemed to notice that my FW3A goes for longer at the maximum regulated ~800lm level than my D4 at the same sort of brightness. Is this most likely because I just keep overshooting and ending up with 1000lm+?
Anduril will surely make it a lot easier to know how much output we’re getting. So glad it’s now included on Emisar’s newer flashlights.
Are external dimensions the same?
I think that magnet addition would increase the length (even for those who don’t use it) which would be a small step back…
That is a good question, though from my experience I have found Anduril to operate just like Ramping IOS V2 if you only use the relevant button presses.
I have found the simple shortcut to directly ramp down instead of having to guess the ramp direction to be an incredibly useful addition in Anduril however.
I compared both my D4 and FW3A at step 130 which is full regulation for the FW3A. My D4 stepped down 2 minutes later than the FW3A with the same thermal config. (the FW3A has a slightly newer Anduril build though)
I guess more thermal mass and running the emitters in a more efficient zone has something to do with it. D4 is SST20, FW3A is XP-L HI, so I expected the FW3A to actually go longer if not near exactly the same.
I really need to crack open my D1 and flash it. RampingOS isnt bad, but I would like most of my lights to be consistent.
Red, yellow, green, cyan, blue,magenta, rainbow aux LED options is selectable through config UI, as well as the voltage indication function. (6 fast clicks and hold the 7th to choose the aux LED options, 7 fast clicks to choose the aux LED modes)
The led is nothing special, not much bigger than a single-colour aux led. But you have to adress the three colours separately to do the colour mixing and get those different colours, so the aux board and MCU must support that (occupies more pins).
Leds must be something like this: