TK - I’ll shoot you and DBSAR the full color logo files I have if you want them for the manual.
Speaking of the manual, I’ve been trying to condense it into something easier to fit on the back of one or more LT1 battery wraps. Does this look accurate so far?
Don’t mind me - I have no idea why the formatting is all janked up - working on it
1 = click, release
1H = click, hold
2 = click, release, click, release
2H = click, release, click, hold
etc
From Off
. 1 On
. 1H Ramp Floor
. 2 Ramp Ceiling
. 3 BattCheck (2 clicks to cycle Sunset-Beacon-BattCheck)
. 3H Strobes (2 clicks to cycle Candle-Bike-Party-Police-Storm)
. 4 Lockout (3 clicks to cycle Aux Off/Low/High/Blink)
. 5 Momentary
. 6 Muggle
. 7 Aux Off/Low/High/Blink
While On
. 1 Off
. 1H Ramp Up
. 2 Turbo On / Back
. 2H Ramp Down
. 3 Ramp Smooth/Stepped
. 3H Tint Ramp CFG
. 4 Ramp CFG
. 5 Manual Memory
. 5H Auto Memory
In Beacon
. 4 Beacon CFG – Click N times for N seconds per flash
In Ramp CFG
. 4 configure
. Click N times for Floor level
. Click N times for Ceiling level
. Click N times for number of ramp steps (step mode only)
In Candle
. 3 Add 30 min to timer
It seems to use nearly the same LEDs as the BLF LT1 lantern (LT1 plans to use 2x LH351D 2700k + 2x LH351D 5000k); this teaser color-temperature-mixing EDC flashlight is supposed to use 2x LH351D 2700k + 2x LH351D 6000-6500k.
Probably transfer the Anduril firmware to an EDC flashlight?
That’s an interesting technology transfer. The hardest part is probably transferring the LT1 driver design into a smaller footprint. Then again, if their engineers were looking ahead, there’s no reason they couldn’t have designed the LT1 driver from the start to fit in other shells. Hmmm…
I’m not sure of their market though. How many people outside of the enthusiast community will really care? Well… maybe photographers who want portable fill lighting they can match to ambient.
It could be possible that they are wanting to try the LT1’s tint ramp design-concept in a flashlight form after learning how well the LH351 series works with the tint ramp high-CRI range. I like the idea of that as a flashlight too. If Toykeeper’s awesome Andruil-LT1 firmware was incorporated in such a flashlight, i would definitely be interested in one myself. :+1:
They posted a teaser video for that a while back. If I understand correctly, what happened was:
BLF sent a lantern driver design to Sofirn
Sofirn interpreted the design as a guideline, and made their own version of it
BLF insisted that Sofirn use BLF’s original design in the lantern
Sofirn still wanted to use their version for something, and scaled it down to use in a smaller light
Otherwise, I haven’t really heard anything about it except the teasers Sofirn posted. I don’t know what firmware it uses, or if it is reflashable. I like the design, but it would have been nice to be included in the process since it’s directly based on BLF’s designs.
Too late to get this into the LT1, but for the LT2 it might be interesting to potentially use the same pogo pin layout as the D4v2 for software updating.
The reprogramming pins are in the LT1, not sure if the pin layout is identical, but would be surprised if it was not. I think the programming pins are at 3 oclock in the picture.
Toykeeper’s pic seems to show a 4+3 pin layout. There’s a spot that looks like a placeholder for a 5’th pin, but it’s not a via or pad, so I doubt it’s in use.
As far as I’m aware, all of Lexel’s drivers use a single pogo pad layout.
All of Emisar’s lights use a consistent pad layout too, ever since Emisar started adding pads (D4v2 and newer).
However, those are two different layouts.
HarleyQuin’s HQ Universal ProgKey works on both, but it’s necessary to move a couple wires to change the mapping when switching back and forth. This isn’t commercially available though; people basically have to build their own or find someone who makes them.
Emisar’s flashing kit uses a 4x2 layout, but the 2 unused pins are omitted, so it doesn’t work with Lexel’s 3x2 layout. At least, not without soldering on another pin or two.
So… long story short: The BLF LT1 Lantern has programming pads for updating the firmware, but no adapters for it are commercially available yet.
I totally love how those ridiculous colours started as a joke and then we got renders and ppl liked it, myself included. I would totally buy a ridiculous colour over a black. It would be hilarious with a hardcore outdoor/camping dude pulling out a pink or bright purple light.