Review NITECORE TM9K

Does this really do 9500 lumens on a 5000mAh 21700? I didn’t think the 5000s were pushing that kind of amps. And what is the “CREE XP-L HD V6”? original XP-L or XP-L2? They’d have to be pulling over two amps each.

Being able to maintain 3000 lumens for over 9 minutes without cooling is real impressive for the size. Nothing comes close in this size range. Too bad it drops to under 1,000 lumens afterwards. The sudden shop drop seems weird. Thanks for the detailed review!

So basically a disposable light with 2-3 years of good usage :wink:

These leds look like XP-L2.

Hi, no I can’t unscrew it with my hands, I didn’t force it with other ways.

CREE XP-L HD V6 is original with the dome.

Hi, maybe you can’t read the graph well but are cd (candles), of lumens in HIGH about 2000.

Single cell 21700, 9,500 lumens, 268 meters throw, 40mm/1.57 in. head diameter, 218 gms/7.68 oz: Omg! I ordered one, and if I like it half as much as I am so very excited about these specs, I will get some more of them.

Of course, very high max lumen spec from a single cell will equate to short burst max mode runtime. I can anytime select a normal mode for normal runtime; nice to know the brief massive burst is available.

My guess is soldered battery is better for high amp draw. The battery will last longer than the wait for the lights' successor.

Thank you for you valuable and timely review of this little screamer!

A good light should easily last 3-5 years … probably much longer

A li-on bat will degrade significantly in 500 cycles or less generally

Not to mention is is a light youll want to run quite a bit at the higher levels, else you would just have gotten a s2+ …

So basically yr spending $$$$ for a light that only last around 3 years with constant high powered use …

It won't even make 2-3 years if you use Turbo a lot. ~20A discharge followed by a Quickcharge is about the worst you can do to a LiIon cell, it will be dead long before it reaches 500 cycles.

Non-replaceable battery is a deal-breaker for lights at this level. I could just about accept it for the TM10K and the Concept 2, where size and shape are pushed to the limit, but the design of this light suggests that it could easily use a replaceable battery. Will have to pass on this one. Throwing a light like this out because the battery is bad is just too depressing, and keeping a dead light in the collection isn’t much better.

As for the notion that this light will last longer than it takes Nitecore to introduce its successor: I’ve thrown out less than 10 lights in 20+ years of using/collecting/modding flashlights, all of which were broken/modded beyond repair. When lights are a couple of years old and not the latest tech anymore, I give them to colleagues, friends and family who will use them for years to come. The world is full of people with age-old plastic flashlights and cell-phone lights for whom a 3 year old high-end light is a huge step up.

The question then becomes: Why do manufacturers market lights with built in batteries, when they know that a segment of the flashlight world will be alienated by that?

Is it a marketing or technical reason? The masses who want to charge in-light, without having to handle the battery? Or maybe to have less electrical resistance at the battery contact points? Or a combination of these two reasons?

Maybe they can offer the product both ways, similar to how the Smith and Wesson Shield is available both with or without thumb safety.

With a fixed cell, the electrical connection can definitely be better if done right, which is very likely in this case if the TM10K and the Concept 2 are any indication. I’m sure it’s an awesome light, wouldn’t mind having one. :cool:

I strongly prefer lights with replaceable cells, but I get why manufacturers do this. It’s weekly if not more that someone posts on reddit about their shiny new D4 not working with some sort of “it flashes once then turns off” or “the battery is too big”, even though it’s an enthusiast light only orderable from two speciality stores and says all over the place what cell to use. Can you imagine a more mainstream brand sold through multiple venues and Amazon? I bet more than half of them would be returned. The alternative would be to at least include a cell - but still. I think sealed cells are awful, but I understand why it’s done on hot rods like this that are just for showing off anyways.

Note that the warranty on lights with fixed bats is 2 years instead of the usual 5 with nitecore

Thanks guys, for replies to the question about non-replaceable batteries.

This just in from Nitecore: Quote: "Yes, of course when the specifications first came to us in the marketing department, naturally our first question was, why did they not make the battery replaceable/removable for alternative charging methods? The reasoning behind it was that after lots of test, the only way to achieve the >9000 lumen mark with a single 21700 is to basically solder the battery ends to the leads of the flashlight. (No flimsy spring connectors in the TM9K) This way you have a thick enough/strong enough connection that can basically handle the high current draw required to power the >9000 turbo."

The nightwatch nsx3 would like a word …

So basically the made a disposable light to hit some arbitrary number that doesnt even matter (so what if it only gives say 8000 lumens)

Oh and this thing has a 2 year warranty instead of the usual nitecore 5 year because of the fixed bat … they know when its going to start dying

Thats marketing for ya :wink:

Mine, modded with improved heat sinking and including an extended two year modders warranty , is ready to ship to me. I will add my initial impressions to this post when I receive it. I am very excited about this light, but I will try to resist the urge to cross-post in more than a few topic threads about this little screamer. :)

I got mine today. The amount of light that comes out of this light of this size is humongous. The effect is indescribable. I thought I was jaded by large lights that have red zoned high modes, but not jaded enough to be wowed and zowed by this light. Lots of lumens derived happiness.

Also, incidentally, this is my first "tactical" light.

Oh boy... I just had to see this....!