With a protected battery, the worst that will happen is just that the light won’t work, right? Or can something bad still happen with a protected battery?
If your protection circuit works, it should detect overload and shut itself off before much damage happens.
If your protection circuit doesn’t work or doesn’t work correctly, bad stuff can still happen.
Have you tested the cell’s protection circuit?
(BTW, I do not recommend testing that by holding a wire on both ends of the cell with your fingers. I accidentally shorted a cell once and, in the ~0.2 seconds it took to let go, I got a second-degree burn which took a couple months to heal.)
The thing with protection circuit is that all the good 18350s comes unprotected, because they’re designed for high-drain applications such as this light. However there is nothing to worry about, if you receive a working light, chances are it will keep working. Even though the design is flawed there is nothing that could move the mcpcb or screws enough that it will short itself under normal use.
If banggood/manker wishes to fix this without changing anything in the production I suggest they use anodized black M2.5 or M3 screws… depending on the existing threading they probably don’t even need to swap the tap…
If the product is like what Kenjii’s received, I think still prone if get bumped (in case optic is not fit enough to hold the mcpcb).
Another option may be they can use plastic screw
1. Reflow and rewire all LEDs backwards. That way, the light won’t blow up if there’s a short.
2. Use a dremel, drill or file… scrape the mask and conductive layer from around the screw. Moving the conductive layer back from the holes should eliminate any risk the screw threads will cause a short.
3. Put a layer of arctic alumina epoxy around the holes to cover the newly cleared area.
Exactly.
If you are not a modder and prone to fiddling around with the innards of things, and just want a flashlight for illumination, don’t do anything. You’ll be just fine.
Sharpie is mainly pointing out the potential issues that may occur. If the light works the first time, no issues. I expect most will work (99% or better). As I said, IF I mod this light, I will reverse the LED polarity to provide more potential safety.
The problem with potential is the perception of it.
If you would sleep with a total stranger for a million dollars, does that make you a millionaire or a prostitute? Neither actually, just talking about potential to do something if something else happens…
Modders tend to spend as much time breaking perfectly good lights as we do modding them.
The thing is, we don’t really care because it gives us an excuse to rebuild them in our own image.
Changing the orientation of the LEDs (rotate 180°) and relabeling + and - on the mcpcb would be better.
But the insulation is something they can do qicker if they have a big amount of mcpcbs in there factory.
If I change such a flashlight to XP-L HI, I will change + and -.