JETBeam C8 is an all-purpose flashlight with built-in charging.
MANUFACTURER SPECIFICATIONS
Not mentioned in the image above:
There is no mention of compatibility with 2*CR123A, but I put a couple in and it seemed to work fine, although do it at your own risk.
PACKAGING AND ACCESSORIES
JETBeam C8 comes in a clamshell packaging with all the usual information and a clear view of the flashlight itself.
To the left you can see a space for 18650 cell, which is occupied by a USB LED light. Itâs a little add-on from a retailer who sent me this flashlight for review, the 18650 is inserted into the light itself.
The back of the packaging has more information and a Micro-USB charging cable visible.
Opening this packaging is easy, it is not one of those hard to open âweldedâ shut packages.
The informational insert opens up into a manual.
Besides the manual you get the flashlight, a JETBeam branded 2400mAh protected 18650 cell (inside the C8 in my sample), a lanyard, a Micro-USB charging cable (290mm long), two spare O-rings, a warranty card and a âCertificate of Approvalâ.
The included JETBeam JL240 18650 has a plastic insert around its contacts to prevent accidental activation in shipping and depleting the cell due to current bleed.
It has over-charge, over-discharge and short circuit protection, 4A maximum current.
I measured it to be 18.5mm in diameter and 68.8mm in length.
In my tests over-discharge protection tripped at 2.5V, not the more usual 3V.
Looks like itâs not just a rewrapped cell with a protection circuit added.
GENERAL LOOK AND FEEL
JETBeam C8 has a classic flashlight shape, with an electronic switch on the head.
LuckySun BLF D80-SE | JETBeam C8 | EagleEye BLF X6-SE | Convoy M2 | Convoy C8 | Nitecore MH25
Machining is perfect, I found no sharp corners, chips in anodizing or any other defects in my sample.
C8 rolls easily, as the only thing that can impede rolling is a flat part of the head near the switch.
HEAD
The bezel is completely flat, there are no crenellations.
Lens is mineral glass with antireflective coating.
Reflector is smooth with a slight wave pattern near the bottom. Itâs hard to say what the purpose for this pattern is, but itâs supposed to smooth out the corona around hotspot, it fails, because corona is very ringy (very noticeable on a white wall, but in real use not so much).
My sample uses a cool white XM-L2 LED, according to the manual itâs a T6. Newer revisions are supposed to come with a U2 binned emitter. The LED is perfectly centered using a white plastic centering ring.
Serial number, brand and model name are laser engraved on the bezel part of the head, right above the electronic switch.
There is an RGB LED behind the switch. It shows battery charge level while C8 is on. Green color means 100â50, blue 50â10, red 10% and less. It also blinks red while a cell is charging.
Micro-USB charging port is on the other side of the head, covered with a rubber flap.
Threads on the head are anodized, allowing for lock-out. There is a spring on the positive terminal, allowing flat top cells to be used.
BODY TUBE
Body tube does not have any markings on it. Diamond pattern knurling is not very aggressive, but not slippery either.
Red O-rings stand out. Also, there are vacant grooves for installing two more O-rings. So the two spares can be installed for added water resistance.
Threads are triangle cut and anodized. They came pre-lubed and feel smooth in action.
Inner diameter of the tube is 19mm, supplied 18650 fits fine with room to spare.
TAILCAP
Tailcap has the same knurling pattern as body tube.
There is only one lanyard hole. I would prefer there were two, so that installing a lanyard would not impede tailstand ability, which otherwise is great - the tail is flat, so C8 can tailstand and is very stable.
The threaded hole in the tailcap is used for installing an optional window breaker.
The whole tailcap is anodized allowing for lock-out. Electrical contact with both battery and body tube is made by the spring.
UI
JETBeam C8 has three regular modes (High, Mid, Low) and one special mode (Strobe). It also has mode memory and will remember last regular mode used, but not strobe. Manual says the flashlight has to be off for two seconds to remember current mode, but in my sample it is remembered instantly.
From off:
a) Hold for 0.3 sec to turn on to memorized mode.
b) Double click to get Strobe.
From on:
a) Click to turn off.*
b) Hold to cycle regular modes (High > Mid > Low > HighâŚ).
c) Double click to get Strobe.
*If youâre in Strobe and got there from a regular mode, one click will return to regular modes, and only a second click will turn off.
**You have to hold for about 1 sec for it to start cycling and as you start to fall asleep, cycling starts, and itâs fast, ~0.4 sec, so you have to be quick to release after it cycles to your desired mode. Also, if you start from off and donât release the switch (from off hold to turn on and donât release after itâs on), it will not start cycling unless you release and start holding again.
To me personally this UI is kind of strange. I am more used to âclick to turn on and off, hold to change modesâ UI (for example, Olight S15). Of course, âhold to turn onâ is nothing new, but in other lights itâs usually âhold to turn on and off, click to change modesâ (Fenix E35 UE). There is also âclick to turn on and change modes, hold to turn offâ (Skilhunt H02). But this UI is something different. After using other lights it throws me off constantly. If I click and it doesnât turn on I immediately know I need to hold. And after itâs on to change mode I automatically try to click- it urns off⌠So this âshort hold to turn on, long hold to get to fast mode changing and click to turn offâ UI feels very awkward to me.
Spacing between Mid and Low could be wider. And Iâd appreciate a fourth mode (Moon).
MEASUREMENTS
Throw was measured with included JL240 cells and HS1010A light meter from distances of 3 and 5m, 30 seconds after start. I got an average of 13277cd or ~230m, which is pretty close to manufacturer spec of 243m.
Standby current is about 62uA, but there are spikes to more than 80uA every 2 seconds.
Current draw:
High â 2.6A
Mid â 0.7A
Low â 0.2A
CHARGING
Charging is done via a Micro-USB port on the head of the flashlight. Charging port is covered with a rubber flap.
While the cell is charging, indicator LED is flashing red. When the cell is full it turns to constant green.
I discharged the included 2400mAh 18650 cell (to 2.5V, thatâs when protection trips) and put it on charge in the flashlight. I used Blitzwolf 40W USB charger, which supposedly can give out up to 2.4A, so there shouldnât be any bottlenecks. At the start my USB meter showed 0.82A and charging current slowly dropped throughout the process.
About 5.5 hours later charging terminated at 0.06A and the cell was at 4.18V.
PWM
I consider myself very sensitive to low frequency PWM and spot it easily in normal use, but didnât notice any while using C8. A closer look (âwave it around really fastâ test) revealed PWM on Mid and Low modes. Oscilloscope measurements showed that C8 uses PWM at 4kHz. Manual claims âconstant current circuitâ, but itâs not the case in my sample.
CONCLUSION
I really like the quality build, look and feel in the hand, indicator LED. C8 tailstands very well, unless you attach a lanyard. It could have also been up to 6mm shorter, but that would mean losing ability to attach the optional window breaker (does anyone actually uses it?). Iâm missing a Moon mode and rings in the corona are noticeable.
But the UI is my biggest gripe (and thatâs not even considering I prefer Low>High mode order). Overall, I think itâs a good flashlight with a bad UI.
JETBeam C8 was provided by SkybenTrade on Amazon for review.
Thank you for reading.