Sorry for the off-topic post⌠This isnât really related to the lantern. Itâs about other Anduril-based lights.
It can already do momentary mode at the maximum level⌠it just requires ramping up to that level first.
The tricky part is that, on most lights, the highest level isnât in the ramp by default. And momentary can only go as high as the ramp does. But if this is not what the user wants, the ramp ceiling can be raised with just a few clicks. Thatâs how I usually configure really throwy flashlights. Itâs handy having a momentary turbo on throwers, so I made sure it was possible to do that.
To raise the ceiling all the way:
1 click: Turn the light on.
4 clicks: Go to ramp config mode.
0 clicks: Wait for the second prompt.
1 click: Set the ceiling to maximum.
0 clicks: Wait another few seconds to exit config mode.
This only needs to be done one time, and then momentary mode can use the turbo level.
Turbo is also available in sort of a momentary fashion by doing a double click while on.
About the lantern though, it already has its ceiling levels set as high as they can go, by default. So this isnât an issue on the lantern unless the user manually lowers the ceiling level(s).
That may be, but unless they suddenly push codes for all the slots up to 3000 Iâm not going to be able to order all of them in the next few days.
I have little reason to order a stack of lanterns to sit on them for almost a year until next Christmas when future production runs will likely fix the USB-C charging issues and other minor problems. Weâve already seen they can be bought for the group buy price (or better) outside of the group buy, so I will likely forgo all my extra group buy slots unless something changes and revisit buying LT1âs as gifts in the fall of 2020.
But usually market conditions and demand will determine a selling price.
I hope I am wrong, but IMHO, with the quality and exclusive nature of our BLF LT1 lantern, I am afraid the selling price after our codes are used up will settle down into a higher $75-$100 range.
- Seems like no matter how much we try to do, there will be the same few who will repetitively complain, whine and have mostly negative replies to projects created by âvolunteersâ on BLF, out of our free time. I sen this not only here in the LT1 project thread, but other BLF projects too in the past. Added it seems the ones doing the whining are those who never contribute anything positive, but all they do is take low-blow jabs at the projects, project teams, and manufacturers. It does get discouraging for those who take to time & effort to try to design something for others in the community and abroad, but we always seem to have to endure the negative âjabsâ and slaps-in-the-face from the complainers and whiners who will never be satisfied at no matter what others try to do to help.
Waiting patiently for my codeâŚ
DBSAR has a pointâŚ
I follow this forum frequently and always snoop around for great buys or fascinating projects.
I really enjoy learning about LEDâs, drivers and user interfaces/flashing.
To me the miracle of this hobby isnât that I get another light that I will use like my life depended on it or is much different (in utility) from the $4 store lightsâŚitâs dark, I need to see in the dark, I grab a flashlight and turn it on so I can see, I turn it off and set it aside until the next time I need to look in the closet or walk around at nightâŚpretty simple utility.
I am overjoyed at the enthusiasm over builds, tints, reflectors, batteries, user interfaces and flashing Anduril on to a chip with a smartphoneâŚhow cool is that??
The appeal for me is how much such a simple device can be modded, tweaked and programmed to way more than a $4 store lightâits not their âproductâ (absence of darkness) I enjoy so much but their âproductionâ.
Iâm a computer geek and I find all that borax to be a fun science lesson.
All the people on here that conceive, build, tweak and program are a knowledgeable bunch and always give me more than just a flashlight.
I understand it is a labor of love for them and I hold them to no timetable or even completion of project.
That this bunch of volunteers can make an idea eventually turn in to something I can buy from Amazon (when ready) and have in my hand in two days is beyond industrious.
I guess they could have not bothered, and I would have been spared craving a light that never came in to existence in the first place.
Please remember that in a group this large there will inherently be enough unfortunate souls to fill one or more threads with nonsense. You canât let the tiny minority of screaming d*cks get you down when most people are decent and appreciative. Broken people are VERY loud and thatâs perhaps the biggest downside of the Internet.
When given an explanation that Sofirnâs LED supply is on backorder from the manufacturer, the most logical conclusion is that they are lying and are instead trying to stop me from giving them my money right this moment. Obviously, that makes perfect sense and refusing to accept my money is, in fact, a violation of my rights as the center of my own Universe.
Aware that this doesnât help, but Iâm broken, too.
The fallback position to any critical comment on the LT1 is always, âwoe is us, weâre unpaid volunteers, you guys donât appreciate our efforts, and weâre doing the best we can.â That of course is absurd. I appreciate the effort. I understand the reality of the project. However, I also donât believe thatâs an automatic valid excuse for every easily rectified oversight / mistake. Thatâs a reasonable explanation if someone starts whining that you didnât do a DFMEA or didnât do thermal modelling or FEA on the mechanical design or something. Thatâs not an automatic reasonable explanation for everything or anything.
If you want to have a pity party I guess you can. I spent many hours working on that horrific manual. âNever contributing anything positiveâ my eye⌠Further, I made no attack. I didnât blame anyone. I made a dispassionate & well reasoned argument as to why it makes no sense to buy a bunch of lanterns now, miss Christmas 2019, and then sit on them for a year. Iâm sorry you take it so personally that someone might want to wait for lanterns with bugs worked out instead of buying the early releases, especially when theyâre gifts for non-flashlightaholics. Thereâs just no reason to buy them now with the intent to give them as Christmas gifts in 2020.
After seeing how the project was coming along I put my name down for four lanterns, as it is obviously a groundbreaking piece of technmology that is likely to be copied by others in the future, and it seems like a perfect gift for several people that I know. Regarding the option to purchase I never had a specific date in mind, especially as I entered the group buy fairly late. It doesnât really make much difference whether I give them to people for Christmas, or as birthday presents at a later point.
Maybe it could have been a good idea to move from a âdevelopment threadâ to a âproduction and distribution threadâ, once the LT1 was ready and the first codes were being send out.
So that the developers can sit back and relax (I remember feeling very satisfied once production of the Q8 started and reports came in that mostly people liked the thing) while the inevitable (as seem proven in the past) chaos of production in batches, buying and then random distribution (in time and order) and then customers who are/feel mistreated, and then finally everyone getting their lights, takes place elsewhere.
Good and bad experiences with the actual light by customers, and found design flaws, can be reported again in the development thread.
But as everone is free on an internet forum to post where one likes, it probably will not prove possible to keep it separated.
Thanks for this update! An off timer for sunset would really be great
But you are right. First things first.
Itâs highly appreciated, that you put so much work into this platform!
Which attiny is used in the LT1? I guess the larger 8k model, right?
So for notable more space we will have to wait for a future 16 or 32 K versionâŚ.
1) It wonât charge from a USB-C charger using a USB-C to USB-C cable. (It will charge from a USB-A charger using a USB-A to USB-C cable.)
2) Flat top or near flat top cells may mechanically interfere with the potentiometer on the bottom of the driver board. (It can be removed from the driver board as itâs unused)