I figured the SL needed a protective/ carry case for clipping to a belt etc or be able to hang from a neck chain so I made this today from an old leather wallet I had.
I cut the leather to size and hand stitched the sides with 0.25mm dyneema line.
There is a kydex backing which I tapped for the M3 clip bolts and I used an old clear plastic aftershave package covering to stick on the inside with 3M double sided tape for the window so the light can be operational while carried but also help protect the glass of the light. There are felt strips to protect the finish from scratches.
The kydex and plastic help to add rigidity to the thin leather.
The light slides very snug in the case as I had the leather turned inside out and stitched with the light inside then reversed, the clip is from a Kershaw knife, due to the design of the clip it looks off centre but is central where a belt would be.
Showing the light working on low mode inside the leather pouch.
Using the neck chain.
Any Iron Man fans here? :D
Couldn't help myself putting the light inside my t-shirt there :)) :FACEPALM:
It's a bit rough but I am quite happy with how it turned out :-)
Thanks mate, not quite finished yet. I got the brass screws fixed in to the copper plates yesterday, took ages countersinking them to the correct depth as I had to keep removing and replacing them individually to get it right without making too much of a mess of it.
Today I got the electronics potted, arctic thermal grease and sealant applied with a piece of diffuser film over the optic.
All I have left to do is sand around the edges and polish it up... again... :-) Will post pictures of that later :THUMBS-UP:
This was the reason why I asked, I saw the picture before and thought that they were probably missing somewhere! And I imagine how hard that might have been :person_facepalming:
But, it’s almost done, and it surely is a really gorgeous flashlight :+1:
Hopefully we’ll see it soon! Keep it up, Iron Man
Thanks mate. It was a bit of a scary decision choosing to go ahead with it as I haven’t really done this before but it should look good when it’s polished up some more :+1:
Yes that was time consuming.
I had to assign each hole it’s own designated screw then take tiny slivvers off the bottom of each countersink and keep re-checking every time, plus each screw head is hand sanded.
I’m glad there were not sixteen screws in it :laughing: