Looks like this LED overclocks pretty well
I wonder how would it do on LN cooling
Thanks for the great test Texas_Ace.
Itās really impressive that an LED can handle so many watts and still make it out intact.
Once the price of the XHP70.2 breaks the $8 barrier, budget-oriented brands will start going crazy with their new flashlights.
Impressive results, thanks for the time invested!
I posted a thread awhile back on it here: Texas_Ace integrating PVC sphere with no math involved
Nothing super fancy but has proven itself reliable and consistent, which is the most important part.
A big one lol.
Ideal is a relative term. A better CPU heat sink would do the trick nicely, something without heat pipes and good enough for at least 150W, 200W would be better. The problem is by that point you are usually dealing with heat pipes and that makes drilling and tapping the mounting holes almost impossible.
As a compromise the copper core stock intel heat sinks would work fairly well but man, they are hard to drill and tap. I already tried to do that to one I had.
Indeed, I was very surprised when the output just kept going up and up and up. It didnāt even drop under 100lm/watt until over 7000 lumens!
I donāt really measure the time between measurements, just do them at a leisurely pace. Most likely around 30 seconds for each one.
Over 10,000 lumens for sure. It would be really impressive if not totally impractical lol.
Is it a full CPU cooler setup with a fan? How about putting the heatsink in a pan of ice cold water? Be careful what with the amps and water not mixing though voltage is low enough. Alternately inverted compressed air can?
This is a good idea, but Matt is not very knowledgeable in the subject. No offense to him. A simple copper water block, a high flow pump using 3/8ā lines and a bucket of water should easily handle the heat. The question though is whether you just want to keep the emitter cool or to better simulate real world conditions of a flashlight heating up?
Yes, it is a full stock intel 95W CPU cooler. I also had a 135W stock intel cooler with the copper core but it ate all my small drill bits.
I like to simulate real world conditions to some extent, which is why I was never that worried about getting the biggest heatsink around. Even this test is not something I am particularly bothered about. The cold start tests show what it can do on a cold start but the hot tests are more what can be expected in the real world.
Yeah, using a giant CPU heatsink or AIO cooler should be able to get you those 10k lumens continuously
Definitely not a ānormalā flashlight use case though.
Very interestingly, I sliced the dome on the xhp70.2 in Giggles and the Kcd jumped by over 50%!
I would not have guessed it would gain that much.
It went from ~450kcd with the dome to over 700Kcd with the (badly) sliced dome.
All of this with only ~90w of power, it could do even more if you pushed it.
I'd use some small dabs of thermal glue among the thermal paste between the heatsink and the led baseplate. This way you can use a massive high performance CPU cooler without worries. To disassemble it help yourself with some alcohol and/or white spirit, can't remember which one did the trick for me right now.
Cheers :-)
Maybe now itāll be more believable to folks that I had an L6 running 9200 lumens. Believe it or not, doesnāt change what itās doing.
Maybe now itāll be more believable to folks that I had an L6 running 9200 lumens. Believe it or not, doesnāt change what itās doing.
This is actually where the test LED will end up once I get my soldering iron replaced.
Circuit Specialists have had some sales going on.
I was impressed by the luminous output of the xhp70.2 in my chimera but not by the ugly halo. That said, in real-life outdoor use the halo isnāt as obvious as on a wall and four months use with hundreds of hours at low and mid levels with a ta srk driver from lexel powered by 8x (2s4p ncr18650b) impressed me enough I havenāt replaced it. The chimera handles heat well enough that with the 70Ā°c step down it still hasnāt stepped down from turbo at 20 minutes.
Very interestingly, I sliced the dome on the xhp70.2 in Giggles and the Kcd jumped by over 50%!
It went from ~450kcd with the dome to over 700Kcd with the (badly) sliced dome.
50% is quite large! Usually itās 25% to 30%, isnāt it?
Do you think the overall result is positive or negative?
You loose lumens as well as have a smaller area the hotspot covers, but gain distance.
When I sliced my older xhp70 I found the end result was negative as I prefered the bigger hotspot and brighter output. Maybe itās a personal preference thing?
I noticed the sliced hotspot size was pretty much the same as a xhp50.2 with the dome on.
I would speculate that a sliced dome xhp50.2 would give the same hot spot size as a xhp35 HD (with dome).
So you get 4 steps of hot spot size:
Xhp35 hi
Xhp35 HD
Xhp50.2 sliced
Xhp50.2
Xhp70.2 sliced
Xhp70.2
You start with the smallest hot spot, the lowest lumens and the lowest amp draw. Then as you go down the list the hotspot size goes up.
I wonder how the 50.2 and sliced 70.2 compare as far as amp draw for the lumens they put out?
Iāll have to sit down and crunch the numbers one of these days.