Given that this is BLF, I’m willing to bet the emitter will be easy to swap if you aren’t happy with it out of the box. Hopefully we can an update on the design soon!
I’d prefer around 4500K, but anything in the range of 4000K to 5000K would be okay with me, as long as it doesn’t have a sickly tint. High CRI would be nice as well. If you’re going out in nature, you might as well see it as God intended!
Any chance you’d also consider making a mini version to hang in tents?
Something like single cell (AA or 18650), candle to incandescent temperature range (~2000k), lightweight, 360* diffuser, cheap. Should include some kind of clip or ability to hang it to a tent ceiling loop.
I don’t understand why people want lanterns in the 4000-5000k range. That introduces blue light which is artificial and will make it harder to sleep because it messes with circadian rhythms.
Like DavidEF mentioned the XP-G3 may be a good emitter for this. ( in the 4000K range to get the best balance of tint & output. Also maybe the XP-G3 would not get so hot as an XP-L on 1.05 amps ( three-7135s) after a hour? I never tested that LED yet… The run time would still be not bad on maximum-mode at 1 amp if four 3200mah or higher cells are used maybe.
I did that exact mod to a Roche single 18650 flashlight, put a 2700K warm white XM-L in it, with a 3-7135 Q-Lite, and a frosted diffuser. Its the perfect tent hanging light.
He is correct on that, warmer tints closer to that of a candle or even yellows, ( 2300 ~ 2700K) does help people sleep & be more relaxed at night. What You Should Know About Warm Lighting