DBSAR Lantern Mini-Review: -Zanflare T1 (UPDATE: Second T1 failed!

My protected cells are too long to fit this lantern.

I have 3 T1s …… I ran all 3 for several hours on high CW and the tailcaps on all remained as cool as the ‘outside’ of my fridge…… Not saying this couldn’t change in the future but if there is a heat problem then it seems it may be a QC problem and would not be occurring in ALL T1s.

Considering the majority of present owners of the T1 are not experiencing the same thing as the op while using the cell that came with the unit but from a known old cell (might’ve already high IR) , shouldn’t it be fair to Zanflare to have this thread’s title edited ?

In my case it was a used older cell that overheated & began to gas fumes due to the battery tube being hot from the LED that are attached to it inside. It may not happen to all 18650 cells, but its still a potential risk with a weak, older, cheaper, or damaged cell in the lantern. When it comes to lanterns in particular, i focus on all safety concerns and potential hazards. unlike flashlights, lanterns will more likely be left unattended for long periods of time running in a tent or house, resting on or near flammable material. (even when people are asleep) and even if just one out of 500 of them that has a bad cell it it that causes its battery to gas or go full-vent due to the heat and catch fire is a concern.

No doubt that most who have this lantern may never have a problem, but the risk is there because of the flaw in that design using the same battery tube metal as the LEDs direct heatsink. My personal feelings on this lantern is that Zanflare should either reduce the maximum mode amp load, or re-design the LEDs to be on a separate sleeve with an air-gap from them to the battery tube. ( but neither is likely as they woudl probably discontinue it and offer a new re-designed model.

Well, to be fair to Zanflare and the rest of the owners, such sweeping conclusion in this thread’s title (“Dangerous Flaw Discovered”) should be qualified with an additional note like “using a used, old cell, etc.” information.

No doubt you have good motives to bring this out to our attention yet one sample with such cell behavior from an old cell doesn’t necessarily require such sweeping conclusion.

I may be missing something but it seems to me if the “design” was the problem…. it would affect all the T1s. I definitely think if they implemented your suggestions the design would be safer but think it is a little unfair to blame the design if the problem is only caused because someone uses an old or defective battery. That’s like blaming a gas car’s design because you put kerosene in it. You could re-design the car so kerosene would work or simply use the proper fuel so you don’t create a problem where one does not exist.

it do not matter if its an old or new cell. the lantern has a flaw that directly heats up the cell with the LEDs. not everyone who may buy this lantern will understand what we know about Lithium Ion cells and LED lights. someday someone could put a cheap ultrafire cell on this lantern and it go bad. If a product i test has a potentially hazardous flaw, i will expose it and make sure people are aware of it.

and that would be “someone” at fault wouldnt it…… not the lantern?

your missing the point. the lantern has the flaw of heating the cell, that people are not aware of.

Would be fair though, to test it with the cell it came with and see if the problem still occurs.
And for good measure, test it with a Japan made cell.
Just to make sure it’s not your old battery.

Maybe I am, but again, if this IS a ‘design flaw’ then why does my tailcap remain cool after hours of continuous use when I use a decent battery?

maybe your particular lantern has a flaw and don’t run at full output like the others. LEDs will produce heat when running at higher modes. its fact. at 1 amp draw the tube inside my L1 gets so hit it almost burns my finger. The cap gets quite warm, but not as hot as the insides sides of the battery tube.

User’s misuse/misapplication in the boon of all manufacturers… but if this all they consider all the time, no one can ever sell in the market anything anymore.

Adding to that, no manufacturer can predict and write all disclaimers as a safety measure.

And when using your vehicle… please don’t use kerosene and turn left when the road curves to the left…

…or perhaps it’s the other way around? Numerous owners has already posted that their unit, using the OEM cell, does NOT heat up unlike your unit using your old cell…

I am running a new test now with a new LG HE4 high drain 2500mah cell. I turned it on now at 9:13pm EST, on maximum mode, with the tint set to roughly 4000K ( so that all the LEDs are on at the same time, (except for the red) and will let it run for 30 minutes then check the temperature of the cap, & the temp of the inside of the body of the battery tube.

  • Will post the update in 40 minutes.

Have you checked the IR of the used, old cell that was used and is the subject of this op?

10 minutes in, on a LG HE4, on high mode, with tint ramp set to roughly 4000K, the battery cap OUTSIDE surface is already at 40+ degrees Celsius and climbing:

30 minutes in: -now the cap temperature has reached 52.1 degrees C.

for those who say that their T1 still has a “cold” battery cap after running on high for more than 20 minutes i call complete BS.

- I will let mine run with the HE4 cell for a hour or until the temp don’t rise anymore and measure the camp and the inside battery tube.

Wellp, to be fair(er), that’s still not an end-of-the-world scenario.

I took an AT01 that I gave mum, and swapped the 3×AAA carrier with a crap 18650. It needed more pressure on the spring(s) to make better contact (ie, get rid of random flickering), and a Li cell fit the bill nicely. ’Though I’m not going to waste a good cell in case she leaves the light on overnight and burns it down. Ruin the crap cell instead, y’know?

And so she did. Ran it down to vapors by leaving it on, several times. Later complained that after charging, the light would “get hot” when using it (then quickly “get dim” but no longer cook. I figure that pushing the LED with 4.2V after charging, vs 3.whatever when the AAAs would sag under load, was what was heating up. Mmmmmnope, not quite.

When charging it in my not-quite-almighty Opus at a paltry 700mA, the cell started getting quite warm. Okay, back to the AAAs.

Point being, with a lousy cell, pretty much any load would get the cell a-cooking.

see posts above using a 3 month old LG HE4 cell. it still gets very hot.