Sofirn SP36, impressions of a sample

Any more news about this light? Availability? Final specs?

+1, maybe they are busy working on other things. I’m ready to buy one of these. I tried to get this light when it had the HXP 50 but was already discontinued.

I think that the specs of the sample that I got are reasonable final. It seems a good working design as it is. I asked for a non-glued driver by using a driver retaining ring instead but they do not want to do that in fear of it coming loose, and I asked several times for a nice neutral led version, no answer yet about that. Sofirn asked Toykeeper to adjust the firmware because they found that the flashlight could become too hot with the standard Q8 software, not sure what the current ststus is of that. For the rest I see no obvious flaws in the design.

So I expect the SP36 to become available soon, I’d say before the end of the year, but that is not based on actual promises by Sofirn. Perhaps Barry has more exact information, hope to hear from him soon.

I’m not entirely sure either. I think an engineer at Sofirn may be trying Anduril to see if it is suitable, but I haven’t gotten confirmation yet. I think Sofirn may be sending me a sample too, but I’m not sure if that’s really necessary or what exactly I would need to do with it. I asked, if a sample is sent, that it not be glued… because I don’t think I can spot-weld a handle onto the driver and crowbar it out as shown earlier in this thread. Glue would likely just interfere with any help I might be able to provide.

Anyway, it has been a week since I heard anything, so I sent a ping to see how things are going.

Thank you Djozz and Toykeeper for taking the time to respond. I’m definitely interested to get this light.

This light will look nice with SS bezel.

The SS bezel is going to be gigantic but anyway, the glued driver has completely annihilated the initial interest I had for this model.

If I understand correctly, the plan is to release the light right away with NarsilM because it has already completed testing on the hardware, and then possibly consider using Anduril in later batches if it works well.

Hmm… Chances are they use a simple linear charging circuit. You know with that well known 4056 IC.
Sorry, it seems there’s a buck converter on board indeed.
Nice.

Hey, nice light!
To me somehow much more attractive than the Q8, (which i didn’t buy afteral.)
Hope for no glue, but something has to keep the driver in place….
We’ll see.

No glue please Sofirn ,hundreds of light come with driver retaining ring without loosing problem why this light will.

In most of those hundreds of lights the battery tube does not screw against the driver retaning ring. In the current SP36 design it would. It would require a different smaller driver and a pretty major re-design of the head to do it well. (mind that I would like to see the retaining ring as well, I just give you the considerations)

Well, how about placing some screws to fix the driver in the head? Would that be feasible? If glue is the only option, how about using glue that can be dissolved/broken easily like this hot-glue you can find in every DYI-store?

That is how it is done in the Q8 which is also made by Sofirn. Sofirn made the SP36 as a compact version of the Q8 so they are well aware of that solution, requiring milling the driver cavity in a non-round shape instead of simply turning it with a lathe, with added consequences for the spatial design of the driver circuitry. They decided not to do that, I guess it is a matter of cost.

I assume that they do not aim the SP36 at the modding crowd but at normal people, and perhaps rightly so, with the USB charging this is a very easy flashlight to handle, with still impressive performance. It may just sell well like it is.

Seems to be able to sustain low 5000 to upper/mid 4000 lumens in Turbo for 4 mins plus in a smaller/lighter host than the Q8. That’’s pretty efficient.

There are a few flashlights out there that have similar output at a similar size but this performance is surely at the upper limit for its size. But not the output sets this light apart, but the output combined with a decent reach, the beam is not all flood compared with lights with multiple leds/TIR’s. And it is the first in its class with 2 amp USB-C charging (no doubt more will follow though).
Hopefully what makes it most unique will be the price, I hope for under 40 dollar (but I have no idea btw, Sofirn has told me nothing about the price))

Any news or updates? I’m eager to find out more to see if I should stash some money away.

Not from me.

No updates yet. Postal tracking says my sample was delivered, but… it wasn’t.

This isn’t the first time my local delivery agent has done this sort of thing. Or the second time. Or even the tenth time. So I’ll see what I can do to track down the package. It’s probably either delivered to the wrong address or still sitting in his mail truck.

Okay, I have a SP36 now. My neighbor is a good person, and hand-delivered the package they received by accident. The label on the package is correct; my local delivery agent is just sloppy.

So. I have a SP36 sample. It’s a little banged up in ways which weren’t caused by shipping, but the important part is, the driver isn’t glued. It actually falls right out if I point the head upward without the body tube installed. So this should be a good host to use for development purposes.

I have Anduril on it, working pretty well. I haven’t tested the thermal regulation yet, but other functions appear to work.

The charger works too. If I connect it to a USB power bank, it charges at 1.5A. The flashlight still functions while this is happening, but the button’s charging LEDs override the driver’s normal indicator LED functions. That’s fine though. The light can actually be left in battcheck mode while charging, to get realtime progress information (ish; reported voltage is the charging level, not the cell’s resting level).

It can also run entirely off USB power, with no cells installed. It just makes the button LED behavior change; when it’s running at 5V it has no low mode for the button LEDs, and instead just goes smoothly from green to red as the main emitter power goes from moon to 350mA. And battcheck displays 4.2 to 4.4V in this mode.

It’s running the experimental SP36 build of Anduril I made a few weeks ago. I took some guesses about the light and the driver, compiled a version I thought might run on it, and … it works. So I mostly just need to make sure the calibration is correct, like for the voltage readings, thermal regulation, and the ramp shape. And then it should be good to go for production purposes.