Sofirn SP10 Pro (AA/14500/Andúril 2) - now available!

Interested if it comes with nimh support and anduril

Interested

Interested

Interested

Interested!

Interested

heck I’m in… I am in the market for an AA edc and had just started looking…. My short list was the Utorch, lumintop tool 2 and sofirn sp10s!!! so this would be great!!! BUT ONLY IF IT CAN RUN ON AA’s too…

Interested even if it only work with 14500.

Interested if it’s aa compatible. Could you somehow make the glass have a built in minus green filter?

interested if it supports alkaline/nimh as well. Not sure why there is a debate about the possibility, the original light does it, as do other lights in this size (Rofis R2). Perhaps adding Anduril and a small board is the challenge? Certainly the lower voltage cells have lower outputs.

Sorry, I only read through 2 or 3 pages of the thread.

Interested

Interested

Interested, dont have a light with LH351D emitter yet.

Withdrawing my interest. DQG Slim AA is too good, it fills my “nimh/alkaline” support niche.

Price put me off!!! same with max lumens on AA

What s the latest news on this project?

Three years later…

…in a galaxy, eh, right around the corner…

Stainless or brass comes in around $40 with the extension tube (to get it to AA/14500 length) and pocket clip. Probably cheaper if you can find codes for it.
Yeah, it’s more than a S2 or Tool AA, but it’s also very close to the smallest AA light you’re going to get (the competition is with non-clicky DQG lights, haha). Since my pocket clip came in, I just can’t grab another AA light. The Sofirn will surely be stuck with a protruding, pocket-activating side switch, it won’t be as small, it’ll probably still be cool white, and for the size I’ll just wanna grab my SC62.

I am interested if it will support dual chemistries. Lower output on NiMH is to be expected and it’s fine. I already have a standard SP10S and I’d love to have one running Andúril.

Not sure how feasible it is, but I’d like to see some other emitter options as well. I’d love to have something ~4000k and high CRI in this light.