No, I’m trying to figure out how the project got into the situation it’s currently in, specifically with regards to the inaccurate manual included with the first lights.
Factory flashlight manuals are printed in such a compressed format that they can’t be read anyway. The only copy that really matters is the one you find online and can actually read.
Ordered my first one with amazon.de with batteries.
Thanks all involved to make this happen.
I think this one might eventually replace my coleman unleaded on camping trips.
3 more to come. Most will end up as gifts.
This project really shows if you get together what you can achieve. Been looking at battery lanterns for ages, and they have all been s!!t. I really think the BLF community hit gold with this one.
To all those complaining, one advice, get involved earlier in the project and offer to help. If not, shut up and be grateful for those that stood out.
I believe Sofirn started with a manual from a previous Anduril light that was close, but not the same functionally and had different hardware features. TK has made a bunch of LT1 specific changes/enhancements to Anduril, and those were not included in the manual they used as a base. As English is not the first language (presumably) of Sofirn’s team, they may not have known any different (Anduril = Anduril right?).
I saw you posting earlier in the thread helping with the manual. It seems you really helped to sort out the inconsistencies and make the LT1 project even better, and many here will be grateful for that.
Yup, things got a bit weird, hence my use of the term generic code since I was unaware as to the source and I wasn’t going to go back and try to decipher things, hence generic.
Is there a summary somewhere in the differences between the first batch of 500 and the next revision, other than the manual… assuming there are any? If it’s all firmware tweaks, has it been published anywhere how we connect this thing up to a computer so we can flash the firmware if we want? I started perusing the thread elsewhere in the forums (which I really need to bookmark…) and grabbed ToyKeeper’s bzr tree. I’m very comfortable using version control and compiling software on a Linux and I know my way around the command line, but my experience flashing embedded devices is a bit more limited (mostly flashing routers and cell phones). I’m not sure if this will work with the existing clips out there or if I’d need to solder something up for use with the LT1. I don’t rightly care which rev I get, since I think it all should meet my needs and then some, but having the ability to hack the firmware and update it would be awesome.
TK posted a mice summary of the tweaks HERE.
As for reprogramming, I believe there are a set of spring-side programming contacts on the driver. I’m sure there’s a pic of it floating around, but I can’t locate it right now.
Edit - I think this is reasonably current. (click to open full) “under” the LT1 logo, you can see programming pads.
As for the technicals of How, the standard USBASP & related tools used to flash an FW3a or D4 will get you 90% of the way there.
If correct that would be another strike against the way this has rolled out. The LT1 is not a light that’s only going to end up in the hands of flashlight savvy BLF members. It needs an understandable & readable manual in the package not a micro-printed illegible set of instructions.
You’re not in the first 500 on the list, so I don’t think you’ll get a PM for the first batch. However, it seems you can still buy one via eBay (based on reports from others). Just make an offer of $49.99 and include your BLF ID.