Thank you for the excellent review.I have this lantern and I am enjoying it more now that I see the specs.
I would like it more if it had a magnetic base.
Your reviews are superb, Tim. The intro picture really puts the size of this light in perspective (much smaller than I envisioned…that or your hand size rivals Andre the Giant). A good sale on this and I’m in.
Great review.
This one is now on my list. Soon as Sofirn puts them on a deal at Amazon - I’m on it.
The form factor of several cheap lanterns but with Sofirn build quality and a 21700 down the center.
Other than a tripod socket - don’t think I’d want anything else.
Nice to the the turbo and high hold at a constant value across the runtime.
All the Best,
Jeff
The LT1s showed up yesterday from Amazon.
I must say it’s a winner.
Love the form factor. Easy interface.
Way more compact and lighter than the LT1. I can live without all the blinkies.
The ability to light half the LEDs for a more directional light is a brilliant idea.
I don’t see any PWM, but I will put it to the scope at some point.
The battery came at 3.47v. It tested 4987mAh on the first go round.
An 18650 flat top works just fine without any adapter.
Came with extra O rings. Threads well greased out of the box.
Moon mode seems way brighter than the claimed 1 Lumen.
The Red is way bright.
Wish moon was a lower level or perhaps just had a extra firefly mode.
And a timed go to sleep mode would be icing on the cake.
It’s a keeper. This would make a great gift for muggles or any enthusiast.
All the Best,
Jeff
My lantern arrived today.
The battery was 3.45 volts.
A beautiful lantern, well made and I’m happy with it.
I found 2700K light as default, the red light is very strong and it meets my needs.
When I pulled out the charging cable, I must have also taken the protective grommet in my hand and it came out.
It was impossible to reinsert it, with a Victorinox I cut a small piece of the rubber pin to make it retract, perhaps I would have liked a better fixing system.
I still don’t understand how to switch from warm light to cold light but I admit that I still haven’t read the instructions well.
If it also had a lower light like the Fenix CL26R it could be the perfect lantern.
I read the review and the manual well and figured out how to switch from warm to cold 6500K mode, it’s quite easy.
I did not understand, however, if there are only two tint (2700 K and 6500 K) or if there are 4 tint between 2700 and 6500K as we are talking about “tint ramp” (but it seems so)
While the LT1s is on, click the button, release, and then quickly press and hold to ramp the tint up or down.
TacGriz describes it as 2H (like the notation used for Anduril):
I think half the 36 CSP1919 LEDs are 2700K and half are 6500K. The diffuser might be bringing the CCT down to 2500K and 5600K.
While shifting the tint, 2700K LEDs may increase in light output while 6500K LEDs decrease. Or it may do the opposite when changing direction.
You end up with much more than 4 tints. The colour temperature changes smoothly. I used an Opple Light Master Pro III to measure the CCT while trying to change the CCT to 5000K. It doesn’t jump from 2700K to 3000K to 3500K to 4000K etc. It ramps up smoothly with many more CCTs in between.