Personalmente penso sia una luce con molte ombre a partire dal manico Fandle che è assolutamente inutile, produce un raffreddamento vicino allo zero e lo dico da possessore di un Manker MK38, l'unica utilità è non scottarsi le dita, al di là di questo vogliamo parlare dei lumen dichiarati? Non è possibile avere 80000 lumen da 12 xhp70.2 con quella configurazione batteria e parlo da possessore di Imalent MS12 mini che ne ha 60.000 reali con la stessa configurazione batteria, inoltre credo che ormai i clienti siano stufi di queste torce di serie: "la potenza di fuoco non basta mai..." molto meglio un ibrido come Imalent MR90 che combina Flood e Throw per una fruibilità superiore ma soprattutto con un raffreddamento e una autonomia migliori, questa volta Acebeam ha potuto osare qualcosa in più nell'innovazione invece ha preferito puntare sui grandi numeri degli 80.000 lumen dichiarati a seguito del marketing piuttosto che della tecnologia. Molto deluso da questo prodotto, se è vero che ci hanno lavorato per più di 1 anno, avrebbero potuto usare meglio il loro tempo IMO.
Since I am not a person who criticizes without proposing something constructive and I love you because I have several of your flashlights or K75, X65 mini, X70, X80GT etc., I want to suggest a new product with a very competitive cost and that could have many admirers. , take the head of an X65 mini replace the LEDs with Luminus SFT40 and update the battery pack with 3x 21700 and maybe even add a usb-c recharge even if it may not even be necessary and you will get a flashlight with at least 12500 real lumens and a throw of at least 1800 meters which will outperform almost all medium launchers with SBT90.2 and in addition you will get a very good runtime because the SFT40 is less thirsty than energy and heats much less than an SBT90.2
Never had and never wanted a flashlight with propriety battery pack. What’s that cost $150 to $200 to replace it? 80,000 lumens for what 10 or 20 seconds?
I’ll stick to a few of my lights that can sustain about 10,000 lumens until my hand tells me otherwise!
Excellent for users who don’t want to fuss with buying individual cells though. No different to buying most mobile phones these days with a built-in battery.
Sorry readers, this discussion went a bit sideways from here on. I should have just stopped responding. Plain and simple, some people don’t mind a propriety battery pack and some people hate them, like Raccoon City…lol
Never did I say I was a fan of a propriety pack. i simply said that they're great for some users....I know for a lot of people who aren't enthusiasts, they'd be more interested where they don't have to worry, just buy another pack and they're away.
Same with anyone who has a drone, you can't just go get any battery and chuck it in. My DJI drone costs me roughly $300 nzd for a battery and I'm happy with that, it's just one of those things...
Just to end I would like to be clear that all I’m saying is that some people like a built in pack, that’s all. If I have the choice, I avoid them. For my new DJI RSC2 gimbal I just purchased, it has a built in battery which is not amazing, but that’s one of the reasons I have a $300 kweld spot welder, so I can replace it myself, if needed.
I have an online business selling flashlights and you wouldn’t believe how many muggles love to not worry about batteries. They’re happy to buy another pack and away they go. LED Lenser are New Zealand’s number one brand and most use a propriety pack, yet they’re always recommended despite this.
but it requires you to have the skills. Same is true for the pack. Its more involved than swapping a cellphone battery, but it is as doable if you got the skills and tools.
The common muggle will neither replace his cellphone battery nor the cells in a pack like this one.