ACEBEAM New X75 80,000Lumens Brightest PD Power Bank Flashlight

Unfortunately, you can’t choose who you sell to or know their level of knowledge. What you must still do is provide a warranty and user error isn’t always something you can prove if they’re dishonest.

I do have a battery safety guide at least, so many people have no idea because very few stores will care to say anything or even know themselves.

I purchased your flashlight and the brightness is terrible, I’d like it replaced or money refunded. What battery are you using, send me a photo. Oh, it’s a BRC 5800mAh lol.

Absolutely, use coupon code:
ACEX75-90

“10) Color-changing silicone sleeve monitors the temperature of the flashlight and protects for anti-impact.”

I’m just wonderng what’s that and where is it. Any idea?

I’m having Jetboil outdoor cooking system and there in a cup/pot is silicone sleeve with gel that is changing color to orange when the temperature of water reaches 100 Celcius degrees. That’s what comes to my mind.

Definitely my next floodlight. Acebeam, what is the intensity of this X75? I noticed there is a difference in size when compare to the X50.

For a light this size, it seems the built-in Fandle is going to limit its usefulness. But otherwise it looks like a winner.

Yes indeed. I will really like to see if it is capable to deliver that 80 000 lumens.

Keep in mind that no one that reviews flashlights and tests lumens has a professional setup with a verifiable calibration light source. Everyone is using a maukka light for calibration and who knows if Maukka’s Chinese calibration light used to calibrate his integrating sphere was in fact accurate. It did have a cert, but any company can produce one of those. I would have had more trust if it was USA sourced.

I have emailed a lab in New Zealand to see how much it’ll cost to test one of Maukka’s lights I purchased 2 years ago

Thanks for the info.

I’m going to call this one true. Our forum is about those who use flashlights as a whole way too much. We tend to know good cell from bad ones. However the public in general would probably buy the very best eBay 9900 mah Trustfire batteries. You want top performance, then let the engineers do their job from top to bottom. You want some degree of variables then get into the hobby as we here have. Want a questionable out come then let the public do it.

New Acebeam X75 LED flashlight,compact size but bright, utilizes detachable, maintainable and waterproof cooling fan(IP68).The X75 flashlight emits is remarkable 80,000lms quite ideal for search&rescue,outdoor activities.

Cool flashlight!! 400 retail seems like a reasonable price. I like Acebeam stuff. If I could find one for 300 delivered I’d probably buy it.

Please forgive me for pointing this out and don’t take it as a personal dig or pettiness on my part. Your thread HERE about popping a diminutive lithium primary cell and your overall reaction to that is precisely why manufacturers have been moving to various forms of protected cells and packs (“proprietary” or otherwise). And that was a comparatively low energy density compared to much larger li-ion cells, and those being asked to deliver higher current loads such as in these lights. Even with your 12 years of carefree experience you made an oops and got pretty upset about it because it scared you (and thankfully no harm to you in the process).

In the past “we” certainly have seen bigger oopses from multi-cell li-ion lights in various forms, and the potential is no less today than it was at any of those other times for those designs. Lights that use multi cells at high loads do command a greater sense of caution and safety awareness, and since even “experienced” people don’t always do that, packs and controls are the smart way (mostly) for manufacturers to mitigate the risks - both to users and to themselves as a company that may face litigation or brand-souring complaints and commentary.

I’m not a fan of packs that remove user input and serviceability but sometimes it makes sense. It’s no different than power tools and vacuums where the demands are similar (actually often much more severe but they use different cells, too, and smart BMS in addition). What I don’t like about the trend is inflated pricing and what is often limited availability as manufacturers stop making packs available after a too-short period of time when they move on to the next models or designs and fail to support previous ones. Overall these light-monster designs are fun and at one time were the realm of enthusiasts building at home, but for the few manufacturers willing to put these out now, they do need to take their business as a whole into account, and frankly it makes much more sense to do packs, given the general behavior of end users and the relatively high potential of accidents that could be avoided. Sure, it will cost a bit more but if they would be a little more fair in the pricing of packs it wouldn’t be too horrible. I think the overall design approach of packs could be made more user friendly in some lights but they do what they do and if you don’t like it, don’t buy it, right.

Also, those were awesome raccoon pics. :slight_smile:

You can just choose to only use the 10,000lm and lower modes if you want. There’s no reason to limit brightness like that.

I ended up purchasing one at a reviewer’s discount, soooo you’ll all get to see this monster from my drone, it’s going to be quite spectacular

At 11,0000lm which is the highest sustained mode it only hits 40kcd which is equivalent to the sustained throw of a pocketable flashlight.

I’m not asking them to limit the output, but to use a more adequate emitter setup for a “searchlight”. You’re carrying all that weight for it to provide only 15% of the output and throw 90% of the time, it’s not designed for real world use but for the wow factor.

Aaah I see. I’m sorry, I didn’t realize you were looking for a different beam profile. That makes sense.

Watch more of what our friends Zhudabo gives his review the X75 Brightest Power Bank Flashlight. If you are looking for a quick rundown on features that are important to you, check out his video.

Video Review Brightest Power Bank Flashlight X75

YouTube:

Pretty much every high power light that’s not Haikelite, Lumintop, Nightwatch, Wurkkos/Sofirn, Convoy, etc. use built in batteries. It’s safer for the user since they have a BMS and all the safety bits and benefits a pro user who doesn’t want to fuss with removable batteries, chargers, etc. They want a plug-in-and-go flashlight. Plus it improves IP and reliability. It also means your real-world output specs will be (somewhat) close to factory. I’ve reviewed enough of those type of lights to see the benefits and drawbacks of integrated batteries. If you can afford to buy a $400+ flashlight replacing the battery, even at $150, still makes sense and is somewhat affordable compared to replacing the whole flashlight. These batteries lasts a long time and are warrantied.

This is great flashlight, too bad when during promotion few days ago, BLF10 coupon was disabled.
I don’t care about the waterproof. I prefer the convenience of charging of the battery pack.
It is just toy flashlight to many people, water resistant is already good enough.