Solarforce S2200 MT-G2

But if you run the numbers like scaru showed above with fresh cells at 4.20V it’s more like 3.40A getting to the emitter at start-up. So between 3.4A and 3.0A from start to moderately run down. Does that sound about right? Seems like they did a pretty good job here and didn’t keep it super conservative like they did their M3 head.

The S2200 shot on the wall (dark paneling and some pictures, daylight) at about 10-12’ just simply blows the doors off my HD2010 that’s pushing around 850-900 lumens. Shine the HD2010 first and totally make the hot spot go away with the S2200. Which is pretty dang good, considering the HD2010 is modded fairly extremely and hits 350-450 yds pretty well. (Pulling 2.88A from a Powerizer IMR26650 [LiNiMnCo] with XM-L2 on copper driven with a stock Q-Lite)

Well, if it was run off of a 4.2 volt power supply then it might do 3.4 amps, but the voltage of the batteries will sag quite a lot. If you want to be optimistic use 4 volts.

Ok, I surrender. I don’t know the numbers or the forumula’s so I won’t even try to speculate. I’m sure y’all will figure that out soon enough and I’ll sit back and read it. Won’t understand it, but I’ll read it.

Looking like it could rain, hope I can get beamshots tonight. Won’t be here at all tomorrow or tomorrow night so it might be a few days before I can get back to it if it rains tonight.

Hope these accent Foys, don’t mean to try to take anything away from his work on the S1100.

The S2200

The head/reflector

Let’s have a look, shall we

MT-G2…whoa! Monsta emitter in the house!

Hope to get outside in a little while for some beamshots, wish me luck!

looks nice. thanks for sharing.

Looks like typical Solarforce, but on a huge scale. I’m glad they are getting serious with their latest forays in the non-host flashlight biz.

I got to go out and get some beamshots, rain bypassed us. The S2200 is definately a seriously bright light. It, as predicted, is not a whopping thrower. My HD2010 has been pretty heavily modified and is pulling 2.88A at the tail on a XM-L2 @ 5000K. That same 5000K tint looks bluish compared to the MT-G2. While the HD2010 has been my best thrower to date, the S2200 meets it, and ups the ante. It doesn’t throw further. They’re about the same in the distance dept. But it puts out at least twice the light. More light everywhere, even downrange where it makes it easy to focus the camera there’s the same light out to the sides. So in that regard too it wallops the HD2010. My little L2P with M3 head looked pathetic, so much so I didn’t even include any pics from it. I once thought it’s throw was respectable, but it fell flat. And was much bluer in color appearance.

I ran the light for short bursts, a dozen times or more. I took it for a brief walk and compared em without the camera, searching things out. I could see trees in our back 40 some 475 yds away. Couldn’t make anything out but could see they were there. And while the 2010 created a relatively narrow path of light to look down, the 2200 put out a nice wide swath of light, all the way to the back fence. Pretty respectable. The solid midsection where the emitter is mounted warmed ever so slightly. Really. Barely noticeable. The cells measured 4.09, 4.09, and 4.10 when I came inside.

This picture is big. Crunched the JPEG a bit to get it down from 43MB to 16MB. So if you click on it and go to the larger versions in Flickr, be aware it might take a little while on some systems.

If you’re looking for throw, get the S1100. If you want the best of both worlds, this S2200 just might be for you!

My kids have been asking me what I want for Father’s Day…

I think I now know what that will be :)!!

Edit: BTW, this has an OP reflector right? I wonder what it’d be like if it had an SMO?

One more thing, when I was out walking around with it just before full dark I was surpised at something I’d never seen before. The emitter is so fn huge it collected what little ambient light there was and almost appeared to glow down at the bottom of that salad bowl reflector! I’m serious, you could see that orange/yellow ball down there when the other lights showed nothing. Like in the pic up above where it fills the reflector with yellow reflection, you could see that in near darkness! Impressively huge!

And I’ll add what Foy was impressed about, the build is flawless. Very professional. No quirks, nothing. The lens has the AR they say it has, in a reddish hue like some binoculars. They even left the “Voltuge” intact. lol

This mild orange peel reflector gives a gorgeous beam. The emitter is made up of 40something areas in conjuction, so a smooth reflector might be pretty ugly in it. They have a fantastic smooth reflector in the S1100, don’t ya think if it’d work for this one they’d have implemented it instead of creating a new one?

Edit: Is that 72 areas? Wow!

thanks for the shots. tint looks pretty nice. truly neutral with solid CRI. if you could post some shots of colorful stuff to judge CRI that would be awesome.

Bookcase on Medium or use High and 1/8000 of a second? :slight_smile:

Can anyone tell me if this A0009 serial number is truly the 9th one in circulation?

Bummer. Was really hoping they had fixed that. Don’t know if I can plunk down this kind of money for a light with that on it. :frowning:

How’s the low?

I was thinking about your comment about throw, and that the throw would be better with an SMO… that’s all :)…

MTG2 in the S1100 smooth reflector has a two-stage hotspot, I guess you could call it, on a white wall, but in actual use it's not noticeable. It was like this with the XML too just with the center spot about half the size. The main center spot is still very sharp and well defined.

Anybody else notice how far the MTG2 is set back from the inside of the reflector, like we talked about in other threads? It definitely does NOT like to be shoved way out into the reflector like an XML does, that's for sure.

Ok, don’t know if this helps or not but here’s some comparison shots. The camera was set on auto this time to keep everything in perspective so that only the color of the light would be the issue. All pics on the right are the same pic, the S2200 on Hi. The shots on the left are, from the top, the L2P M3 w/ XM-L U2, the L2P EDC+ Triple XP-G2 (I think 5700K), the HD2010 w/XM-L2 T6 @ 5000K and the L2P EDC+ Triple Nichia 219 @ 4700K. Shot in a dark room with only the flashlights for light.

The color stays good from Hi to Lo. The 3 shots below start on Hi, then Med, then Lo. The shot on hi is 1/160 f6.3 ISO400, med is 1/100 f5.0 ISO400 and lo is 1/20 f4.0 ISO400

Is that an incredible LED, or what? :love: Now do you see how hard it is to put into words how much difference there is from a typical XML light?

Can you do a wall shot that shows the beam pattern? Just curious how much difference there is between the two reflectors.