Second Attempt: COURUI with LD-36 driver ~ Series Conversion ~ BETA version ~ Don't Try This At Home

I put mine back to parallel battery config and wired up two 2.8amp drivers. It’s very close in lumens to my TN-31 that has the resistor mod done. 1,500 vs 1,300. I haven’t de-domed the TN-31 yet so right now the big head is blowing it away in throw.

It’s supposed to be good for 18V. I got all my modes in both groups…just can’t hold onto high. I’m glad you told me this so I didn’t wast tomorrow trying to rebuild everything.

I was just studying up on master slave. I’ve spent far too much time doing series conversions on this light.
Can you tell me if I should remove all excess components from the slave board except the 7235 chips? I have a hot air reflow, so it would be easy. This will be another first time endeavor for me.

I’m glad I read your thread so I found out I wasn’t going crazy. I might go and hook one up to an MT-G2 and a SST-90 and see what happens. It worked fine with the 3x XML so maybe it’s something to do with the small emitter not taking enough power so it’s kicking in the protection? I thought that at first and went from XP-G2 up to XM-L2 hoping it would help but it didn’t. Same damn thing. High would ramp down to medium, If you held the button down you could keep it in high but as soon as you let up it goes to medium.

When you hooked it up to three XML, were they in series, or parallel.

Series. I was talking to comfy about it and he said that this driver will not push more than 5amps no matter how you set up the emitters. Too bad because 5amps each would be nice for a triple.

I never did ask how you converted your cells to series. Did you do a convoluted mod like mine, or did you dump in a bunch of 18350s?

Our posts seem to be out of sync.

Just read this thread. Nice work in my book. Best wishes on working out the bugs and finalizing it.

I took the original driver and used it as a contact board and on the top of it I isolated one positive and one negative and ran a wire from one to the other.

So starting at the contact board it was like this

Positive on the board, negative to the springs.

Negative over to positive at the springs. then up to an isolated negative at the board to an isolated positive at the board, Down to a negative at the springs with the body at the springs making the last negative connection with the contact board connection.

I’m wiring up an SST-50 right now to see if it works. Can’t find my SST-90 that I usually use for testing. Let you know in a minute if it works.

Yikes! I think I need pictures to get that sorted out in my mind.

I know it’s hard to explain. Just think of how you would do it yourself. Starting with a positive on the contact board. You go up to the springs and back down to the contact board. But the next two that are on the contact board have to be isolated from the board itself because if they touch it’s a short. I just used LB weld as my “glue” and tested with my DMM to make sure that there were not shorting out on the board. The last battery goes up to the springs were it only makes contact with the spring in contact with the body.

Oh hell this just makes it worse. LOL

Like I said just follow the path starting at positive on the board through negative at the springs to the body.

I wired up the driver again to the SST-50 and the driver is now dead. I can’t remember what I did to it to kill it, something about using pencil lead to try and find the heat protection and disable it.

Rats.

I’m in the middle of linking two 1.4A NANJG boards. I need to see if I can do it.
I removed all the other components off one board and linked the VDD pins. I guess I have to connect the neg. LED leads next.
If this works, I’ll order some momentary Qlites from RMM and say to hell with series.

Right on! That’s what I did and I’m loving the results. Still ticked about these 5A drivers. I wrote them about them too and also reviewed them saying exactly what it did wrong. I think I posted it hear as well someplace but I’m not sure where.

They say they do “best” with SST’s they didn’t say anything about them not working with XM-L2. I just assumed that as long as I had it on a sinkpad I would be fine. They need to update their description to say they don’t work with XML.

I’m going to write them again and I hope you will too. Might at least get them to change their description and save someone else a lot of time and effort.

Just what amps were you aiming for?

Well, I linked up two FT 1.4A drivers and got 2.8A so I guess I did it right. High was OK, but some of the other modes whined like crazy. I needed to know if could do it.

Now I can order a momentary Qlite and slave another one to it. Sixteen 380 chips. Will that be enough?

Congrats on getting them to work.

That would be enough for me. If the heatsinking was better on this light I would say you could go for even more but really that is plenty and will be a ton of light. It’s pushing it pretty darn hard.

Yeah, i don’t want to go through all the work I did building the copper pill on my last COURUI again. I was going for 7A. Wasted a lot of time for a fail.
This time I’ll just use a Noctigon mounted on another copper round to help raise it up.

I have done that on a few lights and it helps a lot, especially with de-domed emitters. Getting them farther up into the reflector is a must.