Review: TrustFire TR-J20 - 12 x XM-L (3 x 32650) Chunky Monkey!

Thanks for the hard work
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Ran the “Chunky Monkey” on three fully charged Keeppower 26650’s 5200 mah. It drew 3.04 amps off of full batteries and climbed to 4.54 amps when it shut down at 9.6 volts.

Thanks for the report! It looks like the driver is doing a great job of boosting the amps as the voltage drops. I hope is continues to offer that kind of boost performance after the resistor mod.

nice review :slight_smile:
These big battle-club lights are intriguing, i just wish some manufacturer could build one that produced a real-measured minimum 5000 or more Lumens, have a 3 plus hour run time on high, and a good heat dissipation to sustain it.

Thanks! :bigsmile: This light seems to be at the top of its 12X game in terms of handling sustained high mode use, both in terms of cell capacity and no V-sag while using the excellent 6500 mah TF 32650’s and in properly designed heat sinking. Id like to see something driven harder with active cooling, but many well designed lights do quite well as long as they are used as intended. ie: walking with them in the cooler night air… where air is actively moving past the cooling surfaces to exchange heat. This is one of them.

Im looking forward to texas shooter’s results after his resistor mod.

I think I’ve almost talked myself into getting one of these. I’m just a little backed up with mods at the moment.

For the resistor mod I’ve got a few on hand and a few coming; 0.9, 0.75, 0.62, 0.47. A little worried that at the lower voltages while charting out the amps raising, something will go poof. Tail switch? driver? I think I’ll set 7 amps at the tail the limit. I’m also putting heat sink fins on those 4 little black square thingies that we don’t know what they are, cause Trustfire scraps of the id #. Anyway those 4 Mosfets get very warm when the driver is near cut off at 9.6volts.

Boosting amps as voltage drops puts extraordinary stress on components. The higher the conversion ratio, the more heat is produced and conversion efficiencies decrease. Thats another reason I love those huge 32650’s that can sustain a continuous huge load without sag. So far, Im quite impressed with this driver.

Ive been using copper pipe strands, 12 gauge solid core copper and end pieces from noctigon/sinkpads die stamps to cool mosfets and diodes. Although the data sheets often show many of these components as being able to handle high temperatures, if its made in China… all bets are off. Sink those (potentially shitty made suckers) before you push them beyond.

In other lights, regardless of what others have indicated as being a “tough mega driver”, enough have failed that I always sink the hot parts. IMO, potting insulates most hot parts and shortens component life. If its hot, sink it with copper, using the copper as a heat conductor to transfer heat to an exterior sink. Its easy to do and will definitely increase longevity. If she goes poof, then look forward to your new mosfet driver swap.

BTW, those TF 32650’s are definitely worth the money. Ive been running the crap out of them in my stock TK70. 3 cells and an additional spring with copper wire & disk mod launches the boost driver into DD, and that sucker keeps up with my modified BTU shocker with XML2. Im just as impressed with those cells as I am with the TR-J20. In fact they are THE ONLY Chinese made cells I have ever been impressed with.

Looking back on my 9 x XML comparison vs this 12 XML chunky, Id take the 12X any day. While the 9X is driven much harder, its a meager “wow light” that edges out the 12X in terms of raw lumens, but it overheats FAR too quickly to be of much use to anyone that expects to use it for any length of time. IMO, a wow light has some purpose as a pocket EDC, but not as a monster bashing continuous burn beast… enter the TR-J20.

For your mod, if you have any concerns, decrease your resistance in increments and see how hot the mosfets get. I assume you have the driver dismounted from its home while testing, so also check the board to see how hot its getting. Being dismounted from the sink will prevent it from conducting heat, which will skew your observations. I doubt the tail switch will prove to be a weak link.

Ive read enough of your posts to know that Im quite confident that you’ll be more than impressed with the “chunky” build and design. But knowing you, I foresee a brutal assault on those poor emitters via a mosfet driver swap. Thank god for that friggen mega floor plate assembly, cause its going to whimper after the ouchy-arc welder conversion youre sure to give it. :bigsmile:

The switch is listed as 1.5amp/250volt, it’s going to poof but I’m going to replace it anyway. The driver I’m leaving mounted in the lower half of the head to bleed any heat it might. This also lets me monitor the components. The batteries used are the new Keeppower 26650 5200 mah. By the way I’ve seen a few Trustfire lights with this 12 led reflector design, its a good design.

RMM in his store thread reports he has a hopped up version doing 11,000 Lumens initially and 10,200 at 60 seconds. Wants to know if any interest in his offering this hopped up unit commercially.

Se post # 2295

This seems to be the heavy duty host available at a reasonable price at the moment for major hop-up opportunities to absolutely ridiculous output levels. Send him a PM or post in his thread if interested.

Not enough LEDs! :smiley:

Any one done a reading of Lumens out on the stock light as delivered? Curious to know how it does.

IIRC mine was around 4,000-4,500. (or was it 7,000-7,500??? Man, I should have written it down!) The cool thing is that is could run at that level without any fears of overheating and the driver seems like it is actually up to the task. Underpowered for such a large light but probably pretty efficient.

It looks like the TR-J20, it might even be but its $10.00 cheaper when you add it and shipping over the fasttech one.
Description looks nice, even though it contradicts itself a few times;

http://www.aliexpress.com/item/13000LM-Flashlight-torch-12-CREE-XM-L-T6-LED-32650-26650-battery-charger/1950168174.html

Nice price, especially since it comes with 4x 26650 batteries and a charger, even if they might be low quality.

It doesn't come with batteries or charger.

Batteries and charger are included.

Batteries and charger are $15 extra.

Maybe

Just received my Trustfire TR-J20 today. Even with all the photos I’ve seen of it, I still wasn’t prepared for the sheer size and weight of it. Arrived in flawless condition and in perfect working order. Depending on the cells used, I get 3.11a (KeepPower IMR26650 5200mah) - 3.32a (MNKE 4000mAh) at the tail on high mode. My KeepPower protected 26650 5200mAh cells are long for the light, but the tailcap closes to within one thread of being completely tight, which is fine.

Thanks FlashPilot for this review.

Hey Richie, Im glad you’re enjoying your new light. Its quite the Chunky Monkey, isnt it? :smiley: Thanks for the amp readings with those cells. Ive been using unprotected 32650 Trustfires and they seem to be holding up quite well… which I find amazing for Chinese mfgr cells. Every time I hold my J20, Im always amazed that this is a Trustfire product. The upscale build and finish are what we usually find in more expensive name brands. Although this is not to be considered a bargain light, I still think its a steal for the price. When you have a chance, unscrew the head pieces and check out that massive thick heavy floor plate/heat sink. I might mod mine some day with a 100 watt Bridgelux and boost driver.

Richard at RMM built a FET driver for me but I havent had a chance to rewire and instal it yet. My Supbeam X60 from the GB has been my power light of choice lately, but its getting time to move forward and see what this J20 can really do with that RMM driver.

I just received Trustfire’s other Chunky Monkey, the TR-S700, and shipped it off to RMM to see what he can do. I think that if it is a monkey he is named King Kong! I asked for him to do a max output sphere check before and after so we shall see what happens. The TR-S700 is HUGE compared to other multiple parallel soup can style lights and weighs about 54 ounces with three 26650 batteries installed.

FlashPilot, It’s funny you mention how impressive a Trustfire flashlight can be, at least their two flagship models, the TR-J20 and the TR-S700. I was thinking exactly that myself. It’s unfortunate they have to be so heavy, but for proper heat dissipation, I have no problem with it. It makes me realize how badly designed my other multi-led lights really are in comparision. At least I’ll be able to mod this one and not have to worry to much about overheating the internals.

As for price, at $91.98 on AliExpress with free shipping, I don’t know how they were able to do it, and I consider it a fantastic deal.

I did want to ask you a question, the 32650 Trustfire cells you’ve been using, what are you using to recharge them?

Please post back when you rewire your J20 to accommodate RMM’s FET driver. I’m interested in knowing how involved rewiring the LED’s will be in case I wish to follow your example.