Good pro tip there, thanks Hank.
If you get the Hugsby and put some DC-Fix behind the lens , it will tame the lumens somewhat and create a beautiful flood beam .
Are you sure that a 13 lumen E01 wouldnât be the simple and not too bright bathroom light for her?
Do you need to buy one, or is making one an option?
Lend her one, take the Mag, do a Match-mod on it with 800mA boost driver (Fasttech) and 90deg TIR lens (Amazon/uxcell) for something nice and floody. Itâll have some decent lumens, but theyâll be nicely spread out over a wide area.
Or if you donât mind an angry blue color, a Nite-Ize LED replacement.
Both will be simple twisties.
Thanks again everyone, I picked up a Nebo CSI LUMA50, it was less than 10 bucks and has a crenulated bezel so she can look tactical. :laughing:
Hahaha, neat! Looks suspiciously like those infamous Police 5w ones albeit has a different colour and has the rubber grip thingy.
This is apparently the deluxe model the Crime Scene Investigators use. I think those Police 5w models are intended more for your average beat cop. :smiling_imp:
Woah! Group buy?
Please refrain from using foul language on the forum âŚâŚ
the word NEBO is not to be uttered .
i like the $2 #3 zoomies âŚgas de-domed while still in the light and 1/8th of the slider filed down to make both the flood super wide and laserlike in throw mode . mod takes 10 minutes.
youâre right about old people not being able to push a buttonâŚ. you might want to try a super light AA twisty off ebay for about 5$
Beauty of these cheap lights is if they get lost or ruined with an alkaline itâs no great loss .
As in, dunk the light LED side down in a glass of petrol? Wonât it hurt the driver electronics, etc? How long does it take and is the gas warmed?
I didnât mean the gas de doming only took 10 minutes âŚ.
I de dome emitters in lights by adding a little gas to a 2 shot shot glass. then add paper towel and make a small ball of the paper towel to act like a wick âŚand i just set the emitter on top of the ball . next morning i knock of the emitter clean it up with some alcohol and let it air dry ⌠done it to about a half dozen #3 zoomies âŚthere is nothing to lose and the improvement is pretty dramatic âŚ. the flood is as big or bigger than any other Flood to throw light Iâve ever seen. A good NW xpg2 doesnât hurt these lights at all either
Appreciate the details, Boaz. Will try it myself asap. I ruined a latticebright from an sk68 clone by dunking it in petrol overnight. The bond wires came right off by themselves, and Iâve been hesitant to dedome cheapies ever since.
I replaced the incan bulbs in a pair of Grannyâs 2D plastic Duracell brand flashlights with the Dorcy LED replacement bulb and she loved them. They will run for days on lightly used batteries.
I think it needs to be simple, and vote for the Hugsby xp1. I have given a lot of them, and am not aware of any failures.
Jerry
One thought â older people (and babies) have easily disrupted sleep patterns, and the blue emission spike in LEDs is the signal that interrupts sleep.
Using an amber emitter (or just a piece of yellow plastic film, like Rosco theatrical filter gel) can block that narrow band â roughly in the 400-500nm range.
Little old incandescent bulbs emit virtually nothing in that band.
Rather than go back to low-brightness incandescent, you can filter the LED, or now finally even buy lights that specifically donât interrupt sleep.
I gave some of those (and over-the-eyeglasses light yellow safety glasses) to one of my neighbors who was just about to be given heavy duty sleeping pills and a CPAP machine.
She says itâs helped a lot to change the evening lights, and has held off the $$$ medical intervention.
These are really effective, and premade:
http://www.mrbeams.com/stick-anywhere-amber-led-night-light-mb720a
They are very bright, using rechargeable NiMH C cells (or using AA-to-C adapters). Yeah, itâs appalling from my cheap side to spend $15 apiece, but well worth it for the nighttime safety.
You can find the same thing much cheaper with the usual blue-white emitter, and cover that with an amber/yellow filter fairly easily.
Iâve had no luck zero nada finding any lights from China using amber 590nm LED emitters in motion sensor nightlights
(possibly because they donât translate âamberâ â and âyellowâ means âwarm whiteâ which has a blue spike)
I see, so itâs my blue LED night lights that are keeping me awake at night and not my thoughts of Jessica Alba, good to know.
Hmmm, you too???
I donât have a blue LED night light either.
haha.
But lest anyone coming along not understand, hereâs the spectrum â the spike is the blue light part of the white LED spectrum.
LEDs are fluorescent lights, remember â a blue/UV source underneath a phosphor that absorbs some of the energy and re-emits photons in the warmer part of the visible range
No offense, I know you guys know this.
Please donât post pictures of what youâre dreaming about that keeps you awake. Family friendly site here.
Itâs funny, I have all kinds of lights around, but I find that I grab a cheap little SK68 off my nightstand the most. I swapped in a 3W warm white emitter about five years ago. (you know, the type that have ceramic bases and big electrical tabs). The light doesnât go full flood or zoom. The reason I reach for it most is that its shape makes it easy to hold and turn on/off. Also, the tint if very nice in the house in the middle of the night (like hank says above). Itâs also small enough to stick in a shirt pocket and has a pocket clip that prevents it from rolling around. Translated: Itâs where I want it to be when I need it.
I keep thinking I should update the emitter, but I canât because the darn light does itâs job well as it is.
I change them to Luxeon Rebel ambers, or the newer PC Ambers from Luxeonstar.com (square boards, so these need a copper disk inserted to cover the hole in the pill) or else XP-E2 amber or PC ambers (which come on 16mm round copper boards from MtnElectronics, so fit well enough into the ledge in the pill).