Blinding white? Orange/brown?

Biased perceptions (we're all biased of course). The cool white XP-L HI in my modified T20T may also look “much whiter” than a comparatively yellowish 219C inside a USB rechargeable torch side by side, yet in practice and to my eyes/mind the colour appreciation is vastly superior with the 219C, so much that the T20T's output remembers me of B/W monochrome monitors. :facepalm:

Throughout the day the sun's spectral power distribution and corresponding light temperature varies. I've yet to hear a complaint about the sun's “tint” because of its “perfect” colour rendering performance. It's colour rendering performance is bound to our minds and corresponding visual organs' morphologies (see: Photoreceptor cell @ Wikipedia). If we could re-program our minds with ease it would be possible to “rewire” ourselves in a way that the crappy led of choice's light output would look “perfect” to us, but in doing so standard (sun/stars, blackbody radiators) light sources would start looking “crappy” to us also.

What the @#$% was I saying? Aaah! Please send me all of those yellow/orange/brown high-CRI emitters you don't like, thanks. Let me give 'em a good home. :-D

3D a perfect tint? A perfect tint is probably provided by colour emitters like red/green/blue XP-E2s, if you know what I mean (and :-D I believe you do).

By the way, you say current A01s come with a PWM driver (@#$%!) with next mode memory (@#$%!) AND on top of this comes equipped with an also-ran emitter? This is completely misleading, straight false advertising!

Banggood is calling for a spank!

Cheers ^:)