I’m not a reviewer, but I want to share a few findings. Don’t expect anything remotely useful…
I bought several lights to compare but not exactly the same as suggested.
I bought:

- NiteCore LA10 - not High CRI

- Lumintop Tool AA and AA - Not High CRI 3200 and 5600K

  • Sofin C01 (AAA) Hi CRI

Lumintop:

  • Small
  • Good output
  • The difuser gives very pleasant white. Better than Nitecore.
  • The tailstand of the AA is very unstable. The AAA has no tailstand at all; but the magnet tail stand is good. Also on non magnetic surfaces. For me this is a huge unforgivable design flaw for a light sold with a diffuser.
  • The beam could be more even. I don’t like hot spots.

Nitecore.
I bought it because I want to test the built in diffusor.
A good light that gets beaten by the Lumintops using a diffuser.
The lumintops light just feels more relaxed.

Sofirn C01

  • No settings
  • Low output (which hindered testing)
  • Small
  • Less hotspot than the Lumitop, which is a bonus for me.
  • Hi CRI

Hi CRI brings me to the whole reason I started this thread.
Very nice pictures have been posted (thanks!). No need I repeat that. Even if I could.
The thing is that the Sofirns have a very low output.
The results of my tests greatly confuse me.

Because of the low outputs of the Sofirns I only tested by reading black, red and blue text on white paper.
As expected 3200k shows the white paper as creamy.
What I noticed when comparing the 3200k and 5600K makes me wonder one of my lights is defect.
The red and blue looked equally good under both tints.
3200K feels a bit easier on the eyes.
3200K somehow feels a lot brighter. How is that possible?

I tried to compare with the AAA Lumintop on low.
It looks brighter than the 5600K but not so sure about the 3200K.
I’m wondering why that is. Could it be one of the Sofirns isn’t calibared correctly and its only setting is fixed at brightness not according to specs?
Could it be because how eyes work?

That last question likely need some explanation.
On this forum great tests are posted. Some flat out lab grade scientific tests with fancy graphs. Technically irrefutable and very helpful.
But our eyes combined with our brains are no computers.
Could it be that our eyes apply all sort of filters, adapt, introduce sensitivities for a certain color spectrum etc.
(I know from serious sources the eye is most sensitive to green light for example)
The above is a long winded way of asking it could be the 3200K and 5600K are equally bright but due how eyes work, don’t appear like equally bright.

That’s an important question for me. I’m looking for the best trade-off. Not the most bright. No the best color rendering. But if the hi CRI 3200K really looks brighter at the same output that would certainly get my attention.

The Lumintop made the text equally readable. Also good colors.
If someone showed me all those flashlight without knowing specs of any sort and asked me to comment on it; I would talk about all sort of differences, but honestly “the red/blue don’t looks real in this light” would not be on my comment list.
And even when I see a tiny difference, I wouldn’t know what’s best.

So what’s going on here? The photo’s posted in this thread, especial the yard with the orange leaf, are extremely simple. There is a huge difference between hi and low cri color rendering.
Once again I totally admit that fact. But why don’ I see it in my own tests???
Could it be AliExpress messed up, and instead of sending a CW Lumintop they sent a Nicha version?