You’re misinterpreting a little bit. Unlike other vendors, Mouser shows what they’ve got on order. What Mouser has ordered from their suppliers! If you click next to the 600 on “View Delivery Dates” it will show you when they expect to get that stock: one batch of 400 in a month followed by a batch of 200 in another month after that.
Had no idea they did that its good as a buyer but as a seller it sounds like a bad idea, i sold a iphone 5 the guy who bought it loved it till he dropped it and wanted a refund 40 days later, u should no what happen next i get a broke phone and he got his money back
I agree, this is a terrible change from the sellers’ perspectives.
OTOH it solves a dilemma faced by the nicer individuals who order from China and are asked to “wait, wait, wait” for surface mail. Often nice folks who trusted sellers were asked to wait beyond 45 days. For many people this was no problem since the packages eventually showed up. Other people were unable to have that much faith for whatever reason (burned in the past, etc) and felt compelled to file a claim at the 45 day mark. Several members here keep datasheets and previously filed a claim for any unreceived goods 45 days after payment as standard policy! This was never the intended use of Paypal’s dispute resolution system; therefore the practice was detremental to the system. In the end the 45-day limit caused several things…
It made it very difficult for the system to judge good sellers from bad due to the signal:noise ratio.
Good sellers who used slow surface mail shipping or ran into problems (like returned li-ions from mailcarriers) were sometimes wrongly punished.
Extra work for buyers determined not to get the short end of the stick (keeping spreadsheets, filing disputes at the 45 day mark on the dot, etc).
Beyond the cost of resolving disputes for packages that would eventually arrive anyway, international sellers (as well as those providing custom orders which took a long time to build) which faced another problem: many buyers were simply unwilling to deal with the risks involved with that 45-day limit.
So while for many sellers the change increases risk, there are also benefits for many. Increased buyer confidence leading to higher sales AND reduced losses through the elimination of honest but unnecessary “item not received” claims.
As mentioned before the 50 size emitters will work on XML boards in 6V but not in 12V
I will stock the 70 size boards, but am not sure about the 12V 50 size yet.
I will be carrying XHP50 and XHP70 in about a month, but I am still not sure what the bin and tint will be. Copper 6V and 12V XHP50/XHP70 Sinkpad MCPCBs are already available.
I am thinking about a multi-emitter XHP70 build. Any suggestions for a good host? I was thinking about doing a 3x XHP70 Supfire M6, with 8x18350s powering it.
Don’t do it. 4 x 18650 has to be sooo much better. The least you’d have to do is make a contact plate in Eagle… And the tail end is extremely easily modified.
I realize the capacity benefits, and making a custom driver isn't an issue, but 4x18650 without gluing the head shut or adding a set screw has too much possibility for very "heated" mistakes (I think you know this from personal experience).
18350’s would be an easier build but would be a bit of a pain to manage all the batteries which would need to be done often. 18650’s in serial would be much better.
Edit: Perhaps a light with a removable battery holder would be a better choice.
Hi Beam, the problem is that we are working with an existing light. The distance between the driver and springs is a set figure. We can’t just start building battery carriers and shoving em in, they won’t fit. So there is no universal easy solution. Have a new tail cap made and this would be very much the way to go. Short of doing that, it’s a problem.
Oh, my bad, I thought you could use some old beer cans to make a battery carrier, and if you were to hit it real hard with a sledge hammer you might get it to fit.
I guess being employed by IBM for 14 years as an electromechanical engineer didn’t teach me a thing did it.