I’ve found the group buy page for it. Interesting … food for thought… would love to know the exact size of the head and length. Too bad the candellas are ashown decreasing as the lumens go up…
Keep in mind the White 2 runs hot so I’m not sure what the sustainable output is. I’m sure Vinh will mod the MF01 Mini with the White 2 when he gets it and it’ll probably throw just as far as the D4Svn but with higher max output and sustainable output due to more emitters giving better efficiency.
True. Sustainability is important and hard to achieve on this small head.
Too bad the website doesn’t show the full beam profile of the white 2 version, would love to see if there is enough flood.
Osram has S2WP emitter which has 4 2mm² dies (White 2) but it has a hole in the middle and fighting that will likely cost more throw that it’s worth. Also, White 2 is quite thermally limited and S2WP is even slightly worse in this regard.
So CFT-90 is probably still the best large thrower LED out there.
I know Vinh mods K75 and his lumen numbers are way lower than what Acebeam claims. https://skylumen.com/collections/v54-lights/products/acebeam-k75vn-best-ultra-thrower
Since there’s a lot of discussion on throw and led etc, piling in here. Jason, or anyone else, wouldn’t a big led with zoomable head be best of traits? You literally get throw, lumen, spill, all together. Only negative is that it requires adjusting, but I think that’s fine with most ppl. Why aren’t zoomies more popular? I mean in theory a vendor can engineer a new zoom mechanism (not the common ones in market today) and charge more premium for it. Otherwise it seems like everyone is putting out the same light using well known variables and a new market can be harvested if more variations is introduced.
You haven’t heard? Zoomies waste a ton of output when focused to a narrow beam. Take my CPF Cometa for example. It uses an xpl-hi led. When zoomed wide I get a decent 810 lumen. When zoomed narrow for long distance use it’s output was 270 lumen. That’s 2/3 the output wasted.
This is pretty much true of all zoomies, they waste a lot of output. They have a few fans, especially the smaller zoomies, but I think the majority of people don’t care for them. I don’t really like them.
Third reason - I have it, the catapult v6. I am ok with it as a small thrower but I wasn’t looking for a thrower in the first place, I was looking for a small but powerful enough combination light ( perfect balance of flood and throw, maybe on a throwy side) and catapult has virtually no flood, and yes like Jason said, it’s too weak also, and slightly big head, even if the beam profile was what I was looking for
Ordered on the 10th of September and is now on back order status. It’s still being sold as pre-order so just a heads up for people looking to buy now. You might be waiting for a while.
On the Banggood page, it said previously that shipping was expected on September 29, but when I checked it today, it says “Expected on October 15, 2019” so I guess we are in for a little more wait.
Cometa, 270 lumen and 800 meters
W30, 500 lumen and 2,400 meters
They are quite different lights. Plus the Cometa is wasting a ton of battery power and generating a lot of heat to produce the small output. It’s extremely inefficient.
I think most people like reflector based lights because you get both flood and throw at the same time. Still, there are certain applications where super throwy beams are useful. They are a tiny part of the flashlight market which is why they exist, but are not very popular, in my opinion.