Trying to come up with other applications for my newest 3Ch driver, can you guys help me by listing any lights you can think of with multi emitters (3 preferred but 1-4 is cool) and 2 (two) side electronic buttons.
First one that comes to mind is the warrior but I thought I read that one of the buttons is a true clicky switch, is that the case? The UI on this driver requires 2 electronic switch's only (tho a third mechanical tail clicky to provide lockout would be fine).
TK70
I could run mine on 3 or 4 32650’s if I had the driver to take advantage.
Bump… I know there must be more lights that could take advantage.
Two side button lights
Fenix TK 50 and TK 60 (singlle emitter lights). I have both.
Fenix TK61 and TK41 (single emitter lights)
Nitecore EA1, EA2, EC1 and EC2 (all single emitter)
Nitecore TM26. 4 LEDs and two switches but I think the second switch controls LED readout modes.
Three side button lights.
Fenix TK 51. Not sure what the third button does on this. TK 51 is two emitters, independently controlled apparently.
Does anyone know how the buttons operate on the fandyfire warrior? I know they’re different sizes but do they have the same “tact” [feel] to them or is one a different “click” than the other? Ie are they the same type of button underneath different sized rubber plungers?
I have a Warrior and the switches just feel squishy, apparently due to the characteristics of the rubber covers.
Large switch press for 1/2+ second and light comes on in low output mode. Momentary presses following switch to high and strobe then back to low in a continuing cycle with each momentary press of the large switch. Off is achieved by another 1/2+ second depression of the large switch in any of the three modes.
The small switch is the ramping control which operates when the light is in the low output mode. Continuous pressure with the light on in low mode causes the output to sweep from lowest output to about 70% of maximum and back. Release the switch when the light reaches the wanted level. I tend to leave this at minimum output for low, somewhere in the 100 Lumens output range I estimate.
With the light off pressing the small switch turns the light on in high mode but only for the time the switch is left depressed + maybe a 1/4 second delay after switch release so minimum momentary on time is in the 1/4 second range by my estimate.