Possibly.
An emitter focus change can have surprising results. Sometimes the factory get’s it wrong. Sometimes the lens is a bottleneck. Sometimes the same reflector with a slight differenct in surface finish kills the result. Lumintop didn’t quite nail focus in the big GT, for example. :wink: In that case the centering ring was too thick…

But yes, you’re point is well observed. :wink:

I do remember getting the MaxToch SN6X-2S in the group buy, factory de-domed XM-L2 emitter with quite nice throw… like 335Kcd. A simple lens swap to an UCLp gained 27Kcd in throw…. as always, the Devil is in the details.

Delta… I’ll just continue to hope that Lumintop sourced some better components on that driver to enable it to run at those levels… the originals failed and it was a big mess which is why those other lights are now so underpowered. Boosting a single cell to supply the 12V emitter isn’t as easy as it might seem, proven out by the problems that have arisen… I cut the sense resistor to half what they had on my light and it still only pulled 4.83A at the tail, still very underpowering the XHP-35 emitter at the emitter. Which is why I rebuilt it.

Edit: What happens when the single cell gets down to 3.4V or so? To maintain the 12.6V (approx) that the emitter needs to make the lumens we require the boost circuit has to boost a whopping 370%! As the cell falls further, this continues to go up. Setting up the driver to fail by overheating, typically. With a fresh charged cell at 4.2V the boost isn’t so horrible, amperage draw is low at the tail and demand on the battery is reasonable… as the cell dies and the boost circuit tries to maintain it’s output the demands on the cell go up and up, a situation that I myself really don’t like. The cell is heating up, more demand than ever is placed on it, really tough on the cell. Even a top brand named cell has trouble with this, I hate to think what some of the cheap cells used go through… this is why many protected cells fail to work in a boost circuit light, or fail to work well.