This light has been rebuilt into a XHP 35 HI triple. See post #18.
I was offered a broken Roche M170 for shipping costs as a modding host, and couldn’t turn it down (I did initially because I have so many hosts, but I didn’t know what kind of light this was). It’s been in my desk for quite some time now but I have had plans for it as soon as it was on the way. The plans where to combine the dual switch functionality of my firmware in this light: Mod/Driver: ZY-T08 series conversion, MT-G2. with a SRK style light like my M6: Mod: My SupFire M6 "BMF" edition (new beamshots in OP). and build a triple XHP70.
I started by redesigned the M6 driver to use the ATtiny84 and have exact same pin configuration as the ZY-T08, making the firmware fully compatible with only very minor changes. I’ve learned a few things on the way and changed a few other things too. I ditched springs on the driver side, went with bare copper and put on solder blobs instead. All I had to do was file them down a little. I kept the original M6 size as I have a two more M6 hosts, I just had to file it down to fit nicely into the M170. The driver provides a theoretical current of just over 5A per LED on max boost:
In with the XHP70 LEDs:
The E-switch was broken on this light, but I could use the contact board and solder on one I had laying around:
The battery contact plate needed some work, but was easily done:
To make a dual switch light I had to add a mechanical switch, so I filed down, cut and soldered on a 10A Judco switch. I made a pretty ugly job of the switch as it took a few goes, but it’ll do for testing the light. I’ll be replacing the switch later, would be a shame to have such an ugly switch on a nice looking light like this one.
Screwed the back plate on, but will be making a quick release system without screws as I did on the M6. Right now I just wanted to test the light out, so the screws went in.
The tail-cap needed a hole for the Judco switch. Once again, a darn ugly job on that switch (I deserve any crap you wanna give me) so it’ll have to be replaced later:
I had a rubber switch cover from an old headlamp laying around. Not my final choice, but good enough for testing. It needed just a little bit of glue to stick:
Then the light was ready to fire up. Still working on the firmware, but the nice thing is that I’m working on the firmware for two lights at the same time now as the ZY-T08 board is compatible. Still got a few things to go, like fine tuning the smooth seamless level adjusting and temperature control, but it’s operational… and pretty darn bright on max boost.
So many thanks to the donor for making this light possible!