SupFire L6
Reviewer's Overall Rating: ★★★★☆
Summary:
Battery: | 26650 or 18650 w/included sleeve |
Switch: | reverse clicky tail switch |
Modes: | Hi-Med-Lo-Strobe-SOS (nice mode memory) |
LED Type: | XML-T6 cool white |
Lens: | glass (standard, not AR) |
Tailstands: | Yes - nicely |
Price Paid: | $17 for review, reg. price: $21.12 - free shipping |
From: | Farfar_ledtorch on dhgate (dhgate.com-supfire-l6) |
Date Ordered: | April 1st, 2014, Rcv'd: April 17th, 2014 |
Dimensions: | 159.0mm length, 44.5mm head, 34.2mm tail, 32.1mm body |
Weight: | 187g (no lanyard) |
Max Amps: | 2.33 amps measured at the tail |
Max Output: | ~595 lumens OTF (measured at 30 seconds), ~23 kcd |
Purchase Link: | dhgate.com-supfire-l6 |
Manufacturer Link: | Not listed on http://www.supfire.com/English/ (too new?) |
Pros:
- C8 size with 26650 compatibility
- attractive styling, comfortable in hand, well balanced
- overall good quality finish (not HA III but at least not claiming so)
- quality internal components (switch, pill, driver)
- true mode memory
- nice tight beam pattern, tighter spill than classic C8's due to deeper reflector
- tail stands very well
- thread aluminum pill - appears to match thread and size of the true old "C8 pill"
Cons:
- only a XML T6 (somewhat dated for a new light)
- classic 5 modes (strobe gets some votes but rare to find a fan of SOS)
- moderately driven (some may like this, but generally many like to see over 3 A)
- no unique or special features (charging port, side switch, SS bezel, etc.)
Features / Value: ★★★★☆
The light came very well packed, in a shipping box, not an envelope:
Well wrapped and with Styrofoam on top and bottom:
No separate box, just bubble wrapped well. The lanyard is a good one for a budget light, standard for SupFire's:
Shown here with it's brothers, the M6, and X5. Similar knurling patterns, and some common styling:
For reference, you can see how the head diameters match up. The X5 is a deep reflector C8 size light:
Close up look at the head - excellent finish, no visible marked or imperfections here:
The body tube shown here is also in excellent condition:
The tail, also in excellent quality overall, has a slight nick on a sharp edge. You really have to be looking for it though:
Close-up view. These edges are a bit sharp, though I don't think it will cause damage because of them being recessed in a little:
Here it's shown with a couple other popular lights. Again, head dimensions and reflector performance match up well to C8's. The Paisen shown here is an XML U2, but driven at only 1.8A, smaller reflector (head: 41mm), next mode memory, and outputs only 367 lumens:
Not such a good view of the threads, but they are acceptable, not as square cut as I'd like to see:
The back side of the driver/pill. The pill is all aluminum with a brass retainer ring. Excellent stock setup, but not ideal for a simple Nanjg or Qlite driver swap:
View of the well centered LED. The reflector seems to be free of any imperfections. This is a large hole reflector:
The head dis-mantled. GITD o-ring is a nice touch:
Shows the large hole for the emitter, thin flat surface for easier fitting of wire contacts:
Close-up of the LED. Clean, well fitted and centered:
Pill assembly. Nice overall mass, consistent with better C8 pills:
Close-up of the full size plastic alignment piece and guard:
Pill cavity opened. Easy access to the driver. Wires are quality 24 gauge:
Close-up of the driver. Those R140'sare looking like and easy potential boost:
Along side the VOB copper pill. The copper pill threads in perfect to the head. I'm thinking the height of the LED/star may match up as well, but not sure yet. Excellent candidate host for a copper pill upgrade:
Standard 20mm aluminum star, epoxied on, but soft type epoxy. Solid pill top:
All tailcap parts shown here. Quality components, full tailcap weights in at 44.6g. Almost as heavy as the larger HD2010 tailcap at 50.5g:
Solid tailcap housing, lots of threads, should be an excellent electrical path.
True Omten switch, getting harder to find these days:
L6 tailcap on left, HD2010 tailcap on right:
Design / Build Quality: ★★★★★
Overall excellent quality. Similar quality level to the SupFire M6, in finish/anodizing, with brass retaining rings, better than average switch's, springs, etc.
Battery Life: ★★★★★
The battery life I expect to be excellent, considering it is moderately driven
Light Output: ★★★★☆
This light does well considering the amps and emitter. Based on the components and power, it seems on course with even the best C8's out there. It may have a slight advantage for throw, since the 23 kcd is pretty decent for only 600 lumens.
(Update) Following is levels by mode:
Hi: | 2.33A | 595 lumens |
Medium: | 1.20A | 340 lumens |
Low: | 0.26A | 75 lumens |
Modes are well spread out. The beam pattern had a very well defined hot spot, better defined than most, no sign of rings.
Summary: ★★★★☆
I've been looking for a decent quality light that is a C8 size and C8 compatible but uses a 26650 for a long time now. This light seems to fit the bill. Only shortcoming I find is it uses the deeper reflector: 41.4mm width, 36.25mm deep, 38mm inner diameter. The pill size seems to be the perfect C8 size.
This is an excellent quality budget light for the price, which is what I would expect from a SupFire. Where $10-$20 lights will typically have a poorer finish, thinner metal, cheaper components in the tail cap assembly, driver, pill, reflector, etc., this SupFire is in the $25-$30 category for quality, given it's size. I am giving it only 4 stars because of the short comings of having only a XML T6, classic outdated 5 mode driver, and under-driven for what this host can support.