I reckon this will end up with me spending maybe 200 on making an overpowered light I don’t need and never will.
Maybe tools don’t count but still, so far, a bench power supply and now a DC clamp (kaiweets ht206d) because I had a look and couldn’t believe how much you could get them for these days without having to pay Fluke a stack of cash.
So after replacing my dodgy inline ammeter measuring, I can finally say these are decent numbers measured while on the 7.4V lithium battery pack:
2.57A @ 6.00V for 15W on high
1.31A @ 5.80V for 7.6W on low
Soldering in replacements for the high mode 0.47 resistor, 0.33 gave about 18W which wasn’t enough of a gain to care about.
0.22 was 3.49A @ 6.39V for 21W
So one left and…
0.1 was 4.78A @ 6.38V for 30.5W
30W was the goal so we’re gonna stay with 0.1 ohm, at least run temperature checks and make sure it doesn’t misbehave when left on high for hours.
The resistor has a drop of 0.47V with 4.78A, making it a 2W heater, far less than expected.
Numbers were quite a bit different running on the 7.4V battery compared to the power supply. As EasyB said, there’s the internal resistance of the battery not accounted for. The resistors were burning off a LOT more on the power supply.
In the end it was a trivial mod. Things might change if china ever sends the enormous battery pack I ordered off aliexpress 
*Well what I was thinking of was changing to a driver instead of a resistor but if my numbers are correct, burning 2W with a resistor to control 30W through the LED is already fine?