I own a Teslacom flashlight (12 emitters and four 18650 cells) advertised at 10,000 lumens but subjectively rated at about 2000 lumens. It is bright enough, but even though it is very floody I could still use more light, thus the reason why I specified at least 2000 lumens.

My Teslacom light has never stepped down, even when I let it run for a couple hours on high … but I suspect that it is such a good heat sink that stepdown is not even programmed into it. It doesn’t even get hot. Slightly warm, yes, but only slightly. Not even close to hot.

Mike C, you are correct. I desire a very wide angle illumination area and I doubt very much that the Jaxman M1 can do it. This light is nowhere near 2000 lumens anyways. The specs say 800 lumens on high, which means I would need three of them to reach my 2000+ lumen goal — and that’s not going to happen in this lifetime.

I really don’t think a light exists with my desired output and illumination angle, not at a price I would be willing to spend anyways, so I will probably end up building my own. In this regard, I have a question about this COB module:

CREE COB FULL WATT DC FOR FLOODLIGHT BULB LED

The 10w version says it’s 950-1100 lumens, so three of them might work for me. The specs also say the 10w module has a forward current of 900mA, so three of them would apparently draw 2.7A.

I could buy three of these modules, mount them on a bent piece of aluminum flat bar so each module points outward at a different angle (thus giving me the wide angle light I desire), attach this assembly onto a hardhat or baseball cap, and run the power wire down to a 12v battery pack on my belt.

My question has to do with this particular COB module. Since I have never built anything like this before, does anyone know if three of these modules might be correct for this application?

If I use a sealed lead-acid battery (which from my understanding normally run at 13.5 volts) I would need a step-down module to limit the voltage to 12v, correct?

Would I need a resistor to limit the amperage? Or could I use a battery rated at less than 2.7 amps and skip the resistor?

Any other hints you can suggest to help me avoid problems in a build like this are very much appreciated.