I made for many Throwers and Flood to Throw like TRA, TMA, TMR, FT66 etc
These are my latest thrower TG2 and TRE , but They are not the LAST ONE
(Still waiting for Round LED)
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. Head aspheric lens : new 7G5-V2 collimator head Battery tube : KEYGOS M10
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What will I name these? CREGOS or KEYLANT LOL :bigsmile:
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. TG2 spec :
XP-G2 20mm star
New 7G5-V2 collimator head
2280mA 6x7138 V2
Power 1x18650 or 1x26650
110,000 - 130,000 lux
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. TRE spec :
XR-E ez900 20mm Star
New 7G5-V2 collimator head
1500mA 3-18V
Power 2xCR123 , 2xR123R , 2x18350
140,000 - 170,000 lux
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. My concept and why I made them :
67mm aspheric lens is not too small and not too big to hold in hand.
Be easy to swap LED and Driver.
Sometime I don’t need spill to bother someone, Focus to the target.
I chose KEYGOS battery tube because :
-good price
-good shape (I tried other 18650 battery tube but it’s too small )
-can take 18650 or 26650
-better performance with 26650
-can tail stand
-come with lanyard and 18650 sleeve
Driver for XR-E ez900 I don’t use 7135s because It needs more Vf to LED. 3.7-4.0V to LED @ 1.5A + 0.7V driver drop voltage, so It needs at least 4.5V up
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note :
Crelant 67mm aspheric lens suck. I changed to DX aspheric lens.
I ordered DX 66mm aspherics lenses 5 times, there are 66-67mm .
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I've been eyeing your work for a long time now and I must say that these are probably the prettiest of the ones you've made that I've seen. (A matter of taste I know)
Can you tell me why do you think the Crelant aspheric lens sucks? I am just curious.
To the one asking about the sst90, if you can run it at even 6.5amps I guarantee that after 5 minutes you’ll burn your hand on the body tube. The X6s aggressive heat sinking runs at just under 50 degrees celcius. Just imagine what it would be on a light with no fins.
Here is a plot of the light output of a SST-90 being driven at 9.5A It is heat-sunk rather well to a copper slug/4D maglight body. The temperature is not too bad, buthe SST-90 just can’t move that much heat out the small package. We are talking about a heat density of 200+ watts per square inch.