iamlucky13
(iamlucky13)
5
Many flashlights have no thermal sensors, although hopefully that is not common on very high power lights.
BLF style lights often use an uncalibrated sensor on the driver for temperature. This includes Anduril-based lights. The two main goals here are to keep the LED at an acceptable temperature (generally needs to be less than 150 degrees Celsius, but less for some LEDs), and to keep the user’s hand comfortable.
If the sensor does not get calibrated by the user, it may read low or high. Reading low increases the concern.
Normally, the majority of the heat is generated by the LED. The LED has a very good thermal path to the body, and the body usually has an ok thermal path to the driver through both air and the PCB.
If the heat is being generated mostly by the battery, the battery has a poor thermal path to the body through the foil and plastic layers inside the battery, through the steel case, and through the spring and air.
Based on that, if the battery self-heats enough, I could see it reaching concerning temperatures before the temperature sensor detects it.
Also, while a 30Q can withstand brief exposures to 100 degrees C, that’s no the kind of battery we’re concerned about here.