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128 LED flashlight?

mobobuff

Lifer
Apr 5, 2004
11,099
1
81
What's it powered by? A couple D cells? Probably not very bright. Cool though.
 

BrokenVisage

Lifer
Jan 29, 2005
24,771
14
81
Those flashlights are sooo cheap though, I had one with like 32 LED's and the cheap-o imitation-rubber button stopped working out of no where one night and I haven't been able to fix it since.
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,610
7,258
136
Originally posted by: Runes911
260 LUMEN <------ That bright, duh! :D

What's a regular flashlight usually rated at?
 

mugs

Lifer
Apr 29, 2003
48,920
46
91
Originally posted by: Kaido
Originally posted by: Runes911
260 LUMEN <------ That bright, duh! :D

What's a regular flashlight usually rated at?

That is a dirty, dirty lie.

You can put all the LEDs you want in there, but it's limited by its batteries. And if it can get 30 hours off 4 AAs as it claims (highly suspect as well), it's not going to be very bright.

I'd say it's probably about as bright as an Inova X5. Edit: No, brighter than that... somewhere between an X5 and a Surefire G2.

http://www.flashlightreviews.com/features/chart_manu.htm
 

dullard

Elite Member
May 21, 2001
26,056
4,708
126
For years typical LEDs were under 5000 mcd. In the last two years or so, 10-20k mcd standard LEDs became widely available. Very recently, very high power LEDs became available and they can far surpass that level. It appears that the flashlight is using the standard low power 15k mcd LEDs. So as a very crude estimate, imagine the typical LED and make it 3-5 times brighter. Now place 128 of them together. You'll end up with ~500 times as bright as the LEDs you've seen for years. Thus, that flashlight should be bright enough for most needs.

But as others above have mentioned, there is a lie somewhere on the page. 128 of those LEDs will drain those batteries in a couple hours at full brightness. The only way to make it last that long is to turn the brightness way down.

I don't know if they are lying about the battery life or lying about the brightness.
 

apex32

Senior member
Sep 4, 2006
641
0
0
Originally posted by: dullard
For years typical LEDs were under 5000 mcd. In the last two years or so, 10-20k mcd standard LEDs became widely available. Very recently, very high power LEDs became available and they can far surpass that level. It appears that the flashlight is using the standard low power 15k mcd LEDs. So as a very crude estimate, imagine the typical LED and make it 3-5 times brighter. Now place 128 of them together. You'll end up with ~500 times as bright as the LEDs you've seen for years. Thus, that flashlight should be bright enough for most needs.

But as others above have mentioned, there is a lie somewhere on the page. 128 of those LEDs will drain those batteries in a couple hours at full brightness. The only way to make it last that long is to turn the brightness way down.

I don't know if they are lying about the battery life or lying about the brightness.


Yea, probably not as bright as you would think.
 

0roo0roo

No Lifer
Sep 21, 2002
64,795
84
91
probably wont take long before it starts to fail, cheap workmanship i bet.
as for the light, its all flood, no throw. not that useful.
 

Mark R

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
8,513
16
81
260 lumens, eh?

Surely it would be easier and cheaper just to use a few high-powered LEDs, instead of 128 standard low-power ones. It's not difficult to get LEDs which are 100 lumens each, and you can get 120 lumens if you try.

That said, if you did connect 2 of those high power LEDs to 4 AA (NIMH) batteries, you'd get about 1.5 hours of light.