Brinkmann LED 2 AA headlamp?

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May 7, 2003
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Just noticed the first headlamp from Brinkmann I think I've ever seen. Ok, not the first LED headlamp, but for the money, this one looks good. Fixed focus lens & reflector combo. The single led can only be a luxeon, and if so, it's either a reeealy low Vf (E or F bin) or running off a boost circuit. Check it out under 'flashlights' at www.thebrinkmanncorp.com.

Anyone have this yet? I'm eager to get it, to replace my petzl zoom.

~ned
 
I don't have one, but I've played with one. I don't think it's a Luxeon, I think it is a single 5mm LED. The lens focuses the light into a fairly bright spotlight (for a single LED), but it is very narrow. I can't see this being useful for much of anything. Not wide enough for use close-up and not bright enough to really throw if throw is what you want. I think there are much better choices available.

However, it might well be fine as a weak headlamp with the convex lens removed.
 
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I have 2 of those Brinkmann headlamps. It uses a 5 mm Nichia LED. I have been attempting to run one of them into the ground, with no success. I have used Alkalines, Lithium AAs, and NiMH in it, and all types work just fine.

Guys, this Bright enough vs Not bright enough thing is really a matter of individual need (or desire).

If I can see my way on Black blacktop (no seal coating), with a particular light, I pronounce it fit to see where you are walking with. This one IS fit.

The Beam is essentially a Brinkmann Rebel. In fact, this headlamp is the headlamp version of the 2AA Rebel. Runtime is better than the Rebel.

When I look at a headlamp, I go by my experience of Living out of a tent and backpack, and also look at it on its own merits (rather than preconceived notions).

The fact that it can run on alkaline, NiMH, and Lithium AAs, makes it much more attractive than first glance.
 
I got an LED headlamp from my aunt for christmas. I know it's not the most incredible headlamp in the world, but it worked for me pretty well (I've since replaced it with a Rayovac 3-in-1).

Brinkmann next to a 2AA and a 4D maglite

It runs one standard white LED on two AA batteries. I haven't timed how long batteries last, but I know it's up in the neighborhood typical for LED devices.

The unit us comfortable to wear on my head and all the straps are adjustable. The battery pack and head unit have foam pads where they sit against the head. The power switch is a click on/click off rubber-covered button on the top of the head unit. The battery compartment's construction could be beefier, but I haven't had any problems yet (and there are a lot of hacks and dings on it). A rubber band wrapped around it would keep it from popping open and losing your batteries if it got banged on a low ceiling or something, but I have never had this happen.

battery pack closed
battery pack open

The light output is comparable to that of a 2AA maglite, except it is a sharp bluish-white instead of a soft orange color:
(These are each 1 second at F3.2, ISO 100 with a Canon A70 in my somewhat dark dorm room)


04.jpg


The lamp came with a small convex lens built into the protective lens. It made the beam have a bright spot in the middle, about the size of a coffee can when projected at the ground from head level. Around the bright spot was an almost completely unlit donut shape, surrounded in turn by a dimly-lit diffused larger donut. I didn't like the bright spot. I need more of an evenly diffused light than a sharp spot. I devised a plan to remove the lens.

I was worried about how bright the light would be after removing the lens, but I soon found myself using the headlamp in tunnels and drains with the rubber and acrylic cover removed, exposing the reflector and LED beneath. This is the same effect I would get by cutting the lens out and I liked it, so I went ahead with it.

Initially, I was going to try to sand or grind off the hump in the middle of the window that was the lens, but getting it completely smooth and flat to optical specifications would be nearly impossible. I opted to do it the manly way and hack the whole thing off. The rubber and acrylic shield twists off of the head unit with little effort. The clear acrylic window/cover part comes out of it's black rubber housing by prying the rubber back over some barbs. I used a forstner bit to machine away the flat part of the acrylic piece. Once I had removed about 1/8", I sanded the burrs off of everything and cut a circle out of a scrap of 1/8" acrylic sheet left over from putting a window in my computer's case.

intact (but already modified) head unit

head unit with outer cover and lens housing removed. I used the light like this a lot before modifying it.

the modified lens and cover taken apart (the cutting was done to the part on the right and the new plexiglass lens is on the bottom)

I ended up making the new flat lens a bit on the small side, but it is large enough to catch on the remaining part of the old acrylic tube and work perfectly. Now just drop the new window in to the rubber part and refit the rest of the old acrylic tube in over the top of it to hold it in place. Viola; a new unfocused light.

Not a shabby light for about US$20. Here's a link to it at REI.com:
http://www.rei.com/online/store/ProductDisplay?storeId=8000&catalogId=40000008000&productId=47576078& parent_category_rn=4500596
 
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