eebowler
Flashlight Enthusiast
As an example, the Bright Star Responder is a 4AA flashlight which uses a PR based bulb. Quickbeam's review stated that other PR based bulbs can be used in the flashlight.
My question is this: If I use a bulb designed for a 4D flashlight in the Responder (4AA), will it be any duller than it would be in the 4D? General quality etc aside,(both bulbs being xenon) will it drain the batteries faster than the original Bright Star bulb? Should I expect the brightness vs time graphs for both bulbs in the responder flashlght to be about the same shape?
This question extends to other bulb battery combinations as well. eg maglite 2D bulb with a 2AA flashlight or a maglite 2AA bulb with 2D size cells.
Should I be asking: Are incandescent bulbs current driven or voltage driven?
Thank you for your inputs.
My question is this: If I use a bulb designed for a 4D flashlight in the Responder (4AA), will it be any duller than it would be in the 4D? General quality etc aside,(both bulbs being xenon) will it drain the batteries faster than the original Bright Star bulb? Should I expect the brightness vs time graphs for both bulbs in the responder flashlght to be about the same shape?
This question extends to other bulb battery combinations as well. eg maglite 2D bulb with a 2AA flashlight or a maglite 2AA bulb with 2D size cells.
Should I be asking: Are incandescent bulbs current driven or voltage driven?
Thank you for your inputs.