gary3911
Newly Enlightened
Got my E1b last week and as I posted in the E1b thread, initially my assessment of it was positive.
After using it a few days "for real", I have to say I've changed my mind.
Firstly, the way the light switches on to the high (claimed 80 lumens) beam first and the low (claimed 5 lumens) beam second has gone past being a quirk to being a major annoyance. It seems to make no real sense, a waste of battery life and gives you a blast of blinding light before a more acceptable level.
Second, as noted by many initially, the finishing is VERY slick. It might not seem it at first, but in actual useage I've dropped my E1b three times. It's not just the holding of it, but it's also hard to turn the tailcap or head. There are some longitudinal grooves milled into the light as a sort of afterthought - but they are totally inadequate. If it weren't for the clip, handling this light would be like holding a greased snake in a ballbearing factory.
So whilst it's no doubt a high quality light, and on this forum, lights get totally dissected in reviews and expectations/standards are so much higher than anywhere else; I can't recommend it.
I was hoping I wouldn't have to look elsewhere for a light for this role, but the E1b is forcing me to seek another solution.
Critically, I think this is a failure of design and testing rather than any kind of engineering failure.
After using it a few days "for real", I have to say I've changed my mind.
Firstly, the way the light switches on to the high (claimed 80 lumens) beam first and the low (claimed 5 lumens) beam second has gone past being a quirk to being a major annoyance. It seems to make no real sense, a waste of battery life and gives you a blast of blinding light before a more acceptable level.
Second, as noted by many initially, the finishing is VERY slick. It might not seem it at first, but in actual useage I've dropped my E1b three times. It's not just the holding of it, but it's also hard to turn the tailcap or head. There are some longitudinal grooves milled into the light as a sort of afterthought - but they are totally inadequate. If it weren't for the clip, handling this light would be like holding a greased snake in a ballbearing factory.
So whilst it's no doubt a high quality light, and on this forum, lights get totally dissected in reviews and expectations/standards are so much higher than anywhere else; I can't recommend it.
I was hoping I wouldn't have to look elsewhere for a light for this role, but the E1b is forcing me to seek another solution.
Critically, I think this is a failure of design and testing rather than any kind of engineering failure.