KevinL
Flashlight Enthusiast
Not bad. Despite bringing the cost down Fenix does not appear to have skimped on quality in this light. I too am tired of the buy-it-and-break-it-on-the-first-day rubbish, quality absolutely matters to me. The idea is to reduce cost without compromise in quality.
Fenix got this right except for the horrendous clamshell packaging which did cause some injury when I was opening it. Make the plastic thinner please. I hate this kind of packaging. I need to buy some garden shears of suitable size for the next time I encounter things like this.
That aside, the E21 is very nice. Compared to a LD20, it is a much thicker, bigger light. Build quality of the light is solid, rugged and well executed - the same standard we've come to expect from the Fenix lights.
Fenix also put some serious thought into the reflector, which is optimized for the Cree XP-G emitter. This light really does throw pretty well while retaining a suitably useful sidespill beam for navigation work. It has a smooth reflector with slightly visible machining lines but the beam quality is impeccable.
There isn't much that's complicated about the E21. Twist the head for selecting levels, forward clicky switch in the tail, doesn't tailstand. Good enough.
If you're looking for a simple, solid, bright practical utility light for the non-flashaholics, this is it. I'm buying them for precisely this purpose.
Fenix got this right except for the horrendous clamshell packaging which did cause some injury when I was opening it. Make the plastic thinner please. I hate this kind of packaging. I need to buy some garden shears of suitable size for the next time I encounter things like this.
That aside, the E21 is very nice. Compared to a LD20, it is a much thicker, bigger light. Build quality of the light is solid, rugged and well executed - the same standard we've come to expect from the Fenix lights.
Fenix also put some serious thought into the reflector, which is optimized for the Cree XP-G emitter. This light really does throw pretty well while retaining a suitably useful sidespill beam for navigation work. It has a smooth reflector with slightly visible machining lines but the beam quality is impeccable.
There isn't much that's complicated about the E21. Twist the head for selecting levels, forward clicky switch in the tail, doesn't tailstand. Good enough.
If you're looking for a simple, solid, bright practical utility light for the non-flashaholics, this is it. I'm buying them for precisely this purpose.