bigchelis
Flashlight Enthusiast
Take a look and help!!!! I was thinking of picking this up to drop-in = R2 P60 drop-in or P7 P60 drop-in!
Thank you,
bigchelis
Thank you,
bigchelis
It's a Surefire P116c and it does take P60 lamps.
Whilst it may be possible to modify the housing and wiring terminals to allow this - the batteries can only be inserted one way round.This may seem like a stupid question, but why can't the batteries simply be put in backwards?
I don't believe I've ever seen a standard bezel (Z44) being substituted for the shock isolated aluminium bezel used by the P-Series Nitrolon WeaponLight.Another dumb question....
Can a 6P bezel fit in lieu of the nitrolon?
I don't know. However, I guess the meaning of that is that the drop-in won't be damaged by reversed polarity rather than it being able to reverse 'reversed polarity' back the way it needs it in order to power the electronics and LED.A direct drive P7 has reverse polarity protection "Nature of the beast". If I have a P7 P60 drop-in on direct drive does this mean it will work?
Note that the P-Series Nitrolon Handgun WeaponLight shock isolated bezel features a Lexan window. It is at risk of being damaged by excessive heat.A P91 would also make for a really good high output weaponlight.
You would definitely need SureFire's trigger guard adapter rail mount for the Glock. It can not be mounted directly. Even mounting directly to a Picatinny Rail requires it to be modified.I was looking at this one to use on my Glock 32.
Yes - especially the battery contact terminalsWhat limits them from being put in backwards? Is it a physical mechanism/restiction?
I don't know.What about flat topped RCR123s (are these even available anymore?)?
The photo shown above is a very old stock photo.Here is what the seller thinks the official name is
Surefire Nitrolon P114C-DG Weaponlight With remote tail cap