Matt7337
Enlightened
Hey everyone. I've mentioned before how much use and occasionally, abuse my Fenix TK11 gets whilst I'm using it at work. For those of you who haven't seen mention of that, I'm an electronics, computer and network engineer and where my TK11 gets the most use is in crawlspaces and attics of residential and business premesis, both completed structures and building sites. I generally don't mind it getting the odd knock or scratch here and there because it's a very well made light and it really can take the abuse.
It got slightly more than a small knock a couple of weeks though, when it fell (got knocked actually) out of the attic of a building I was working in, down through two stories and landed on it's head on bare concrete. Obviously it took a little damage from that - there's quite a bad ding on a couple of the crennelations on the head, but the light still works. It did "stove in" the positive contact on the 18650 cell that was in it at the time, meaning that I can only use that - at my own risk... I know not to trust it - in lights that have a pointy positive spring or contact at the end of the battery tube.
Anyway, apart from the battery and the slight damage on the ridiculously robust head of the TK11, it seems the fall also knocked the LED slightly out of place as well which causes the beam to have more artifacts and distortion than usual. This is really hard to describe so I will go and take some photos of the flashlight later so you can see the damage, but I was wondering if anyone has ever successfully opened the [apparently factory sealed] head of a TK11 before? I don't really want to void the warranty, and I think this thing is still under warranty. I suppose that if for some reason it does fail in the future I would want to be able to send it back, but I'd like some input on whether the driver and reflector assembly can be removed from the head so I can maybe get a better look at the damage to the LED holder and possibly repair it... because it seems really unlikely that the actual driver circuit is going to fail given the amount of abuse it has taken already and the fact that it still works. I'd just like to sort the LED alignment out because as many of you know the beam pattern of the TK11 is bad enough when the LED is in it's proper place, never mind a few millimeters out of place :shakehead
Thanks in advance, pics to follow - and I'll also post those in the "lights at work" thread if I can find it and dig it up :thumbsup:
It got slightly more than a small knock a couple of weeks though, when it fell (got knocked actually) out of the attic of a building I was working in, down through two stories and landed on it's head on bare concrete. Obviously it took a little damage from that - there's quite a bad ding on a couple of the crennelations on the head, but the light still works. It did "stove in" the positive contact on the 18650 cell that was in it at the time, meaning that I can only use that - at my own risk... I know not to trust it - in lights that have a pointy positive spring or contact at the end of the battery tube.
Anyway, apart from the battery and the slight damage on the ridiculously robust head of the TK11, it seems the fall also knocked the LED slightly out of place as well which causes the beam to have more artifacts and distortion than usual. This is really hard to describe so I will go and take some photos of the flashlight later so you can see the damage, but I was wondering if anyone has ever successfully opened the [apparently factory sealed] head of a TK11 before? I don't really want to void the warranty, and I think this thing is still under warranty. I suppose that if for some reason it does fail in the future I would want to be able to send it back, but I'd like some input on whether the driver and reflector assembly can be removed from the head so I can maybe get a better look at the damage to the LED holder and possibly repair it... because it seems really unlikely that the actual driver circuit is going to fail given the amount of abuse it has taken already and the fact that it still works. I'd just like to sort the LED alignment out because as many of you know the beam pattern of the TK11 is bad enough when the LED is in it's proper place, never mind a few millimeters out of place :shakehead
Thanks in advance, pics to follow - and I'll also post those in the "lights at work" thread if I can find it and dig it up :thumbsup: