Nereus
Enlightened
P1D-CE goes Seoul and Mcr20s & some converter measurements (now w/ pics & beamshots!)
I modded my P1D-CE with Seoul P4 u-bin led and changed reflector to McR20s. The reflector was definitely not a drop-in, I had to mod it roughly to McR18 size. Finally perfect beam, no rings, no artifacts at all, bright hotspot and nice spill To me it looks like the lumens increased, too. I also got rid of the gap between the flaslight head and body.
Now that I had the light disassemblied I took some measurements on the converter. All measurements after the seoul swap with my Fluke 111 DMM, fresh Duracell primary cell used. All input voltages measured under load. It is good to remember that DMM always introduces some series resistance so my input current measurements are slight overestimates. Output current measurements are not affected by this because this is constant current converter. The results are here:
Converter output:
low: 75 mA / 2,84 V / 0,213 W
med: 314 mA / 3,12 V / 0,980 W
high: 715 mA / 3,32 V / 2,374 W
Converter input (last column is efficiency):
low: 91 mA / 2,85 V / 0,259 W / 82,2%
med: 407 mA / 2,73 V / 1,111 W / 88,2%
high: 1190 mA / 2,40 V / 2,856 W / 83,1%
The converter is doing pretty good job, especially the mid-level efficiency is very good! I was a bit surprised by these results, IIRC someone measured that the converter takes almost 2 amps at high mode.
Let's see if I will post some fotos in future... I have no experience on that, yet.
-N
I modded my P1D-CE with Seoul P4 u-bin led and changed reflector to McR20s. The reflector was definitely not a drop-in, I had to mod it roughly to McR18 size. Finally perfect beam, no rings, no artifacts at all, bright hotspot and nice spill To me it looks like the lumens increased, too. I also got rid of the gap between the flaslight head and body.
Now that I had the light disassemblied I took some measurements on the converter. All measurements after the seoul swap with my Fluke 111 DMM, fresh Duracell primary cell used. All input voltages measured under load. It is good to remember that DMM always introduces some series resistance so my input current measurements are slight overestimates. Output current measurements are not affected by this because this is constant current converter. The results are here:
Converter output:
low: 75 mA / 2,84 V / 0,213 W
med: 314 mA / 3,12 V / 0,980 W
high: 715 mA / 3,32 V / 2,374 W
Converter input (last column is efficiency):
low: 91 mA / 2,85 V / 0,259 W / 82,2%
med: 407 mA / 2,73 V / 1,111 W / 88,2%
high: 1190 mA / 2,40 V / 2,856 W / 83,1%
The converter is doing pretty good job, especially the mid-level efficiency is very good! I was a bit surprised by these results, IIRC someone measured that the converter takes almost 2 amps at high mode.
Let's see if I will post some fotos in future... I have no experience on that, yet.
-N
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