Matt7337
Enlightened
What's happening at NiteCore? - Update 01/07/11
Please note that my comments here are made with the standing opinion that NiteCore were (or are) a great flashlight manufacturer. I have only been a high performance flashlight enthusiast for two years but in that time NiteCore quickly became one of my favourite manufacturers because of their innovative ideas (beginning with the Smart PD system and moving on to the SR series) and fantastic build quality. The NEX which was my first NC flashlight went straight to #1 on my EDC rotation the day I got it and its design and functionality blew me away. Keep this opinion in mind when you read the following:
This has been brushed over in several threads here in the LED section for the past couple of months and I think it's time we had a thread to discuss the disturbing things that have been observed by the flashlight enthusiast community from Nitecore over the past few months.
The first thing that I noticed wrong with any of the NiteCore products that I own was the ramping fault in the magnetic ring of the SR3. Any of you that own one will know what I'm talking about - the light skips to maximum output in between two of the middle modes on the selector ring. The extremely limited run of 18650 extension tubes for a light that in testing here on CPF proved itself as a fantastic single 18650 flashlight both confused and greatly irritated me. I have not been able to find one for my own SR3 since they sold out everywhere and have been forced to design my own and will be having a prototype machined soon.
The next thing that I heard of was that the IFE1 had still got issues with the selector ring, which was supposed to be a refined version of that on the SR3 and a result of lessons learned by NiteCore with the circuitry and mode adjustment on the SR3. When I heard that they had sent IFE1 lights to market which still had problems with the selector ring, alarm bells began to ring in the distance.
The updated D20 R2 that I got in July this year is fantastic. Fit, finish, function and everything else about this light screams quality. It may have taken them a couple of updates to get there, but they hit it out of the park with the latest version of the D20. Imagine my disappointment when I returned to CPF a few months later and read up on the D11 and EX11. The EX11 and D11 threads popping up in the LED forum recently piqued my interest and I started to research both lights to see if one of them might make a nice addition to my collection. I hadnt bought any 1xAA lights to date so the D11 interested me a lot. I was shocked to see that neither the EX11 or the D11 went to market with a clip - a real drop of the ball as far as Im concerned for NiteCore. Next, the issue of abnoramlly high parasitic drain on both the 11 series lights was discovered... especially bad and common on the D11 it seems. This is a flashlight which can drain a battery in 4 days even if the light is never switched on in that time. The publicity photos for the D11 also showed a badly off-center emitter, and many CPF members who have bought them report that this is the case in their D11s as well.
Despite all that, a D11 became available on the MP and I bought it last week. It arrived a couple of days ago and I was; 1) disappointed to see that they have ditched the nice gift box packaging in favour of cheaper retail store packaging with an eyelet hook for hanging it on a shop shelf and 2) disgusted to see that the anodizing on the head and battery tube of my D11 was so mismatched that they may as well have been two different colours.
As you can see, my opinion of NiteCore and their products has taken a real hit in the past few months, and I can barely believe that a large company like them would allow such things to happen that can and have damaged their reputation like this. They seem to be taking one step forward and two steps back. Whilst it may be true that they are still manufacturing good flashlights, I have very little confidence in their quality any more. Can anyone shed any light on why the issues I have raised here were allowed to go unchecked on lights that went to market and eventually ended up in the hands of NiteCore customers? Is it just a case that the big manufacturers simply do not pause for a moment before sending a product to market and think to themselves what would our customers think of this decision?
Please note that my comments here are made with the standing opinion that NiteCore were (or are) a great flashlight manufacturer. I have only been a high performance flashlight enthusiast for two years but in that time NiteCore quickly became one of my favourite manufacturers because of their innovative ideas (beginning with the Smart PD system and moving on to the SR series) and fantastic build quality. The NEX which was my first NC flashlight went straight to #1 on my EDC rotation the day I got it and its design and functionality blew me away. Keep this opinion in mind when you read the following:
This has been brushed over in several threads here in the LED section for the past couple of months and I think it's time we had a thread to discuss the disturbing things that have been observed by the flashlight enthusiast community from Nitecore over the past few months.
The first thing that I noticed wrong with any of the NiteCore products that I own was the ramping fault in the magnetic ring of the SR3. Any of you that own one will know what I'm talking about - the light skips to maximum output in between two of the middle modes on the selector ring. The extremely limited run of 18650 extension tubes for a light that in testing here on CPF proved itself as a fantastic single 18650 flashlight both confused and greatly irritated me. I have not been able to find one for my own SR3 since they sold out everywhere and have been forced to design my own and will be having a prototype machined soon.
The next thing that I heard of was that the IFE1 had still got issues with the selector ring, which was supposed to be a refined version of that on the SR3 and a result of lessons learned by NiteCore with the circuitry and mode adjustment on the SR3. When I heard that they had sent IFE1 lights to market which still had problems with the selector ring, alarm bells began to ring in the distance.
The updated D20 R2 that I got in July this year is fantastic. Fit, finish, function and everything else about this light screams quality. It may have taken them a couple of updates to get there, but they hit it out of the park with the latest version of the D20. Imagine my disappointment when I returned to CPF a few months later and read up on the D11 and EX11. The EX11 and D11 threads popping up in the LED forum recently piqued my interest and I started to research both lights to see if one of them might make a nice addition to my collection. I hadnt bought any 1xAA lights to date so the D11 interested me a lot. I was shocked to see that neither the EX11 or the D11 went to market with a clip - a real drop of the ball as far as Im concerned for NiteCore. Next, the issue of abnoramlly high parasitic drain on both the 11 series lights was discovered... especially bad and common on the D11 it seems. This is a flashlight which can drain a battery in 4 days even if the light is never switched on in that time. The publicity photos for the D11 also showed a badly off-center emitter, and many CPF members who have bought them report that this is the case in their D11s as well.
Despite all that, a D11 became available on the MP and I bought it last week. It arrived a couple of days ago and I was; 1) disappointed to see that they have ditched the nice gift box packaging in favour of cheaper retail store packaging with an eyelet hook for hanging it on a shop shelf and 2) disgusted to see that the anodizing on the head and battery tube of my D11 was so mismatched that they may as well have been two different colours.
As you can see, my opinion of NiteCore and their products has taken a real hit in the past few months, and I can barely believe that a large company like them would allow such things to happen that can and have damaged their reputation like this. They seem to be taking one step forward and two steps back. Whilst it may be true that they are still manufacturing good flashlights, I have very little confidence in their quality any more. Can anyone shed any light on why the issues I have raised here were allowed to go unchecked on lights that went to market and eventually ended up in the hands of NiteCore customers? Is it just a case that the big manufacturers simply do not pause for a moment before sending a product to market and think to themselves what would our customers think of this decision?
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