Man Creates Open Source Flashlight 172
DeviceGuru writes "Not content with revealing the source code to his mom's banana bread, two-time BattleBots champion Christian Carlberg has developed an open source flashlight. Carlberg first achieved notoriety shredding competitors' robots with Minion's 14-inch saw blade on BattleBots. Now he's all fired up to begin shipping what they say could be the 'world's first open source flashlight.' But why in the world would you want a reprogrammable flashlight?"
Why would I what a reprogrammable flashlight? (Score:5, Funny)
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Well one that looks like this, I can think of a couple uses for it...
No! No! No! TMI!
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Re:Why would I what a reprogrammable flashlight? (Score:4, Funny)
I meant using it as the hilt for a sword.
Great, just what we needed, a new euphemism for that activity.
Re:Why would I what a reprogrammable flashlight? (Score:5, Informative)
Not a new euphemism at all. Mind you, "vagina" is the Latin word for "scabbard".
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LOL ... he's not joking [yahoo.com].
That's the funniest thing I've heard in weeks. :-P
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Really? Citation please, I'd like to confirm before I add that to my random fact repository...
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Really? Citation please, I'd like to confirm before I add that to my random fact repository...
Surprisingly, the top Google hit for 'latin vagina' is not a hot-Latin-chicks porn site. I don't even use SafeSearch. Good job, Google.
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Not a new euphemism at all. Mind you, "vagina" is the Latin word for "scabbard".
So, its a whole 'sheathe my sword' joke spilled over into vocabulary? OK, linguistic WIN.
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FTA: My primary goal is to put as much of your pledge money into what really matters for a light- the LED, the electronics, optics, and the battery.
It seems that the programmability, and thus the open-source nature of said programmability, is really incidental. The thing needs a microcontroller to implement flashing modes etc, and since the guy's a nerd, hey, why not open it up, might get a bit of extra publicity that way. But primarily the guy's trying to make a better flashlight.
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Re:Why would I what a reprogrammable flashlight? (Score:5, Informative)
From one of Christian's comments:
Also, in response to the following question:
He answered:
So, yes, it does appear that he's planning on making it 100% open source.
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That's interesting, I guess, but that sort of thing is trivial to reverse engineer if you wanted to change the design. If I'm going to make a or alter flashlight, the only reason I would do so is if there isn't one close to what I needed, and I'd make my own design because it's not complicated to start from scratch here.
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Absolutely. But it's far more trivial to load a CAD file than to re-trace one. Be that the 3D CAD for the housing or the PCB cad for the board.
But it would take you much more effort and pr
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So why haven't you done it?
CPF [candlepowerforums.com] has a large community of flashlight geeks. Some of them have been at it a long time and are very competent (see McGizmo), but there isn't really anything like what this guy proposes.
Building a suitable housing and mating a good switch and reflector and emitter and driver and lens and power source, have all been done many times over. There is a lack of good, readily programmable, software. Making the thing blink in different patterns is not exactly rocket science, but a few cli
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Kinda depends upon what you mean by "software" and what it is responsible for. I built a standlight for my bicycle. There's software in it that watches the wheel go round (AC from the hub), turns on a battery, watches the wheel not go around for a while, and turns off the battery. Latest "innovation" was adding blink-when-stopped (wait a second, turn off the battery and let the voltage sag to 8v, turn on the battery, repeat). But the controller is NOT doing the heavy lifting of implementing switching-su
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Huh, when I read the headline I assumed the CAD files for the housing, electronics, etc would all be available. Looking closer it seems like you're right, which is a little disappointing (although not much since I'd never build one of these anyway).
Unless I'm missing something, it's open source, the same way that a windows gaming box is open source, because the Jameco catalog had a very general article about selecting and assembling various sub assemblies to "make yer own PC", and it even named by model number one of the parts.
All five pieces of the machine of course are closed source, and both overall and detail blueprints are closed source.
I'm expecting the next breathless admission to be that when he says it has 48 candle power, or whatever, it tur
Re:Why would I what a reprogrammable flashlight? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why would I what a reprogrammable flashlight? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd want one with a wireless beacon so I can find it if I lose it. I've lost half a dozen maglites throughout the years.
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Have it chirp and flash if it gets too far away from your phone. Have your phone chirp as well when it's too far away.
Then you'd lose both of them. ;)
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My initial reaction was... "Who the hell wants a programmable flashlight?" I already have several maglites around the house now - durable, fairly rugged, and bright. But then... the batteries often die, and the bulbs often get weaker. This looks like a pretty good improvement.
So I pledged $220 to the project. Four programmable lights, 500 lumens, rechargeable, heavy duty bar stock casing? Yes please - 2 for camping, 1 for the house, 1 for the car. A persuasive pitch, and it looks like a heck of a prod
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Good Idea (Score:3)
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I really like the idea that you can charge the light over USB and program it too.
I'm not really sure I like that idea. My uses for flashlights tend to be a) camping, and b) when the power goes out. Unfortunately with USB charging I would get one charge's worth of use in those situations. With regular old batteries I can replace them to infinity, and if I forgot some I can pick them up at a gas station on my way to the woods.
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http://www.google.com/search?q=mobile+phone+charger+aa [google.com]
See again above. Alternatively, note that there are two different HexBrights. The HexBright Prime uses CR123a
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With regular old batteries I can replace them to infinity, and if I forgot some I can pick them up at a gas station on my way to the woods.
I think you still don't get it... When my flashlight does dark, I can have light again in about 30 to 60 seconds because I have a pack of AA batteries waiting for it, or whatever other AA powered device runs out of juice. If it takes overnight to charge off my car, that kinda defeats the purpose of using a flashlight at night while backpack camping... Also a lovely circular fail mode when using the flashlight to see what I'm doing while jumpstarting my car in the dark, if I had the juice to charge the lig
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Not sure if you meant to reply to me - but for what it's worth, I was pointing specifically to the fact that one of the two types takes reasonably standard batteries, albeit not AA, and the other (the actually programmable one, the HexBright Flex) will happily run off of one of those AA-based mobile phone chargers. Just don't expect it to run for very long because the 1.5V has to go through a boost first to get up to the USB voltage required (5V) and the battery's mAh rating decreases accordingly. But giv
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I'm assuming, like most things that charge by USB, that you can use it while it's charging.
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The 18650 used in the HexBright Flex is less common
Hmmm... 18650 is the closest thing there is to a standard size for rechargeable li-ions. The fact that there isn't much market for standard-sized rechargeable li-ions is probably the only reason you don't see them more often. They are quite readily available on ebay, from most electronics components shops, etc.
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Not sure how practical the crank would be on a 500 lumen chip. That thing draws 5W at full power. You might be turning a fairly heavy crank to keep it glowing.
Of course, being reprogrammable, you could have the cranking circuit put it in "dim and easy to crank" mode.
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Sure, but there are already portable USB chargers for use with cell phones so you could plug your light into one of those in a pinch. You could also charge the flashlight from a cigarette lighter. Sure, it's carrying more batteries but there are tradeoffs to everything.
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You miss the point - the issue isn't charging, it's availability. With conventional AA/AAA powered flashlights (or other devices), you can carry or trivially obtain spares (rechargeable or non) and then swap them out for constant availability. With USB charging, when your device goes dead - it's dead and unavaila
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I didn't really miss the point. I guess it mainly depends on battery life. If the flashlight lasts an hour and then dies then there's a major problem. If you can plug the thing into your USB slot in your house or car (I'm sure more cars will have them... if not, they charging slots can be added for minimal effort) and charge it constantly and it lasts for 10-15 hours on a charge then it's not really that big of a concern, is it?
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There are also solar chargers.
But what if you are in a cave for a month...
Then you wouldn't be buying this flashlight, would you? Obviously, someone can come up with a situation where this flashlight may not be suitable but not every device has to fit every demand. How many toasters do you know of that can also toast bagels, four at a time? Is it something that an average consumer might need? Not likely. (oblig. Slashdot car analogy) Complaining about the battery in this is like buying a Ford Focus and
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Or 5 watts of solar panels, arranged to feed a 5V regulator. Or build your own USB charger, using a bicycle "dynamo" and a regulator off of that (you don't need a whole bike, you could just mount it and run it like a mini-spinning wheel, you would get many watts of power at a high-ish voltage)
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I'm not really sure I like that idea. My uses for flashlights tend to be a) camping, and b) when the power goes out. Unfortunately with USB charging I would get one charge's worth of use in those situations. With regular old batteries I can replace them to infinity, and if I forgot some I can pick them up at a gas station on my way to the woods.
One of the bigger issues with flashlights is that the batteries are often flat when you finally decide to use it. With replaceable batteries you can, of course, go buy new ones but many a time that's inconvenient (right after the tornado hits). A USB powered flashlight has some potential advantages - you can charge it pretty much anywhere these days. Plug in charger (I can see 4 USB chargers from where I'm sitting now), pretty much any computer made since 2000, many cars. USB is becoming more ubiquitous
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As for the programming, it seems to be a bit overkill. I just built a similar, dumber circuit out of a 555 timer because I had an old filament powered headlamp that I wanted to convert to LED and a bunch of bright LEDs. But if it floats your boat, go for it. Same with the over engineered aluminum case.
A non-programmable light has to cater it's mode selection to the most commonly desired configuration (and defining that configuration is non-trivial). A programmable light can be tailored by the user to meet their specific needs or desires.
I've got several programmable flashlights and I'm very pleased with them.
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If you're worried about batteries just get a flashlight with a crank or one of those ones you shake to charge. You can also apply some glow in the dark paint so the flashlight glows if and when the power goes out.
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Still don't put it in a drawer, unless you are searching with a Geiger counter.
Of course, first you have to find the Geiger counter.
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Got an idea - get a 12v to usb adapter (cig lighter/power port - whatever you want to call it) for your vehicle. Covers both scenarios:
a. camping. Someone has a vehicle around, and even if you don't start the car you can get a bunch of charges into the light.
b. power goes out - again, there is a car somewhere.
Anyhow; my main point here is this - in Ohio we had the power go out maybe 3 years ago - pretty bad wind storms. Most of the stores nearby were shut down due to lack of power, so getting batteries
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Well, I bought a solar USB charger [scosche.com] at Wal Mart for thirty bucks. Good enough to charge cell phones and iPods and still have juice left ... not quite up to the task of charging my Tom Tom without being completely depleted. (In fact, I've got two of them, and they're fairly rugged and come with carabiner
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My son recently bridged into Boy Scouts, so I have been looking at devices like this. How good is your experience with these? How quickly does it recharge in good sunlight? Do you find it works pretty well even with high draw items such as cell phones (Droid X, standard battery)?
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I put it in the "pretty good" range.
To fully recharge from depleted, it can take a couple of days (according to the web, depending on light etc) to recharge with modest sunlight (which is why I have two). It will recharge from a wa
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I *almost* threw down for the basic model until I realized it took non standard batteries. Would it have been that difficult to design one around AA batteries?
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cr123 is a standard battery. Almost any place that has cameras or batteries has them. They are more expensive, but last longer.
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If you can't easily find them at Walmart or any big box store, then it's really not 'standard'.
AA Batteries [walmart.com]
CR123 Search [walmart.com]
Rechargeable NIMH CR123 Search on Ebay [ebay.com]
Rechargeable NIMH AA Search on Ebay [ebay.com]
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You can find them at Walmart, just not online.
CR123 NiMH batteries are not normal, Li-ion rechargeable are easier to find
http://shop.ebay.com/i.html?_nkw=cr123+rechargeable [ebay.com]
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You do realize that you just searched for CR123 NiMH, right?
Would you like to retry that search with Lithium instead?
http://shop.ebay.com/i.html?_nkw=CR123a+lithium [ebay.com]
Walmart obviously shows 1 hit on their site.. how many more do you need?
I've seen them aplenty in the U.S., they're typically on the racks near the registers.
They're a bit more rare in the EU, though. Plenty of websites that sell them, but step into a local Aldi or what
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Ironically, that statement isn't true because there's already a lot of good, cheap mousetraps available on the market. (A while back, This American Life did an short clip on building a better mousetrap - and how people keep trying to build better ones, even though there isn't really a need for better ones. "The world actually does not need a better mousetrap. The world will not beat a path to that person's door." http://www.thisamer [thisamericanlife.org]
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It's a bright flashlight that can be used to blind an attacker at night, plus it fits into your hand in case you need to hit back (sim
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How about a portable strobe light (dim the power from 500 lumens and select your own flash rate)? You can also use it for stop motion analysis, or for some interesting photography effects. Program SOS Morse code into it and see who shows up? Get a few of them, set random blink rates, put them on a remote control helicopter, and go have some fun with the UFO enthusiasts?
It's a bright flashlight that can be used to blind an attacker at night, plus it fits into your hand in case you need to hit back (similar to holding a roll of quarters, but more useful).
I think the idea is to see what programs or uses people can come up with for an easy to program high powered flashlight.
I think there should be a setting to induce photosensitive epilepsy.
All I would need is 4 settings, high, low, blinky, and seizure induction.
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I've got a programmable light that can run from 0.07L up to 100L. The level I use 90% of the time is about 3L. I almost never use it higher than 30L.
Try looking at something close with your "dumb" light at night without ruining your night vision. You can't even do it via ceiling bounce.
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As with the poster above, that doesn't sound as much useful as it does geek marketing hype.
My 'system', such as it is, is already built around rechargeable AA batteries. As I have a pool of charged spares, that means I always have fresh batteries if a device dies, or can cannibalize between devices at need - and immediately have that device available. Having to wait to charge the flashlight and requiring an USB charge
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I keep one at home in case the power goes out and I need to recharge my phone, and one in my car in case my phone is dying and I have to leave my car and take it with me. Since I can put rechargeable AA batteries in them, in makes perfect sense.
Also, who says you have to wait to charge the flashlight? Most things
Well (Score:2)
It looks pretty basic to me.
If it had a bunch of sensors stuck to it, you could reprogram something pretty cool, but as it is, what are you going to do with it?
Re:Well (Score:4, Insightful)
Program it to do whatever you want?
give it a strobe function, a slow fade in function, an SOS function, set the levels of lighting the way you want them and not the manufacturer default of "off / barely bright enough to find my way around the house at night / ARGH MY EYES", etc.
Add further capabilities with RGB version down the line.
Also, I wouldn't be surprised if some of the data pins on the microcontroller go unused and if he's smart-ish, he'll break those out for you so you can hook up sensors.
Alternatively, perhaps you can work through the existing USB interface, though that requires more work on your part.
All unused pins will be accessible (Score:3, Informative)
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If it had a light sensor stuck to it, you could program the bulb to give a light output depending on how dark the surroundings are. That might be fun to play with, you could pretty much choose how light the surroundings are.
BSD? GPL? Apache?? Hardware too or just SW? (Score:2)
I wonder if they are going to open source the entire project, hardware and all? I guess I'll hold out and wait and see what kind of license they use on this before I "donate"...
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From one of Christian's comments:
Note that he will be using stock components for some bits of the hardware. It's not up to him to 'open source' the microcontoller or Cree's LED solutions, for example. So in that manner of speaking, no, it's not 100% open source. Nor is a typical computer running Linux. But anybody can build a Linux-capable machine without knowing ho
Did anyone else... (Score:3)
Did anyone else read this headline as "Man Creates Open Source Fleshlight"?
Because man, what a different article that would be.
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yeah, and boy was I were disappointed
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I love the trend of "open source hardware" (Score:2)
Website reads like an infomercial (Score:2)
Oblig. Penny Arcade on Kickstarter [penny-arcade.com]
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I don't know if you're serious - but I know plenty of people who can program but wouldn't know the first thing about electronics - and vice-versa.
Even if you do know enough about both, have you considered what you're saying?
First you have to take a reasonably powerful flashlight - say an older P7 because they're available cheap-ish - which still runs at about the same price as this thing.
Then you have to take it apart and make some
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This is what I was thinking? What value is brought by this flashlight that can't be quickly and cheaply replicated? But, it's "open source" so let all Slashdot the drooling begin.
Having a flashlight that "runs Linux" isn't worth it to me.
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http://www.cabelas.com/product/Camping/Lights/Flashlights%7C/pc/104795280/c/104743080/sc/104332680/SureFire-Outdoorsman-LED-Flashlights/1221819.uts?destination=%2Fcatalog%2Fbrowse%2Fcamping-lights-flashlights%2F_%2FN-1100700%2FNs-CATEGORY_SEQ_104332680%3FWTz_l%3DSBC%253BMMcat104794380%253Bcat104743080&WTz_l=SBC%3BMMcat104794380%3Bcat104743080%3Bcat104332680 [cabelas.com]
There is a comparable flashlight, and it is only 85 lumens. Try to find something around 500 lumens, then compare prices, I think you will be surpri
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Which you could probably do with any flashlight if you know how to do that.
While spending hours of time (which to me, unlike you apparently, is worth something) and probably more on parts than this flashlight costs.
I find people like you funny. You spend more on doing something "cheaply" than it'd have cost you to buy a proper product in the first place.
Things I could do with the Open flashlight (Score:2)
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One million flashlights would not give you HD.
You'd need closer to 3 million.
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You would need 6220800 single color lights or 2073600 multi-color lights
"Why in the world?" Four Words: (Score:2)
Inefficient machining (Score:2)
I machined the body out of 1-inch aluminum hex bar stock.
He actually machined out the center of hex bar stock. Boring a large-diameter hole lengthwise through bar stock is a slow job, and 80% of the metal ends up as chips. You don't do that in a production product. (Well, Apple once did it for one model of laptop, but that didn't catch on.) The outside machining doesn't look all that tough. It's lathe work, either manual or CNC. There's a lot of excess metal there, though, which runs the weight up.
If you want a good flashlight, get one of the MagLite models. [maglite.com] T
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If you'd read the KickStarter page, you would've come across this part:
Which pretty much addresses half your post.
Your corrosion and wiring concerns are valid enough, but I'm confident that both will be treated appropriately. My only concern is actually with regar
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He actually machined out the center of hex bar stock. Boring a large-diameter hole lengthwise through bar stock is a slow job, and 80% of the metal ends up as chips. You don't do that in a production product.
If you'd watched the video (WTFV? looks too much like 'WTF'...) you would know that he acknowledges this problem and says that he'd like to replace that machining step by extruding a hollow hex bar. But to do that he needs to make a mould and do a production run large enough to keep the per-unit price down. That requires money and pre-orders, which is partly why he set up the Kickstarter project.
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Yes, you could get a 3 D-Cell mag-light (10x the size?) that outputs 1/5 the light for about the same money...sounds like a great idea, you go out and do that, I will get the 500 lumen flashlight for $80.
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Wow, even better, I misread the price, it is $60, or $75 with laser etched words of your choice.
Programming Mode Idea (Score:2)
Why? (Score:2)
You love the sound of the word "overengineered"
It's the perfect flashlight for working on your W140 Mercedes. [wikipedia.org]
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Not really. Only the 'approvals' bit would cost a pretty penny.
All of the other measurements are routinely done at enthusiast forums, such as candlepowerforums or that polish one, with several members having reasonably expensive, calibrated, equipment to do just that. Their numbers are more reliable than that of the manufacturer's, too.
You can also usually find information on the LED used - in the case of the HexBright, a Cree XM-L - at those forums. The XM-L is still pretty new, though, so there haven't
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It exists, but it is just a model. One that makes noise would be nice.
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3193 [thingiverse.com]
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Also, this flashlight costs $80 (for the better model) and outputs 500 lumens.
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If your li-ion cell gets hot while charging, recycle it. It's well past it's useful (and safe) life.
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it would be easier and cheaper to just buy a TV-B-gone or Arduino (with IR LEDs) and program it.
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That's a good point.
You could upload different flash patterns to it from an iPhone app (better make that an Android app. Apple isn't likely going to allow this in their precious app store). You could have finer control over its operation without having to add multiple buttons or memorize complex button sequences. You could modulate the output for use as an optical communications link.
But the best application I can think of is to turn it on remotely in the event someone breaks in to your house. The flashli