Happy New Year customers old and new, and he is something good to start the year.
The Lynx SAR 2
This lamp represents the culmination of a mission to combine awesome power with heat sustainability, low form factor and weight. The Mk 1 MagnumStar was the first commercially available lamp to put over 1000 lumens on someone’s head. Albeit at a slightly uncomfortable weight and requiring a belt mounted battery. This lamp manages an awesome 4700 lumens of beam power (data sheet) in a reasonably lightweight lamp and helmet mounted battery.
All thanks to new LED and Li Ion technology.
Similar in concept to the original SAR the new model uses higher output Cree XP-L beam emitters in a smaller and lighter body with more user friendly re positioned switches and heatsinking recessed into the rear of the lamp.
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However, the lamp itself represents no real huge leap from the first SAR, the quantum leap is in the power pack. Weighing in at 300 grams same as the standard ‘long burn’ pack, it is also designed to mount easily on the rear of the helmet and the whole thing is a reasonably light, wearable package.
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The new lamp is slightly smaller that the previous version and weighs about 260 grams against the 300 of its predecessor.
Just like its predecessor each switch gives three different beam setting, one also gives downlighter, the other also gives flood on three modes same as beams. Low beam on one switch is “Standard” at 200 lumens, the other is a pilot. There are 34 possible different lighting settings and combinations.
The twin switches are now at the rear which is a lot more user friendly, and there is also extra heatsinking recessed into the back of the lamp. On test the extra cooling is quite noticeable.
The new lamp has a slight downward inclination on the flood mounting, this is to get the light where its wanted rather than up the roof.
The downlighter is the same of its predecessor but now runs at just over 250mA for less battery hit than the old one by virtue of a more efficient switch mode driver in place of the old linear driver. The new driver runs at 95% efficiency throughout most of the battery discharge range and gives constant output right down to 6.3V input.
Although the new power bank only contains four cells it easily sustains the output of the lamp regardless of the low voltage overhead by use the latest technology ultra high discharge (20 amps per cell) Panasonic Lithium Ion cells reputedly designed for Tesla. The maximum safe output of the power bank is an amazing 40 amps, but is electronically governed down to 10 amps. The lamp draws up to about 6 amps. Slight drawback is the capacity which is 5200 mAh against the 7000 mAh of the standard 4 cell power banks, they are also slightly more expensive, but worth it to get so much power into a small package. The new power bank isof course backwardly compatible with the original SAR.
The standard mode beams draw about 220 mA, the downlighters 200 mA (at 8V lab PSU) combined these output about 500 lumens for a 420 mA battery hit which will go for over 12 hours. Obviously, if the beams on their own are good enough you can double that, 200 lumens is enough for quite a few people. Full power you are down to a bit less than half an hour, but in reality that output is seldom used.
Twin floods are same as the X2000 and will give over 2000 lumens on their own, great for photography.
UHD Power Bank: Technical Spec.
Weight 300 grams
No of cells 4, configuration 2P X 2S
Capacity 5200 mAh
Cell manufacturer and Type: Panasonic NCR18650NSX
Overcharge protection voltage per cell 4.3V
Over discharge protection voltage per cell 2.5V (under load)
Overall Max continuous safe discharge current 40 amps
Overall Max continuous controlled discharge current 10 amps
IP67 waterproof and blow resistant.
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For its reasonable price of £325 plus delivery this possibly offers the most advanced lamp on the market at this present time.
I actually have one in stock, but for how long?
:lol:
My avatar is a poor likeness.