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Reminds me of ink jet printers. Cheap as frig, but the 'screwin' comes when you have to buy the consumables: INK!The new battery prices are retarded.
While the printer is designed to tell you it's time for new ink cartridges even though there's 80% left. Then there's a secret code needed to bypass the built in obsolescence. One of the biggest scams going.Reminds me of ink jet printers. Cheap as frig, but the 'screwin' comes when you have to buy the consumables: INK!
Crafty. Any idea what the lumen output is?home made from a recycled computer monitor base, a switch housing from an old cell phone charger, a 'handle' made of 12ga wire with two eyelets bolted to base, some left over spray paint, a battery adapter that I purchased and, because it has no light, is of little use to me (other than this project), some left over wiring, a few new connectors and two switches, and a set of LED lights i bought for less than $12
estimated total: $15.00 but tossing in that adapter, repurposing isn't the exact same thing, but, that was nearly $20 a while back, so, $35 for my new LED work light set
imho, better than 'on par' with anything on line selling for $60 or more, plus pride in the fact i know 'I Didn't Build It' (yeah, we all relate)
side note:
Beware!
if purchasing LED lights from the Chinesium country, take with a grain of salt what they claim will be the output of the lights, some rate it lm, some watts, some will simply show a picture of a fence being illuminated, at night...lol
this set of lights I bought, they're smaller than two other light's I bought
(the two other lights) they were pre-assembled and made directly for my battery packs at $35 each, and each one of those pre-assembled light assys, has only one light, they produce a bit 'bluer' light and seem to be on equal luminescence as one of my two new light assemblies
the preassembled were rated at 56 watts each, iirc, while the 'new' set i received were rated at 27 watts each...yet they produce nearly identical light patterns and output...that's my experience and after watching a few YT videos on luminescence testing...yeah, DYODD
2¢ but in this case, i shopped the price and got a product that will produce more than enough light output for anything i'm doing, they work satisfactorily...
here's a photo:
View attachment 2388
and the hot glue on that switch box, it's got a rivet inside to hold the base to the main base, but it didn't quite fit the taper so, filler was required, and a bit was applied to hold the top onto the base, i hate when things 'pop open' during use...i'll pick most of the visible stuff off over the next few times of operation
hobbies and some skill can make life a bit 'better'
(i finished it two nights ago)
No Buck I think you have the franchise rights to that human mind logic.oh the wonders of the human mind. . .
Do watch Big Clive at all?iirc, they stated these at 900lm each while the other ones are 'rated' at well over 2klm each, 2200??? not certain, and the preassembled get a lot 'warmer' than these do
i was playing with the two in the yard a few nights ago, maybe i'll have to play some more to get really 'scientific' about it all
side note: on ebay, they pulled these 'new lights' off the market, i'm gonna guess they're gonna reprice them as the next closest set were just under $20 for the pair...i got 'lucky' is how this fits into my narrative, good timing
The Circuit Guy...yeah buttttt.....
in HD the other day and i saw a guy at the 'return desk' seeking to get a warranty on a Milwaukee tool, it appeared to be a 'driver' of some type
he was handed a slip of paper, told to call them, they'll help him from there...
means shipping costs and packing and all that which means:
there will be a percentage of guys tossing their broken stuff into the garbage, buying a new one because they can't wait
at HF, walk in and walk out with a replacement tool, depending on your warranty level as the other option is You Should Have Bought The Extended Warranty, and you get nothing anyways
ymmv and you're situation needs to take that into account
like any 'good' repair guy, you're gonna have extras if only because your paycheck relies on having that tool available, right now, not three weeks or three months from now
warranties on these tools have a long way to go, we're no longer in Craftsman / Sears territory (or HF's either)
your mileage may vary
are welcome at any time as they, like so many others, actually offer up slices of the truth, bitter or notBig Clive
How is the charger affixed. More pix pleasehome made from a recycled computer monitor base, a switch housing from an old cell phone charger, a 'handle' made of 12ga wire with two eyelets bolted to base, some left over spray paint, a battery adapter that I purchased and, because it has no light, is of little use to me (other than this project), some left over wiring, a few new connectors and two switches, and a set of LED lights i bought for less than $12
estimated total: $15.00 but tossing in that adapter, repurposing isn't the exact same thing, but, that was nearly $20 a while back, so, $35 for my new LED work light set
imho, better than 'on par' with anything on line selling for $60 or more, plus pride in the fact i know 'I Didn't Build It' (yeah, we all relate)
side note:
Beware!
if purchasing LED lights from the Chinesium country, take with a grain of salt what they claim will be the output of the lights, some rate it lm, some watts, some will simply show a picture of a fence being illuminated, at night...lol
this set of lights I bought, they're smaller than two other light's I bought
(the two other lights) they were pre-assembled and made directly for my battery packs at $35 each, and each one of those pre-assembled light assys, has only one light, they produce a bit 'bluer' light and seem to be on equal luminescence as one of my two new light assemblies
the preassembled were rated at 56 watts each, iirc, while the 'new' set i received were rated at 27 watts each...yet they produce nearly identical light patterns and output...that's my experience and after watching a few YT videos on luminescence testing...yeah, DYODD
2¢ but in this case, i shopped the price and got a product that will produce more than enough light output for anything i'm doing, they work satisfactorily...
here's a photo:
View attachment 2388
and the hot glue on that switch box, it's got a rivet inside to hold the base to the main base, but it didn't quite fit the taper so, filler was required, and a bit was applied to hold the top onto the base, i hate when things 'pop open' during use...i'll pick most of the visible stuff off over the next few times of operation
hobbies and some skill can make life a bit 'better'
(i finished it two nights ago)
A schematic perhaps?How is the charger affixed. More pix please
How is the charger affixed. More pix please
it's cordless, uses one of my black and decker 20 volt battery packs, so, it's not for 're-charging'A schematic perhaps?
sad to say, it'll hit the market the moment i find a way to separate that pacific ocean fast enough to beat out ChevronBuck, when are you unveiling your perpetual motion generator?
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