FOLOMOV Tactical Flashlight 18650S review

REVIEW – Lots of folks have an “every day carry” (EDC) kit – things that they take with every day so they are prepared for whatever the day may throw at them.  For many, a flashlight is one of those things that go in the kit. The Folomov 18650S is a new contender for an EDC flashlight.  Is it worth your consideration?  Read on!

What is it?

The Folomov 18650S is a compact flashlight with 15 operational modes.  It carries an IPX8 rating, so it should be impervious to everyday water risks.  With its belt clip and wrist strap, it offers a variety of carrying methods.

What’s in the box?

First, I’ll address what’s ON the box.  Right at the bottom, it touts “High quality hard anadizing [sic]”. I think they meant “anodizing” and their proofreader needs to find another daytime gig.

  • 18650S flashlight with battery installed and belt clip attached
  • Wrist strap with feed tool attached
  • Two spare o-rings
  • USB-A to micro USB charging cable
  • Instruction guide

Hardware specs

  • Item Weight: 3.5 ounces including battery
  • Product Dimensions: 3.9 x 0.9 x 0.9 inches
  • Finish: Military gray hard anodized with positive grip texture
  • LED: Nichia 219D
  • Waterproofing: IPX8 rating – full submersion more than one meter
  • Light output: 0.5lm (lumen) to 960lm
  • Control: single button on tail

Design and features

The flashlight is a well-made, lightweight unit. With light output from 0.5lm all the way up to 960lm, it offers the user a wide variety of lighting options.  A multi-function tail cap button provides access to multiple functions: illumination mode (6 brightness levels), tactical mode, SOS, strobe, beacon, countdown, and lockout.

Setup

There really isn’t any required setup, other than attaching the optional wrist strap. But, Folomov added a really nice touch.

Attaching a wrist strap to most devices usually involves a lot of squinting, pinching, sometimes swearing, and frustration, trying to squeeze the strap into the incredibly small holes. Folomov solved that by attaching what essentially amounts to a very small cotter pin attached to the wrist strap.  This allowed me to easily thread the strap through the holes.  Very nice touch, Folomov!

So, after I attached the strap, I was all set up, or so I thought. I couldn’t get the flashlight to turn on.  I tried all the different button press combos that I will get into later, all to no avail.  I figured that the battery must have shipped dead, so I decided to charge it.  With an IPX8 rating, I guessed there would be a pretty beefy waterproof charge door.  I looked. And looked.  And looked.  I could not find a charge port anywhere.

Finally, I unscrewed the button end of the flashlight.  It was then I learned the following two things.

First, the flashlight shipped with a clear plastic disc covering the bottom of the battery, preventing the flashlight from being turned on during shipping.  That explains why I couldn’t get it to work.  No word about that in the instructions.

The second thing I learned was that the flashlight does not have a recharging port – the battery does.

I have never seen this before, but I guess it’s a thing. Since I had it all open, I elected to give the battery a full charge.

There are two LEDs on top of the battery itself.  The one to the right of the charge port glows red during charging.  Then, one to the left of the charge port glows green once the charge is complete.  Again, nothing in the instructions about any of this.

Performance

I took the flashlight out back at night to demonstrate the different lighting modes.

All photos were taken at f1.5, 0.3-second exposure, 400 ISO, to keep the photos consistent and show the relative difference in lighting. I took two photos at each lighting level, shining the light about 15 feet in front of me, and then at a magnolia tree about 40 feet away. For each mode, I will list the light output and the expected runtime with a full battery charge.

Lighting modes

The lowest mode is Moonlight mode. To access it, hold the button about 0.5 seconds.  The same to turn it off.

When in lighting mode, quick-pressing and releasing the button turns the light on to the last-used mode.  Repeated presses cycle up and down through the modes, lowest, low, medium, high and turbo. A 0.5-second press turns the light off again.

Moonlight mode (it didn’t light the tree enough to even show that photo)

  • 0.5lm
  • 350 hours

The light was visible at about 15 feet, but just a faint circle. Moonlight mode is essentially a night light.

Lowest mode

  • 10lm
  • 150 hours

The circle was clearly visible, and I could just make out the trunk of the tree.

Low mode

  • 50lm
  • 22 hours

This mode produced a bright circle and illuminated the area around it.  Shining at the tree illuminated branches.

Medium mode

  • 160lm
  • 10 hours

This mode provided good lighting in front of me, and could clearly illuminate the tree and its leaves.

High mode

  • 320lm
  • 4.5 hours

High mode illuminated the entire back yard and clearly lit the tree.

Turbo mode

  • 960lm
  • 4 hours

Turbo mode lit the back yard to a crazy bright level. When I shined it at the tree, it lit up the tree and the back yard.

One note – the LED end of the light has this symbol on it:

And it does get pretty warm.  I left the light on turbo mode for about ten minutes, and while it was pretty toasty, it didn’t feel dangerously hot, and the body of the light did a good job dissipating the heat.

Other modes

With the light off, a double-click of the button turns on strobe mode. The strobe flashes at the full 960lm brightness and is quite blinding.  This is a tactical mode and can be used to confuse an attacker.  When the strobe is flashing, a double-click flips to SOS mode, where the light pulses to produce an appropriate SOS emergency flash repeatedly.  Another double-click flips to beacon mode, where a 50lm light pulses every five seconds or so as an emergency locator.

Speaking of tactical…quick-clicking seven times toggles from lighting mode to tactical mode.  When you do that, the light flashes to confirm the change. When in tactical mode, the button can be held to for instant and temporary access to turbo mode.  When you release the button, it turns off.  A double-click turns on strobe mode. A long-press turns it back off again.  Seven more clicks flip back to lighting mode, again confirmed with a flash.

The light also supports a countdown timer. With the light on, three quick clicks enables a three-minute timer. The light flashes once to confirm. Once set, the light will turn off automatically at the end of the countdown. Once the timer is set, three more clicks add another three minutes.  You can do this for up to a 30-minute timer before the light automatically turns off.

Finally, with the light off, three quick clicks enables lockout mode, making it so the light cannot be turned on.  Three more quick clicks disables lockout mode, making the light usable again.

What I like

  • Well made and nicely finished
  • Excellent variety of lighting modes
  • Terrific light output for the size
  • Its design includes flat side area, preventing it from rolling away
  • Including the strap-threading tool is a really nice touch

What needs to be improved

  • The English instructions really need to be rewritten as they are a grammatic nightmare, and in some cases, just plain wrong or missing
  • Accessing the wide variety of modes through a single switch, via 1, 2, 3, or 7 clicks is a bit confusing

Final thoughts

In another nod to the proofreader needing to be let go, all the runtimes listed in the instructions showed “M”, not “H”, so if you believe the instructions, it will only run for four MINUTES on turbo. But in my testing, that is more of a typo than anything. The runtime specs on the box itself are correct, even though they differ from the same chart of runtimes in the instructions.

But, I can forgive typos and grammar if the product is good, and this product is good.  The wide variety of lighting levels make this a very flexible flashlight.  The tactical modes make it a good tool for personal protection or emergency use.  It’s light enough to carry every day but sturdy enough to stand up to rugged use.

With up to 960 lumens of blinding light, it’s a good deal at its price point.

Price: $27.65
Where to buy: Amazon
Source: The sample of this product was provided by Folomov.

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FOLOMOV Tactical Flashlight 18650S review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on April 22, 2019 at 10:00 am.

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Lefant T700 Robotic Vacuum Cleaner review

REVIEW – The Lefant Robotic Vacuum Cleaner (T700 1800Pa) lives up to its claim as a super quiet cleaning system, with good suction and sensors.

What is it?

The Lefant T700 is a robotic vacuum and mop system.

What’s in the box?

  • Vacuum
  • Charger with homing port and cleaning brush
  • 2 mop pads
  • Extra filter
  • 2 extra brushes
  • Removable dust bin
  • Removable mop pan
  • Interchangeable suction/roll-style vacuum
  • Quick-start and troubleshooting guide
  • Remote control

Hardware specs

  • Product Dimensions: 12.6 x 12.6 x 3.2 inches
  • Item Weight: 6.17 pounds
  • Shipping Weight: 11.02 pounds
  • Batteries: 1 Lithium Polymer batteries required (included)

Design and features

Setup

Setup was very easy. The dust bin or mop tray pop right into place. You just need to charge it completely before the first use.

Similarly, it was quick and easy to pop open the dustbin to empty it. Or to change it to the roller-style vacuum attachment, which we only used for vacuuming carpet, and the suction-style attachment, which we used for tile and hardwood vacuuming, as well as mopping.

Performance

I despise vacuuming, and mopping is a close second. Our house is a tri-level, with a sunken sunroom, making for a fourth level. For me, traditional vacuuming involves moving a heavy canister model up and down lots of steps.

Since I was in a car accident 10 years, I suffer from back pain that’s often triggered by lugging the vacuum around and the vacuuming motion itself. I’ve been in the market for one of these for ages but always hesitant because of our multi-level home. Then again, we have white carpet and tile (not my choice) with two boys and a black dog. It was time to get a handle on my gross floors!

With the Lefant, I just carry it from floor to floor. At only 6 pounds, that’s really not a problem. Moving it wasn’t the hassle I anticipated.

We let it run until it ran out of batteries, which took nearly 2 hours on vacuum mode! Impressive.

For actual cleaning, my opinion gradually changed on this. At first, I was disappointed. However, in all fairness, my baseline was pretty low. Boys. Dog. A hate for vacuuming. Plus, knowing this was in the mail, I was admittedly slacking on housework, not that my house was a beacon of tidiness to begin with. I think if I would have done a big baseline clean first, with an old-school vac and mop, I would have been happier with the initial performance.

It took a few sessions to get my floors where I wanted them. And, of course, in this household, it’s a constantly moving target.

Now I’ve now set up a rotating schedule, where the Lefant hits at least one level of my house each day (with one round to vacuum and one round to mop in the kitchen and bathrooms). And I gotta admit, after seven days my floors are cleaner than ever. In fact, by comparison, my counters and windows are somehow looking dirtier!

Our house has a lot of weird ledges, and we were all set to create barricades. However, the sensors thoroughly impressed us, and worked almost every time! Now I just set up barricades between the carpet and hardwood, so that I don’t accidentally get my carpet mopped.

Note: Cardboard boxes might not be your best bet for barricades. I watched the Lefant bust right through one! It was the one and only time the sensor didn’t seem to work. Hand weights and cases of Gatorade worked a whole lot better as borders.

It did get caught in a few little spots: the carpeted top of our steps, the track of the sliding glass door, and under the lazy susan in our kitchen. So I’ve started blocking those off, so she doesn’t get stuck in an endless loop and burn out her batteries under the lazy susan.

She’s also extremely quiet. (Notice the female pronouns? We named her “Rosie.”) One morning, my son was finishing some homework over breakfast. He asked me to “turn it off” and I thought he meant the vacuum. He laughed and said, “No! The TV.” It’s true, you can barely hear the vacuum. Really, how often can you watch TV or talk on the phone and not even notice a vacuum running? Well, with the Lefant you can!

Programs

There are three choices for programs: spiral from the middle, start at the edges and work your way in, or press the power button for a basic back-and-forth pattern.

We didn’t have much use for the spiral or edge patterns. In fact, in our small square sunroom, we tried the spiral pattern and it basically cleaned a spot in the middle of the room and then decided it was done. The edge pattern left too much dog hair and dirt to be effective. But simply pressing the start button and letting it do its own thing, just a simple back and forth, worked by far the best.

App

We downloaded the app, which says it’s compatible with IOS and Android 4.0 or above. My son is the phone person in our family, and with his Android 7.0, he had trouble getting it to work. Even after deleting and redownloading it a few times, he kept getting the message: Sorry the program is abnormal and will be withdrawn. We’ll post an update if we get the app working.

What I like

  • Extremely quiet
  • Great sensors
  • Long battery life

What needs to be improved

  • App doesn’t work
  • More effective program mapping

Final thoughts

The Lefant Robotic Vacuum Cleaner (T700 1800Pa) may take a few sessions to clean the messiest of floors, but it’s very quiet and easy to use, has a long battery life and accurate sensors.

Price: $299.99
Where to buy: Amazon
Source: The sample of this product was provided by Lefant.

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Lefant T700 Robotic Vacuum Cleaner review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on April 22, 2019 at 9:00 am.

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Get your wine on with Carivino

CROWDFUNDING NEWS – Do you like wine?  Do you like to take wine with you and try to keep it cold? Do you like aerating your wine to improve the flavor? Carivino has created an innovative solution that handles all those things and also includes wine glasses and a corkscrew for good measure.

Carivino is a portable, steel, insulated, full-sized 750ml wine bottle.  It has a wide, oversized mouth that allows you to pour in an entire bottle of wine without using a funnel.

The bottle is triple-layer vacuum insulated. That should help keep your wine at the perfect temperature for hours. The ceramic lining makes is simple to wash out with soap and water. The other benefit of the ceramic lining is that unlike metal, ceramic will not introduce any flavor, keeping the tase of your wine pure.

When the time comes to enjoy your wine. Carivino includes a venturi aerator in the pour spout. Aerators add air into your wine to help improve the flavor. Two Tritan plastic wine glasses are stored in the base.  The wine glasses can be used as tumblers, or as wine stems with the included magnetic stems. A cork pull is also included, so you will always be able to get your wine from the bottle into your Carivino for your next picnic.

Carivino’s Kickstarter campaign is funded at just shy of $40,000 on their $10,000 funding goal. The funding period ends on Tuesday, April 30, 2019, 8:00 AM EDT.  Reward options start at $70 for one Carivino.  First shipments to backers are expected in August 2019. For more information, visit their Kickstarter campaign here.

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Get your wine on with Carivino originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on April 22, 2019 at 8:00 am.

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Amidst Reports of Troubles with Galaxy Fold, Samsung Postpones Media Events

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Posted by / April 22, 2019 / Posted in News

7 Free Alternatives to Microsoft OneNote

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