1000-Lumen Surefire

Looks like Surefire is getting closer and closer to a real lightsaber.

http://blogs.militarytimes.com/gearscout/2013/09/24/surefire-p3x-fury-3-batteries-1000-lumens/

Wasn’t really excited until I clicked on and read 1000 lumens from a 3 cell body. That’s awesome.

-Jax

I’m just curious why they didn’t transfer that technology to the existing two cell fury. Make them 750 lumens or something.

This looks like it’ll be an awesome carbine light once converted to single output only. Would be nice if they made a rotating bezel like the vampire series that switches between 200 and 1000.

Elzetta has a 900 lumen 3 cell. I have used the SF Fury and the Elzetta 2 cell 200+ lumen, and think that the Elzetta is the stronger piece of kit.

Is there a clicky switch that would work with this light? I only want one output, but I want to choose between momentary and constant on without twisting the cap.

The Elzetta version of that at 900 lumens is $210.

Assuming the head is the same as the regular Fury, you could always just cut the trace eliminating the 5 lumen output.

Tell me more about this.

Remove the head on your Fury. You should see two circles of trace connected by a straight piece of trace. The difference between single output and dual output is that at the factory, Surefire brakes the trace (go compare a single output of yours to a dual). All you need to do is take the tip of a knife and scratch the straight connection, breaking them. Then your dual output is now a single output (only the highest setting). You can conversely reconnect this with solder to get a dual output mode if you want to go back, or if you own a single output and want dual.

Will double as a fire starter too!

1000 lumens…wow.

Sounds like a hell of a duty light.

http://modernserviceweapons.com/?p=4762

I see the single output model (P3X-A-BK) in stock in various places.

Switching
Location: Tailcap
Type: Two-stage tactical
Momentary and constant-on modes
Shroudless tailcap pushbutton for comfort and ease of use
Press pushbutton for momentary activation; twist tailcap for constant-on
Tailcap lockout prevents accidental activation

I may just buy it.

At that output level you, its past that curve of practical indoor application. Id hate to catch a reflection of that come back off a mirror or glass. I think it’d be great for outdoor application though.

Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2

So, I’m guessing the runtime at 1k lumens is going to be about 5 minutes? :stuck_out_tongue:

I cringe at the weight. And indoors there is a thing as too much light. It bounces off of walls and comes back to your eyes.

I’m in the 200 lumen is a great compromise. My scout is a good example at 200 is perfect for inside and out… and my G2X at 300 lumen is a tad bit bright. 1000 lumen is not something I wish for. I’d rather take a 200 lumen with 4hr burn time as the battery life is what’s important to light fighters but it seems that no one at Surefire listens and instead is just pushing the output.

Jesus, I wonder how it would do indoors. Sounds like shining a highbeam indoors.

Does it have a wall plug?

That’s funny.

Seriously, stop with the posting just to get into the EE. You need to read a while and stop posting. - SeriousStudent

I work a night patrol shift, and have for the better part of a decade. I find that 500 lumens is the minimum I want in a weapon light, or tactical handheld. I have a 750 lumen Lawman R1 that I use every night. the only time I ever want less light is if I’m looking under a seat in a car. I also carry a small single C123 light for small admin tasks. I used to use 200 lumen lights, but I still couldn’t ID targets, or see what was in someone’s hand beyond 25-30 yards. With 500 lumen Furys, X300 Ultras and R1 lawman, I can easily ID targets out to 100 yards. Yes, I’ve used all of the above lights to clear buildings. Including several structures under construction that had nothing but solid bright white walls. Not once have I been blinded.

That said, I probably wouldn’t use a 1000 lumen light indoors, but outside on traffic stops, behind buildings, or especially search and rescue, I would definitely use a 1000 lumen Surefire. The runtime is supposed to be the same as the 2 battery Fury at 500 lumens.