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I was thinking about buying a wurkkos fc11 as my first flashlight but it said they recommend untwisting it in a review to avoid making a connection so it doesn’t discharge while not in use. Do I need to worry about that with all flashlights? I was planning on keeping it in my backpack so I have it whenever.

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[-] dmenezes@lemmy.world 12 points 2 years ago

Mechanical switch lights like the Convoy S2+ do not have any parasitic drain. But be aware that the batteries themselves have some self-discharge, Li-Ions are the worst at something like 5 percent in the first 24 hours and then loses 1–2 percent per month. Protected Li-Ions are even worse at 4-5% per month.

If you need to keep them stored for long periods, get an AA-compatible or dual-fuel flashlight and use Eneloop batteries for rechargeables, or Lithium primaries if you don't need/want to recharge.

[-] Adair21@lemmy.world 6 points 2 years ago

To add to this, if you are going to store your Li-ion batteries for any period of time then you should charge them to 3.7v instead of a full charge. This will extend the life of the battery

[-] dmenezes@lemmy.world 3 points 2 years ago

Good tip, but the OP should be aware that when at 3.7V they have only ~50% charge in them, so remember to also pack a spare or two (at the same voltage) to have the same total runtime.

[-] parrot-party@kbin.social 3 points 2 years ago

Should be closer to 60% but still, it's not in a long term ready state. Long stored batteries should be recharged before use.

[-] SiteRelEnby 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

In general, recharging them before use is better - if you're preserving battery life as much as possible the ideal profile is to charge them to ~4.1V, use until ~3.5, then store at 3.6-3.7 until charged for next use, ideally minimising time sitting at full. Going below 3.4ish takes progressively more out of the battery life.

[-] friftar@feddit.de 2 points 2 years ago

Worth mentioning that some chargers offer a storage option, charging to exactly 3.7V.

On a charger that doesnt have this, it can be difficult to monitor it closely enough to get that exact voltage.

[-] unpunctual_bird@lemmy.world 6 points 2 years ago

Li-Ions are the worst at something like 5 percent in the first 24 hours and then loses 1–2 percent per month

I still remember dealing NiCad's 10-20% per month, li-ion was some space-aged future tech dream back then

[-] dmenezes@lemmy.world 4 points 2 years ago

Oh man, don't even get me started on the NiCads. My beloved old Ti58C calculator used a pack of them and it was actually what killed her :-(

[-] wit@lemmy.world 3 points 2 years ago

Oh boy.. I initially read "fleshlight" and it got me very confused.

[-] SiteRelEnby 1 points 2 years ago

If that happens, you might need to clean it.

[-] jerv@lemmy.world 2 points 2 years ago

Yes, but....

There is much hyperbole about parasitic drain, and the sheer and utter necessity of mechanical lockout, but most lights have so little of it that the discharge rate barely changes when you do a mechanical disconnect, or even remove the battery. Ambient temperature will have at least as much effect.

If you place on just tossing the light somewhere and not using it except in emergencies, you want something that takes a CR123 or other lithium primary cell. However, if you're not turned off by having to at least check on your light 3-4 times a year, or if you actually use the light often enough to need to charge at least half as often as you'd need to replace alkalines, the discharge rate is low enough that it's not worth worrying about. Especially not unless you are the type to go to great lengths to ensure that your light never sees ambient temperatures above 20C/68F.

For lights that have aux LEDs, even the worst of them than I know of can last months, and most can last years. Then again, you wont' need aux lights if you're just chucking it somewhere where it will likely be unused. Turning the aux on High, may run some lights dead in as little as a week and a half, but there's really no reason to run them on High all the time. It's great to show off or mess around, but they're best not left on High. Especially not in a TS10, and double-especially not if you snag a first-batch TS10.

Whether you need to worry really depends on how you use it. Personally, I use my copper TS10 a lot, and despite it's short battery life (one-third what an 18650 gets), I'll still go at least a couple weeks between charges unless I get silly playing with Turbo. And it's usually well over half-charge despite the frequent use at low levels.

I'd worry more about remembering to get the Nichia version instead of the LH351D version.

[-] SiteRelEnby 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Everything but lithium primary or eneloops in a light with a mechanical switch will have battery self-discharge (bonus: neither of these two battery chemistries leak). An e-switch adds a bit more parasitic drain, so the best bet for a light that won't be used for a long time is CR123A or white eneloops, and if you're not sure what the switch type is, you can just break the contact of the batteries.

[-] nadram@lemmy.world 2 points 2 years ago

Yes that's a thing with all batteries unfortunately. They discharge when not in use. It's not about the flashlight, but the batteries.

this post was submitted on 18 Jun 2023
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