Now for the caveats: First of all, they don't have the most focused beam pattern in the world. I was able to compare them to a bike equipped with a light bar like this one: and it wasn't even close. And they only use 18w each, which is great. I have one (Convoy L6: ) and just one of these lights is just as bright. Do a google search for flashlights with the XHP70 chip and you can see just how bright they can get. And like I said, at the time I got them a couple months ago, they were the only lights made with that chip.Īnd whoooboy these things are bright. So I went with the next best thing and got lights with the XHP70 chip. I also couldn't find any lights with the XHP70.2. Supposedly there's a chip made by Phillips that may be better, but I couldn't find any lights with that chip. They have a progression of chip designs detailed here: Basically, the XHP70.2 chip is the best. ![]() I haven't found any other aux lights that use the same chip.ĬREE is the company that makes most LED chips you'll find in good flashlights and good aux/fog lights. However, I got these particular lights because of the LED chip that they use. They took a while (16 days) even though they were shipped the day after I ordered them. ![]() I'm super impatient when I buy things, so I'm not inclined to buy from Aliexpress or other direct from China shops. First of all, these are the lights I bought: Okay, I went through a phase where I was really into flashlights, so I did some research before buying my aux lights and I've tested them enough to know they work (with a couple caveats).
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