AVIATION FLASHLIGHT+LASER POINTER



Aviation Part Inspection LED Flashlight + Class 2 Laser, retail $11.49
Manufactured by (Unknown)
Last updated 10-07-09





The Aviation Part Inspection LED Flashlight + Class 2 Laser is a nifty little product which contains a white LED on a flexible gooseneck, a red laser pointer, and a magnetic base to allow you to affix the product to any iron, mild steel, nickel, or cobalt surface.

It comes in a metal body, and feeds from three LR44 button cells - the ubitiquous "laser pointer battery".


 SIZE



Feed the product its included LR44 cells first (see directly below), and then you can go fix that airplane.

Press & hold in the topmost button on the barrel to activate the red laser pointer; release the button to turn it off.

Press & release the bottommost button to turn the white LED on; repeat to turn it off.

The product has a magnetic base, so you can stand it up on its tailcap on any magnetic (iron, mild steel, nickel, or cobalt) surface, and direct (aim) the light on its flexible gooseneck wherever you need it. This allows you to use the product totally hands-free; leaving both hands free to hold wrenches, screwdrivers, or any other handheld tools you might be using at the time. Yes, you can even stick it on a magnetic surface upside-down if necessary. The magnet has plenty of holding power to cope with this position (yes, I tested it myself).


Here is a photograph showing it magnetically stuck to the underside of a desk with mild steel sides.
This photograph was not inverted; yes, it really hangs upside-down.



To change the batteries in your Aviation Part Inspection LED Flashlight + Class 2 Laser, unscrew the tailcap until it comes off, then dump out the dead batteries. Dispose of or recycle them as you see fit.

Drop three new LR44 button cells into the barrel, button-end (-) negative first, and then screw the tailpiece back on.

Alternately, stack the cells on a table flat-end (+) positive down, and lower the barrel of the light over them, then pinch it off with your finger while picking the light up so the batteries don't fall out. Then screw the tailcap back on. Many button cell lights are prone to having cells go in cockeyed; this is one way to avoid that.

The white LED will come on while you're screwing the tailcap on; this is normal - just turn it off with the lower pushbutton.

Unable to measure current due to how the product was constructed.



Because this product contains a laser, the thrash test will not be performed. I never perform this particular test on lasers or products which lase.

The Aviation Part Inspection LED Flashlight + Class 2 Laser is lightly splatter-resistant at maximum, but it is not water resistant or submersible. There is no O-ring present on the tailcap. So water, milk, diet Pepsi, coffee, urine, root beer, or other liquids could get inside. So please try not to drop it in creeks, rivers, ponds, lakes, oceansides, docksides, puddles of raccoon pee, glasses of milk, slush piles, mud puddles, tubs, root beer floats, toilet bowls, cisterns, sinks, cups of coffee, fishtanks, dog water dishes, old yucky wet mops, wall-mounted porcelain urinators, or other places where water or water-like liquids might be found. A little rain or snow probably wouldn't hurt it though, so you need not be too concerned about using it in moderately bad weather.

If it fell in water and you suspect it got flooded, disassemble it as you would for a battery change, dump out the water if necessary, and set the parts in a warm dry place for a day or so just to be sure it's completely dry inside before you reassemble and use it again.

If it fell into seawater, got thrown into a glass of milk, fell in a root beer float, got dropped into a gas tank, or if somebody or something peed on it, douche all the parts out with fresh water before setting them out to dry. You don't want your flashlight to smell like seaweed, sour milk, or piss when you go to use it next. Besides, salt (from seawater or urination), lactic acid (from moo juice), sugar (from root beer & ice cream), or gasoline can't be very good for the insides.

The light has a slight bluish color to it, but if you shined the light on a white wall in a room full of people and asked them to tell you what color it was, I'm pretty certain everybody would holler out "WHITE!!!" in response to that query.

Although the advertisement on Ebay calls this a "Class 2 Laser", power measurements taken and the label on the outside of the product both indicate that this is a CDRH Class IIIa product - outputting less than 5mW of laser radiation.



Beam photograph (LED) on the test target at 12".
Measures 19,660mcd on a Meterman LM631 light meter.



Beam photograph (laser) on the test target at 12".
Measures 1.414mW on a laser power meter specifically intended for this purpose.


Spectrographic plot
Spectrographic analysis of the LED in this flashlight.


Spectrographic plot
Spectrographic analysis of the laser in this flashlight.
As you can see, this laser has an unusually large spectral line halfwidth. Looks like at least 7nm to me.


Spectrographic plot
Spectrographic analysis of the LED in this flashlight; newer spectrometer software & settings used.


Spectrographic plot
Spectrographic analysis of the laser in this flashlight; newer spectrometer software & settings used.
The laser in this product appears to operate right at threshold even with known-good batteries.


Spectrographic plot
Spectrographic analysis of the laser in this flashlight; spectrometer's response narrowed to a band bwtween 645nm and 665nm to pinpoint wavelength.
The laser in this product appears to operate right at threshold even with known-good batteries.

USB2000 spectrometer graciously donated by P.L.




Beam photograph (laser) on a wall at ~10'.

Those rectangular graphic things near the top are marquees from:
Midway ''Omega Race''
Sega ''Star Trek''
Williams ''Joust''
Venture Line ''Looping''
Universal ''Mr. Do!'s Castle''
Jaleco ''Exerion''
Gremlin/Sega ''Astro Blaster''
Atari ''Tempest''
Gottlieb ''Q*bert''

upright coin-op arcade video games from the 1980s.





TEST NOTES:
Test unit was purchased on Ebay on 01-30-07, and was received on the afternoon of 02-02-07.


UPDATE: 00-00-00



PROS:



CONS:



    MANUFACTURER: Unknown/not stated
    PRODUCT TYPE: Small flashlight/laser pointer
    LAMP TYPE: 5mm white LED, red laser diode
    No. OF LAMPS: 2 (1xwhite LED, 1xred laser diode)
    BEAM TYPE: Medium spot w/soft corona (LED), very narrow spot (laser)
    SWITCH TYPE: Pushbuttons on barrel
    CASE MATERIAL: Mostly metal
    BEZEL: Metal; LED recessed into hosel for it, laser recessed into cell for it
    BATTERY: 3xLR44 button cells
    CURRENT CONSUMPTION: Unknown/unable to measure
    WATER RESISTANT: Light splatter-resistance at maximum
    SUBMERSIBLE: No
    ACCESSORIES: 3xLR44 cells
    WARRANTY: Unknown/not stated

    PRODUCT RATING:

    Star Rating





Aviation Part Inspection LED Flashlight + Class 2 Laser *







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