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Fenix mini LD01 CREE Q5 80 Lumens LED Flashlight - black color, using one AAA battery

Fenix mini LD01 CREE Q5 80 Lumens LED Flashlight - black color, using one AAA battery

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Brand: FENIX
Category: Sports

List Price: $56.00
Buy New: $39.95
You Save: $16.05 (29%)



New (13)

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 38 reviews
Sales Rank: 21707

Color: Black
Size: 3- Inch
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 5.5 x 1.1
Legal Disclaimer: We do not in any way represent that any part we sell is legal to possess in your jurisdiction. Check with you local authorities to ensure it is legal for you to possess before buying!

MPN: FX-LD01B
Model: LD01
EAN: 6942870300412
ASIN: B001K3HJXM

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  + 3 inch length, less than one ounce weight, AMAZING 3 OUTPUT LEVELS: 27 Lumens (3.5hrs) -> 10 Lumens (8.5hrs) -> 80 Lumens (1hrs)
  + Uses one 1.5V AAA ( Alkaline, Ni-MH, Lithium ) battery, inexpensive and widely available--NOT INCLUDED
  + Unbelievable 1 ounce body design is made of durable aircraft-grade aluminum, Type III hard-anodized anti-abrasive finish
  + Waterproof to IPX-8 Standard
  + Virtually indestructible, microprocessor-controlled, CREE light emitting diode (LED) has no filament to burn out or break

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Fenix LD01 Flashlight. Incredibly bright, keychain small and always there in a pinch! Includes key ring and clip! Never be left in the dark again! Running off just a single, inexpensive "AAA" battery and measuring in at under 3", this lil' pipsqueak of a Flashlight produces an amazing 80 lumens of bright, white LED light... even outperforming some of the "big boys"! The mini-might Light: Cree premium (Q5) LED with lifespan of 50,000 hours; 3 output types: 27 lumens (3 1/2 hrs.), 10 lumens (8 1/2 hrs.), 80 lumens (1 hr.); Made of durable aircraft-grade aluminum; Type III hard-anodized anti-abrasive finish; Uses just 1 "AAA" battery (not included); Waterproof to IPX-8 Standard; Toughened ultra-clear glass lens with anti-reflective coating; Reliable twist head switch; Capable of standing up securely on a flat surface to serve as a candle; 3" l., 1/2-oz. Includes key ring, clip and spare o-rings. Order Today! Fenix LD01 Flashlight


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 38
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...8Next »



5 out of 5 stars No more MiniMags for me   April 24, 2009
Jordan Brown (Granada Hills, CA USA)
24 out of 24 found this review helpful

Even on "dim" this little light puts out plenty of light for walking around in the dark. On "bright" it's bright enough that I can stand in one place and scan my ~10,000 square foot lawn for toys left out. Wow.

Comparing to Maglite, it's roughly as bright as a 3D flashlight (with much shorter run time, of course), or brighter than the AAA flashlights (with longer run time).

Specs:
Dim: 10 lumens, 8.5 hours.
Medium: 27 lumens, 3.5 hours.
Bright: 80 lumens, 1 hour.

Compare with traditional Maglite:
Solitaire: 2.3 lumens, 3.5 hours.
Mini AAA: 15.6 lumens, 2 hours.
Mini AA: 15.2 lumens, 5.5 hours.
2C/D: 36.5-40.6 lumens, 5 hours C, 9-10 hours D
3C/D: 76-82.5 lumens, 5 hours C, 9-10 hours D

(Maglite does not advertise lumen rating or run time for their LED flashlights.)

I have two relatively minor quibbles:
1) Since "dim" is plenty for most uses, I would prefer if the sequence was dim-medium-bright instead of medium-dim-bright.
2) I think (though I am not sure) that I would prefer a pushbutton switch over the twist switch. Not sure where you'd put the button on a lamp this small, though.



5 out of 5 stars 80 lumens from a single AAA battery. This baby is bright!   March 9, 2009
J. M. Barbera (Palo Alto, CA USA)
22 out of 22 found this review helpful

If you're looking for a compact LED flashlight that runs on a single AAA battery and will always be ready and available, the Fenix LD01 is by far the best in terms of light output, beam quality, efficiency, and durability. It's about the size of a ChapStick so you can carry it in the change pocket of your jeans. I've used it as a bike headlight with great results. Other flashlights I've tried give off a dim, poorly diffused, blue tinted beam. The Fenix LD01 provides three levels of very useful white light. It's great for camping. If you store one in an emergency kit, install a lithium AAA battery as they have a long shelf life and won't leak if it ever does go dead. I recommend getting flashlights that take either AA or AAA batteries as they're the most readily available and come in NiMH rechargeable and lithium versions. It may seen like a lot of money to spend on a dinky little flashlight, but it's worth every penny. It will outshine flashlights several times its size.


5 out of 5 stars Amazing -- and Amazingly Functional   January 10, 2009
W. Noble (Northern California)
8 out of 8 found this review helpful

First, a disclaimer: I have no connection to Fenix. I saw a review on [...], ordered two, and am just ordering a third for my son, who's about to set off world traveling. I have mine on my keyring. It's extraordinarily bright (and has three controlable brightness levels for battery conservation (or discretion), which the catalog info doesn't seem to mention. It's waterproof, built like a brick s**thouse, and barely adds to the bulk or weight of the keys in my pocket. This new generation of super-brilliant LEDs is instantly transforming flashlights, making ANY older light obsolete -- and is apparently on the verge of transforming household lighting too. Fenix mini LD01 CREE Q5 80 Lumens LED Flashlight - black color, using one AAA battery


5 out of 5 stars The Fenix LD01 or how I stopped worrying (about the price) and came to pay $40 for a key chain light   October 5, 2009
Sideslip (New York City)
8 out of 8 found this review helpful

After 9/11 it became apparent to me (and, I'd warrant, a good number of other New Yorkers) that it would be a good idea to carry around some sort of small flashlight, underscored every time a subway train stopped unexpectedly in a tunnel. It was one of those background amendments to life in NYC that just happened, like the way we react now when a plane flies overhead.

I bought a MagLite Mini and stuck it in my bag. The light seemed reasonably bright, the unit was small and clever with the switch incorporated into the head and being able to stand it on end to use as a candle. I felt a little smug for making such a fine choice.

But I don't always carry my bag with me and the flashlight was too big to carry around regularly in a pocket. As well, because I don't use the light enough, I worried that the batteries would leak. So I took them out. But now I'd have to remember how old the batteries were and replenish them from time to time. The light had now become an end unto itself and not much use to me in a darkened subway tunnel.

A friend gave me a small Orvis keychain light. This solved both the battery problem (some sort of life-long battery in it) and the portability problem but the light was pitifully weak - fine for reading menus but barely enough even to find a keyhole in a darkened apartment building hallway.

Though not as bright as the Mini, the MagLite Silhouette was an improvement over the Orvis (now I could see my shoes in a darkened apartment building hallway), uses only a single AAA battery which I always have on hand to power my insulin pump, and I could attach it to my keychain and as such I'd probably use it more often mitigating the risk of leakage. It felt good in my hand. I congratulated myself for another fine choice.

But in a pitch black subway tunnel?

A review here of small flashlights mentioned the Fenix (pronounced Phoenix) with all the convenience of the Silhouette - a single AAA battery, portability, good build quality, and most important vastly more light than the Silhouette. But $41 (ca. $50 full price) for keychain flashlight? I was suspicious (and bridled at the pronunciation of Fenix). Reluctant, I ordered it.

The scales have fallen from my eyes. It's as trim as the Silhouette, with better build quality and an on/off twist-switch that permits 3 light levels of varying intensity (turning it off and back on within 1.5 seconds moves to the next intensity in order: med, low, high). Unlike the MagLites, the head is loosened to switch it off, not tightened. I've found that I can easily manipulate the switch with one hand and that it quickly becomes apparent how much to loosen it to insure that it won't inadvertently turn on in one's pocket or be so loose that the head will fall off - a few dozen times of turning it on and off and pushing on the lens end with one's thumb sort of trains the fingers, and the threads of the head seem long enough and tightly machined enough to prevent loosening so much that the head will fall off.

But the light! More than enough to see the third rail in a darkened subway tunnel and to scare the bejesus out of rats. $41 will quickly get absorbed and sufficiently amortized by the comfort and confidence I get from reflexively clutching it my pocket when the train stops unexpectedly in a tunnel. Now I'm REALLY smug.



5 out of 5 stars The Swiss Army Knife of flashlights   March 3, 2009
David Deitsch (Wind-swept plains of Central Illinois)
5 out of 5 found this review helpful

The Fenix LD01 is what flashlight aficionados call a "key chain light;" a very small light that can live in your pocket, purse, or briefcase ignored and forgotten, until you need it. Just like a Swiss Army Knife, it is not designed for heavy, complex work. If you need a flashlight for heavy work or serious emergencies, get something bigger, brighter, and more versatile. However, most of us do not need, or already own, a big torch if we need one. This flashlight is so small and light that you will not notice it until you need it, then, it will be right there with three levels of light, including a maximum setting that is surprisingly bright. This is the flashlight you carry when you think you will not need a flashlight, or as a backup in case your primary light goes out on you. If a key chain light is what you need, get this one. It will last a lifetime and never let you down.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 38
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