Water Cooled LED Flashlight

by MatthewS225 in Circuits > Gadgets

3366 Views, 22 Favorites, 0 Comments

Water Cooled LED Flashlight

WATER2.png
Water Cooled LED Flashlight!

Be sure to check out the above video for amazing beam shots and instructions. In this instructable see how I got over 7,000 lumens from a single Cree XHP70 LED. If you want to take your building and modding to the absolute extreme, to squeeze out every last drop you possibly can. There's one thing that you always need to remember........ THERMAL PATH IS KING!!!

Basic Parts

Snapshot_20.png
Snapshot_12.png
index.jpg
DSCF1103.JPG

The first thing we need is a piece of 3/4" brass tubing. We also need a DC water pump so I got a 12V one for a fish tank. The water lines will be made from vacuum tube. A copper 12V 20mm mcpcb and Cree XHP70 LED are also needed. A mason jar is what will be used for the water container.

Assembly

Snapshot_22.png
Snapshot_24.png
Snapshot_25.png

I reflow soldered the LED and MCPCB to the end of the brass tube to make sure no water could leak from the end.

If you need help doing this here is my instructable on reflow soldering:

https://www.instructables.com/id/How-to-Reflow-Sol...

The Reflector

Snapshot_26.png
Snapshot_29.png
Snapshot_30.png
Snapshot_34.png

Next I made a collar for the reflector to sit on. 2 holes were drilled for the wires to pass through.

Water Lines

Snapshot_27.png
Snapshot_28.png
Snapshot_33.png

I the water "in" line to just below where the mcpcb is and ran the water "out" line in just a few inches so that the coldest water would be hitting the LED. Using a mason jar I created a reservoir. This allows the pump to sit directly in the water so no priming is needed.

Battery Power

Snapshot_11.png
Snapshot_12.png
Snapshot_36.png
Snapshot_37.png
Snapshot_39.png

Since the voltage of the pump and LED are very different I hooked up two sets of batteries and also ran separate switches for the LED and pump. The pump is powered on 3x 18650s in a battery adapter, and the LED is powered by a stack of 26650s housed in a maglite body. Once assembly was complete I put the whole apparatus in a back pack for easy carry.

The Proof

Snapshot_35.png

To see just how much power we gained with our water cooled LED flashlight I set the light in my lumen tube and powered it on. The Cree XHP70 is rated at 3773 lumens at 2400ma on a 12V mcpcb, but our water cooled LED flashlight is able to drive the emitter to a much higher current and net us over 7,200 lumens. Even after minutes of run time the output is stable. There is very little drop.

Here is how to build and operate a lumen measuring device.

https://www.instructables.com/id/DIY-Lumen-Measuri...

The Beam

Snapshot_40.png
Snapshot_41.png
Snapshot_42.png

The beam of our water-cooled LED flashlight is pretty much what you'd think. It's all of the power of a multi emitter set up concentrated into one tight hot spot the beam from this LUM 590 reflector is incredible with the XHP there's not rough edge on it, and man does it throw!

Truck VS Flashlight

Snapshot_43.png
Snapshot_44.png

Truck head lights on the left, and the water cooled flashlight on the right.

Acebeam L16 XHP35 HI Vs Water Cooled XHP70

Snapshot_45.png
Snapshot_46.png

For more great projects like this be sure to follow me on Instructables.

Thanks for watching!