- Joined
- Jun 29, 2008
- Messages
- 27
- Points
- 3
DX200mW Green - Restored by JayRob
Sent him a dead DX200 green (before death, actual readings on a lpm were only 90mW...disappointed).
Got it back recently, not a scratch on it. First noticable change, polished aluminum momentary button.
Secondly, a on/off clicky tail cap switch in place of safety switch that uses a key.
Turned it on via tail cap, then used momentary switch to activate laser, next noticable difference, no blue led blinding you (yes!). Brilliant focusable green beam, very tight thin beam when focused all the way down. Will light a sharpied or red match head instantly at 2 ft. (max distance for this unit for an instant light). Next, put fresh battery in and got these readings on a lpm, it peaked 135mW and then settled down to a consistant 100mW.
Excellent restore job, doesn't show any signs of anyone even working on it. Just like his past builds and his kits, the quality and detail and craftsmanship are outstanding. Keep up the great work.
Sent him a dead DX200 green (before death, actual readings on a lpm were only 90mW...disappointed).
Got it back recently, not a scratch on it. First noticable change, polished aluminum momentary button.
Secondly, a on/off clicky tail cap switch in place of safety switch that uses a key.
Turned it on via tail cap, then used momentary switch to activate laser, next noticable difference, no blue led blinding you (yes!). Brilliant focusable green beam, very tight thin beam when focused all the way down. Will light a sharpied or red match head instantly at 2 ft. (max distance for this unit for an instant light). Next, put fresh battery in and got these readings on a lpm, it peaked 135mW and then settled down to a consistant 100mW.
Excellent restore job, doesn't show any signs of anyone even working on it. Just like his past builds and his kits, the quality and detail and craftsmanship are outstanding. Keep up the great work.