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When I received my cyan I was ecstatic to see that Rich also sent over a still canned NUMB06 LD. I didn't have a driver for it but I wanted to test it because I haven't seen such powerful blue so I whipped up a quick 2 Lm317 in the parallel driver and a small diode protection board consisting of 1 electrolytic 1 ceramic,100ohm discharge resistor, 2 silicon diodes, and 2 Schottky ones with a small SMD capacitor. Pics the test setup can be seen below:
Then 2 days after I moved on with jamming it all into a nerf gun. The summary is that I needed to make an 11.5mm brass adaptor 12mm ID to fit the module and then reduce the 15mm pipe diameter enough so I could press in the module with thermal paste and all this needed to be done with no power tools just sandpaper..... The result was that my hands still have a ton of marks and are leaking puss out of 3 spots. Anyways getting to the electrical part, For switching the driver on and off I chose a small relay that I attached a small clicky mouse switch to then I connected a battery connected indicator LED and modified the driver to fit inside. I also changed the heatsink of the driver to a smaller alu one since the one I had before didn't fit and was too overkill, Also for extra cooling I attached the back half of the module and pressed it into a 16mm heatsink with thermal paste that helps to wick away the heat faster from the diode. This is the initial prototype construction:
Then this is it now finished! and let me tell you that relay makes the most satisfying clicking sound I've ever heard!
The battery pack is just 2 18650s in series.


Then 2 days after I moved on with jamming it all into a nerf gun. The summary is that I needed to make an 11.5mm brass adaptor 12mm ID to fit the module and then reduce the 15mm pipe diameter enough so I could press in the module with thermal paste and all this needed to be done with no power tools just sandpaper..... The result was that my hands still have a ton of marks and are leaking puss out of 3 spots. Anyways getting to the electrical part, For switching the driver on and off I chose a small relay that I attached a small clicky mouse switch to then I connected a battery connected indicator LED and modified the driver to fit inside. I also changed the heatsink of the driver to a smaller alu one since the one I had before didn't fit and was too overkill, Also for extra cooling I attached the back half of the module and pressed it into a 16mm heatsink with thermal paste that helps to wick away the heat faster from the diode. This is the initial prototype construction:

Then this is it now finished! and let me tell you that relay makes the most satisfying clicking sound I've ever heard!






The battery pack is just 2 18650s in series.
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