Philipd7
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NDB7675 UltraFire F13
Before I get started, I would like to say that I have looked all over the forums, and have found no reviews of the F13 modified into a laser. So, I may or may not be the first to build in this host. Either ways, this can be somewhat of an instructional review I suppose
To begin, I got the heat sink from Eudamonium. It looks great and fits very well. Thanks!
I bought the ultrafire F13 from Gearbest:UltraFire Ceee XML-T6 Waterproof LED Flashlight
The host is great because it has a lot of mass for its short length, and has fins where the driver is, which helps a ton with heat dissipation.
		
		
	
	
		 
	
Here are the specs:
Diode: NDB7675
Driver: 2.4A X-Drive
Batteries: 2x 16340
Lens: 3-Element
From what I have gathered from RHD's spectrometer tests, this diode should be at 466nm. But Cyparagon tested his and got ~470.5 at 2.4A. Mine is probably somewhere in between there, well I hope But just by the look of it, it seems in that range. Here is the thread if anyone is wondering:http://laserpointerforums.com/f40/spectro-ing-new-nichia-1-4w-462nm-470nm-ndb7675-89422-4.html
 But just by the look of it, it seems in that range. Here is the thread if anyone is wondering:http://laserpointerforums.com/f40/spectro-ing-new-nichia-1-4w-462nm-470nm-ndb7675-89422-4.html
First, I set up the contact board. I just drilled a hole through the center to the spring, then soldered a wire on the spring and fed it through the hole. Btw, I got this idea from DTR.
		 
	
Here is how the contact board goes back in place:
		 
	
Then, I attached the contact board leads to the driver. This was pretty hard because of how short the leads have to be for when the heat sink goes in later.
		 
	
Next, I thermal glued the driver to the host.
		 
	
My makeshift clamp
		 
	
Here is where I ran into my first problem. the wires coming from the contact board to the driver stuck up too high, so they got in the way of the heat sink. Also, I couldn't get the Ceramique 2 to cure for some reason. I left it sit for 12+ hours, and it still slid around. What I ended up doing was flipping the driver over, and putting a small heat sink I salvaged from a broken computer on it. This way, the wires from the contact board came through the holes, and right to the driver. The other 2 wires (to the diode) fit around the driver and through the heat sink. By now, there was thermal paste all over and it was a mess, but it gets covered up by the heat sink, so idc. Also, by a string of luck, the driver heat sink went into the diode module hole of the diode heat sink perfectly, so it wouldn't get smashed
 What I ended up doing was flipping the driver over, and putting a small heat sink I salvaged from a broken computer on it. This way, the wires from the contact board came through the holes, and right to the driver. The other 2 wires (to the diode) fit around the driver and through the heat sink. By now, there was thermal paste all over and it was a mess, but it gets covered up by the heat sink, so idc. Also, by a string of luck, the driver heat sink went into the diode module hole of the diode heat sink perfectly, so it wouldn't get smashed
Again, it looks REALLY messy
		 
	
Then, I put the heat sink in, and soldered the diode to the leads.
		 
	
All together
		 
	
This was my first time seeing a blue wavelength other than 450nm. The color is so cyan/aqua! I love it:bowdown:
		 
	
Comparison with 445nm 1.5W
		 
	
Now for some night beam shots!
Sadly, my camera does not show the difference between the wavelengths very well.
		 
	
NUBM44 on the right, NDB7675 on the left
		 
	
NUBM44 on the left, NDB7675 on the right
		 
	
NUBM44 on the left, NDB7675 on the right
		 
	
Overall, this has been the hardest build I have ever done so far. It looks great when finished. If you have any ideas on how to make the driver setup less difficult, please let me know:beer: Remember, there is about 5mm of space between the heat sink and the host. Thanks for looking!
Before I get started, I would like to say that I have looked all over the forums, and have found no reviews of the F13 modified into a laser. So, I may or may not be the first to build in this host. Either ways, this can be somewhat of an instructional review I suppose

To begin, I got the heat sink from Eudamonium. It looks great and fits very well. Thanks!
I bought the ultrafire F13 from Gearbest:UltraFire Ceee XML-T6 Waterproof LED Flashlight
The host is great because it has a lot of mass for its short length, and has fins where the driver is, which helps a ton with heat dissipation.
 
	Here are the specs:
Diode: NDB7675
Driver: 2.4A X-Drive
Batteries: 2x 16340
Lens: 3-Element
From what I have gathered from RHD's spectrometer tests, this diode should be at 466nm. But Cyparagon tested his and got ~470.5 at 2.4A. Mine is probably somewhere in between there, well I hope
 But just by the look of it, it seems in that range. Here is the thread if anyone is wondering:http://laserpointerforums.com/f40/spectro-ing-new-nichia-1-4w-462nm-470nm-ndb7675-89422-4.html
 But just by the look of it, it seems in that range. Here is the thread if anyone is wondering:http://laserpointerforums.com/f40/spectro-ing-new-nichia-1-4w-462nm-470nm-ndb7675-89422-4.htmlFirst, I set up the contact board. I just drilled a hole through the center to the spring, then soldered a wire on the spring and fed it through the hole. Btw, I got this idea from DTR.
 
	Here is how the contact board goes back in place:
 
	Then, I attached the contact board leads to the driver. This was pretty hard because of how short the leads have to be for when the heat sink goes in later.
 
	Next, I thermal glued the driver to the host.
 
	My makeshift clamp

 
	Here is where I ran into my first problem. the wires coming from the contact board to the driver stuck up too high, so they got in the way of the heat sink. Also, I couldn't get the Ceramique 2 to cure for some reason. I left it sit for 12+ hours, and it still slid around.
 What I ended up doing was flipping the driver over, and putting a small heat sink I salvaged from a broken computer on it. This way, the wires from the contact board came through the holes, and right to the driver. The other 2 wires (to the diode) fit around the driver and through the heat sink. By now, there was thermal paste all over and it was a mess, but it gets covered up by the heat sink, so idc. Also, by a string of luck, the driver heat sink went into the diode module hole of the diode heat sink perfectly, so it wouldn't get smashed
 What I ended up doing was flipping the driver over, and putting a small heat sink I salvaged from a broken computer on it. This way, the wires from the contact board came through the holes, and right to the driver. The other 2 wires (to the diode) fit around the driver and through the heat sink. By now, there was thermal paste all over and it was a mess, but it gets covered up by the heat sink, so idc. Also, by a string of luck, the driver heat sink went into the diode module hole of the diode heat sink perfectly, so it wouldn't get smashed
Again, it looks REALLY messy

 
	Then, I put the heat sink in, and soldered the diode to the leads.
 
	All together
 
	This was my first time seeing a blue wavelength other than 450nm. The color is so cyan/aqua! I love it:bowdown:
 
	Comparison with 445nm 1.5W
 
	Now for some night beam shots!
Sadly, my camera does not show the difference between the wavelengths very well.
 
	NUBM44 on the right, NDB7675 on the left
 
	NUBM44 on the left, NDB7675 on the right
 
	NUBM44 on the left, NDB7675 on the right
 
	Overall, this has been the hardest build I have ever done so far. It looks great when finished. If you have any ideas on how to make the driver setup less difficult, please let me know:beer: Remember, there is about 5mm of space between the heat sink and the host. Thanks for looking!
 
 
	 
 
		

 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
