To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Maglite Conversion

McFarmer

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2009
Messages
2,139
I have an old Maglite my uncle (LAPD) gave me years ago.

I bought the LED conversion from Malkoff Devices. I have read on here how the conversions aren’t worth the price, but holy fricken jebus this thing is bright.

Mine is an older six cell Maglite, I had to do some shimming to get it to work. The newer ones I guess just drop in.

Six D cells and that thing should be good for a generation. No ?
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Catfishdan

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 15, 2017
Messages
1,047
Location
Central coast, California
Re: Maglite donversion

I have an old Maglite my uncle (LAPD) gave me years ago.

I bought the LED conversion from Malkoff Devices. I have read on here how the conversions aren’t worth the price, but holy fricken jebus this thing is bright.

Mine is an older six cell Maglite, I had to do some shimming to get it to work. The newer ones I guess just drop in.

Six D cells and that thing should be good for a generation. No ?
I have a Malkoff drop in in a 2d maglite and it’s a flamethrower. Lights up road reflectors a half mile off. I can only imagine how bright a 6d would be.
 

MadMark

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 21, 2009
Messages
677
Location
New York City
Re: Maglite donversion

I have a Malkoff drop in in a 2d maglite and it’s a flamethrower. Lights up road reflectors a half mile off. I can only imagine how bright a 6d would be.

Do you have any issues with batteries leaking?

I read on here years ago, that the maglite sleeve is tight, and does not dissipate the greater heat generated by the LED.

I had an older one with original halogen bulb design that leaked.
 

Catfishdan

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 15, 2017
Messages
1,047
Location
Central coast, California
Re: Maglite donversion

Do you have any issues with batteries leaking?

I read on here years ago, that the maglite sleeve is tight, and does not dissipate the greater heat generated by the LED.

I had an older one with original halogen bulb design that leaked.

Never had a leak. It lives in my truck too.
 

casmurbax

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 25, 2012
Messages
2,760
Location
Wilton, NY
Re: Maglite donversion

I was just looking at my 6D and 4D Maglites contemplating what to do with them as they need new bulbs, I am going to try the upgrade kit on the 6D.

What did you use for shims?
 
OP
M

McFarmer

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2009
Messages
2,139
Re: Maglite donversion

I was just looking at my 6D and 4D Maglites contemplating what to do with them as they need new bulbs, I am going to try the upgrade kit on the 6D.

What did you use for shims?

Sorry for the fat fingers, should be “conversion” of course. Don’t want to know what a “donversion” would be.

I just stuck a hunk of metal opposite the tapered wedge thing.
 

Citation

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 20, 2016
Messages
3,223
Location
Indy
Re: Maglite donversion

LEDs run alot cooler than standard bulbs

LEDs run cooler but they also can't take the heat. A standard lightbulb would have no issue running at 200+ F. A LED would burn out at that temperature.

I'm not sure how good the Mag conversions are. I have a real soft spot for the company but I hardly touch my Maglites. I like the MagTacs but the CR123 rechargeables just can't compare to an 18650 for run time. Thus I use other lights. My ML50x is a great thrower but rarely do I need that range so it sits unused while I typically grab one of my sub $20 generic 18650 based lights that actually work really well. I'm not sure what will happen to the company but sadly I don't see a bright future for them (no pun intended). The generic China competition has killed the market.

One more sad thing for Maglite. Their lights no longer claim made in USA. It's not because they moved production off shore. I believe all their lights are still assembled in California. The problem is the LED modules are expensive and generally not available in the US. Thus the foreign content is too high to claim USA. I'm sure they aren't happy about this either.
 
OP
M

McFarmer

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2009
Messages
2,139
Re: Maglite donversion

I have a Malkoff drop in in a 2d maglite and it’s a flamethrower. Lights up road reflectors a half mile off. I can only imagine how bright a 6d would be.


Yeah, they say don't shine it in your eyes.

Don't.
 

gtsgarage

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 31, 2017
Messages
482
Location
California
Maglite donversion

I too have several mag lights. I think a two D and a four D and some AA types. As someone said above I have a fondness for the company and the brand but these lights just don’t compete in any way with my Surefire lights! Surefire is a whole new level of compact and bright.

I’d be open to a conversion. Googled them, that’s a lot of money to convert.
 
Last edited:

MadMark

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 21, 2009
Messages
677
Location
New York City
Re: Maglite donversion

I have a real soft spot for the company but I hardly touch my Maglites.

They were the first to come out with a quality aluminum body, and a reliable on/off switch. They were a real step up from the yellow plastic ones.

Its a shame they took so long to go LED.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

mbshop

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 23, 2010
Messages
1,539
Location
visalia ca
Re: Maglite donversion

I just keep mine with regular bulbs. Good for emergencies. They work, good enough. Have smaller led flashlights for daily use.
 

DGersic

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 12, 2017
Messages
6,371
Location
DeKalb, IL
Re: Maglite donversion

I was just looking at my 6D and 4D Maglites contemplating what to do with them as they need new bulbs, I am going to try the upgrade kit on the 6D.

What did you use for shims?



I put TerraLux LED upgrades in my 2D and 5D MAG lights years ago. Highly recommended.

Keep an eye on the batteries. Unlike halogen bulbs, the LED will keep working until the batteries are drained and ready to leak.



Sent from my iPad using The Garage Journal mobile app
 

maxcarp709

Well-known member
Joined
May 10, 2016
Messages
302
Location
Las Vegas Nv
Re: Maglite donversion

If you do convert them,use only name brand batteries (Duracell,Rayovac,Energizer)and put a sticker with the date on the end cap and be sure to check the batteries for leaks once a year. The only downside of doing a LED conversion is that the batteries will start to leak before they go dead.
 

IdahoMan

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 26, 2015
Messages
434
Re: Maglite donversion

I love the old incandescent bulbs, but I did get a new LED bulb for my 4C MAG after the bulb burnt out. But I do have some incandescent bulbs for backup.
 

Badger 13

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 28, 2010
Messages
407
Location
Northern Idaho
Re: Maglite donversion

I have Malkoff upgrades in a few lights, including Surefire, and a Maglite. Huge difference and brings the old Maglite back to life. I know the LED technology has made vast improvements in flashlights, but kind of hard to just throw away a good light. The Kel-lite was around prior to the Maglight, and actually a more rugged light. What I have done for years with non lithium battery powered lights, is to make a "tube" from plastic paper protector sheets and encase the batteries in it. This is thin enough that they fit fine in the light, then I also add a little dielectric lube to both ends of the batteries. This has certainly saved some of my lights from leaking batteries. And I don't care what brand batteries, they can all leak..
 
OP
M

McFarmer

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2009
Messages
2,139
Re: Maglite donversion

Just found out they have a ready made shim for the older ones. Didn’t know that.

Good tip on checking the batteries, I imagine these six D cells won’t have much of a drain on them.
 

Dave455

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2013
Messages
5,829
Location
Sussex, England
Re: Maglite donversion

If you do convert them,use only name brand batteries (Duracell,Rayovac,Energizer)and put a sticker with the date on the end cap and be sure to check the batteries for leaks once a year. The only downside of doing a LED conversion is that the batteries will start to leak before they go dead.

I’m afraid that both Duracell and Energizer have leaked on me over the years. Duracell, here in the U.K. at least, used to be made in Belgium, and while premium priced, were guaranteed leak proof, and in my experience they were. The current ones are imported from god knows where and they seem to leak readily. I’ve always found Energizers to be bad. Mag Lites used to be supplied with them, and quite often they would leak in the packing when the light was new!

The best I’ve found at the mo are Varta and Panasonic (Alkaline). I have a stack of devices that use AA or AAA cells and havnt had an issue using either of these makes over probably 10 - 15 years. Long shelf life on them too!

All of the Chinese made batteries, irrespective of the brand, seem to be very prone to leaking. I think it’s one of the things they just can’t get right!

Another option is rechargables. I use Panasonic Eneloop, which are great. They don’t lose their charge, even when stored for years, and are in a different league to the old Ni- Cad’s!

Incidentally, I have an LED conversion for the Mini MagLite AA made by a firm called Opalec. Great conversion, as you can still get the light apart to clean the switch contacts. You can’t do that on the LED AA Maglites, which seems to be the greatest cause of them not working, or flickering!

There is some argument for a conventional incandescent light. You can usually clean all the terminals and switch contacts, and there are no electronics to fail. If I really need a light, I usually have one of each!
 
Last edited:

6PTsocket

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 12, 2014
Messages
4,593
Re: Maglite donversion

I put TerraLux LED upgrades in my 2D and 5D MAG lights years ago. Highly recommended.

Keep an eye on the batteries. Unlike halogen bulbs, the LED will keep working until the batteries are drained and ready to leak.



Sent from my iPad using The Garage Journal mobile app
We had Mag 2x AA's at work. The problem was just the opposite of what you said. When the voltage drops below a certain point they just quit. An incandescent will just get dimmer until there is nothing left. The LEDs would quit and if you turned it off and on it would work for a moment. It appeared to be a bad connection but what was actually going on was that the battery would drop to the critical voltage and the LED would quit. The battery would recover a little and run the LED for a few more seconds. Later versions worked a little better. 3 volts is marginal for LEDs. If you want to run LEDs reliably on low voltage there has to be boost circuitry.

Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom