The full review is available here

English review at BLF
German review at my website

Summary

You don’t hear much about JETBeam. That’s a shame, because the long-established company has some interesting flashlights in its portfolio. The new JETBeam E26 (“Kunai”) has just been released.

The E26 was announced a few months ago via a Kickstarter campaign and was successfully funded after just one day. I had the opportunity to test the flashlight before it was officially shipped.

JETBeam made a successful start with the E26 “Kunai” into the world of flat flashlights: white light, UV light and a green laser, combined with intuitive UI using a rotating ring and two buttons, fast charging via USB-C and an ergonomic, practical design.

For the perfect experience I miss direct access to the lowest level, which could also be a little lower. That, and if the flashlight was a little shorter, it would be the perfect EDC flashlight for me. But even as it is, it makes a very good impression.

This review was sponsored by flashlightgo.com, a Chinese shop with a large selection of flashlights.

  • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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    83 months ago

    You can’t call something the “Kunai” and not put a big old thumb ring on the back. Not doing so is just… rude.

    • @SammysHPOP
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      43 months ago

      With some imagination the lanyard could be seen as a ring.

      On the other hand, I just tried to stab myself and it didn’t hurt. Definitely no real kunai.

  • @solrize
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    73 months ago

    JETBeam made a successful start with the E26 “Kunai” into the world of flat flashlights

    TIL there is a world of flat flashlights. Wow :)

  • @Jimmycakes
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    43 months ago

    If it’s as bright as that picture I assume this gets insanely hot very quickly. Is their data on that?

    • @SammysHPOP
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      33 months ago

      It’s mentioned in the review. It reaches 38°C in turbo, or 43°C if you activate turbo again. That’s rather moderate for a modern flashlight. Usually I set my limit to 55°C - not because the flashlight would be damaged, but that’s the limit I can comfortably hold in my hands.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 months ago

      I have a different brand but yes it does. The torque test channel on YouTube has a video comparing a bunch of these kinds of flashlights with actual data if you want to look into it.

    • @[email protected]
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      33 months ago

      I have a similar flashlight as my every day carry from OLight and the battery is just integrated into the flashlight and rechargable. Can’t speak for the one op posted but I get pretty good runtime, only charging it every few weeks under admittedly light use. (I work retail and use it for looking in between shelves mainly)

      • @LifeInMultipleChoice
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        13 months ago

        I imagine they could use the same batteries they used in cell phones. So many built and wasted.

    • @SammysHPOP
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      23 months ago

      It’s built-in. The back cover is secured with four screws, so I assume you could replace the battery once it’s dead. But the seal didn’t want to release the cover without force, so I stopped to not damage it prematurely.