TrustFire DF50 Scuba Diving Light, 6500 Lumens Video Camera Photography Dive

$136.65

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TrustFire DF50 Scuba Diving Light, 6500 Lumens Video Camera Photography Dive

(6 customer reviews)

$136.65

Last updated on November 8, 2024 7:23 am Details
  • SUPER BRIGHT AND COMPACT: Max 6500 Lumens. 6*XM2 U3 lamp beads, white light (flooding) color temperature 6000K, up to 150 degrees flooding can provide 6500 lumens of underwater lighting. Non-slip body design. TrustFire DF50 is a diving flashlight specially designed for scuba diving, cave diving, free diving and other underwater sports lighting
  • 3 TYPES OF LED: 6 *XM2 U3 LED – 6000K White light (flood light) 6500 Lumens. 3 *XE-3535 RED LED – the red LED with a wavelength of 620nm provides pure and efficient red light and is suitable for underwater photography, creative photography and red light-sensitive fish light. 3 *XPE UV LED – the UV LED with a wavelength of 395nm and pure UV light is suitable for underwater photography of fish and corals with fluorescent substances to brighten the light
  • RECHARGEABLE BATTERY: Using customized rechargeable battery pack which is more reliable. It can be charged directly with a cable. All you need is a power supply and you will never run out
  • 70 METERS WATER RESISTANCE: In the diving protection system, the max depth of the 70M diving pressure allows you to use it safely in the underwater environment, the four-level battery indicator can easily let you know the remaining usage time
  • WHAT TO GET: 1 x TrustFire DF50 KIT Diving flashlight with BOX, 1 x Trustfire-battery, 1 x Type-C USB charger cable, 1 x ball joint, 1 x diving gear, 2 x replacement O rings, 1 x Operating instructions. NOTE: Please twist the light head part to get the battery
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6 reviews for TrustFire DF50 Scuba Diving Light, 6500 Lumens Video Camera Photography Dive

  1. mstevens

    I received the flashlight on September 7th and took it to a field trip in the Caribbean. The light performed great, it is very bright and the battery last forever, as promoted. However, I detected some condensation on the front glass. I checked the battery part and it was dry, I closed it again (after applying some silicon), hoping the “problem” was over, but the condensation remained. After coming back, I put the flashlight in fresh water for a couple of hours and when I checked again I saw water inside the front glass. I opened the battery chamber again and it was dry. After shaking the front part of the flashlight, (salt) water dripped out. Of course, the light is broken now. I wrote to the seller, but they have not replied to the guarantee. I hope they do since it is not a cheap flashlight. Evidently, it is a manufacturing problem, since the glass is intact and the body of the flashlight is not compromised in any way.

    Update: TrustFire sent a brand new light head. It is working very fine so far. Great customer service. Congratulations.

  2. Krzysztof Puciaty

    There are many things we like about these lights, which explains why we’ve bought 7 of them. The fact that only 2 remain in operation explains why we won’t buy any more.

    The good: Nice size for a dive continuous light, good battery life, usable brightness. The 395 nm UV light is great for nighttime corals and anemones. I really love these lights until they flood.

    The bad: Many of these are shipped with a loose lens retaining ring. We couldn’t figure out how out lights kept flooding until the ring (and lens) on a brand-new one fell off on the boat. That’s one of the 2 that’s survived, probably because we tightened the ring before the first dive. Honestly, these things flood like the banks of the Nile. None has lasted longer than a couple of weeks of diving (Cozumel, max depth 164 feet/50 meters, max duration 102 minutes, max dives/week 8).

    The minor: The cases seem as if they might be useful but the latches are very poorly made. At least one latch on every case broke within a week. Some arrived broken. Others broke in luggage (containing other fragile items that were undamaged). Don’t buy these for the case.

    The ball joint has nothing to keep it from rotating, so adjusting your light can loosen the ball joint’s connection to it. Many other manufacturers use various means to prevent this.

  3. ELC

    非常に明るく充電式で使い易いライト。
    操作ボタンの問題は、自己解決。
    重いのは残念だが、仕様上仕方ない。

  4. Scubadriver

    I purchased two lights in August and September 2021. I have used one of them no more than 5 times, the other I have used only once. I then left them in storage for two years as I had no time to dive at all. They were stored in the protective cases they came with, with batteries disconnected.

    I tried to use them last weekend (January 2024) and none of them switched on. I have charged the batteries (one was continuous green when connected, and the other one was blinking as charging until it got continuous green too.)

    I have sent an email to Trustfire, will wait and see what they say. When the light work they give enormous amount of light (I film cave diving movies so no amount of light is too much). I really wish I can make them work again.

  5. Wile E Coyote

    I have 2 of these lights on a camera rig, with around 50 dives on them now.

    They’re great lights, and for a good price. They have plenty of power for daytime videography, and at night they’re even better. Video lights don’t have a hot spot, so they illuminate the area very naturally. I don’t find my self reaching for a dive torch unless I need more reach at night (e.g. when you see something move in the distance). If you’re doing still photography, you’d be better off with strobes, but these still work just fine, and are far cheaper than a strobe set up.

    Durability is great. I soak them, charge batteries and grease O rings after every dive day. The ball mount appears to be hardened carbon steel, which isn’t great as they’re corroding where they meet the aluminum housing. I installed mine with locktite as a slipping ball mount is a real pain, but with the corrosion they’re never coming out again anyway. I don’t even want to disturb them to clean the corrosion, they’re installed, they don’t slip, they’re staying there. Complaints about stripped ball mount sockets are likely due to over torque issues. Take it easy with the wrench and use some locktite if you’re concerned about them backing out (as I was).

    The mode/power button works well. It remembers the last mode you were on, and turns on the that mode when next activated. It also flashes intermittently to indicate battery level (green, yellow, red, flashing red) which is handy as charging these batteries is a real hassle.

    It has a lock mode to prevent accidental activation for some reason, the button is so firm and requires a long press to turn on anyway, so its not necessary. If you think the light is dead, you might have activated it accidently, just double click the power button to turn lock mode on and off.

  6. Wile E Coyote

    This puts out a lot of light. I used it with my GoPro Hero 11 on a handful of dives in Bonaire. It is a very wide angle uniform flood. It pretty much fills up your entire field of view, turning night into day (sure to annoy other divers), but it matches up well with the GoPro’s wide field of view. During the day it was giving me really nice color to about five or six feet.

    The UV light was a pleasant surprise as well. I had heard about UV light diving. When I accidently cycled though that setting at night, the reef lit up like a Jackson Pollock painting. I was a bit surprised as I though that UV light diving required a mask filter as well but apparrently there two different wavelengths that are typically found on lights. This wavelength does not require the mask filter. Hopefully there is not a massive amount of UV light being reflected from water particles back into the diver’s eyes…

    Quite impressed with build quality. Very sold.

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