Festool syslite KAL II-set

Woodchippie

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Joined
Mar 27, 2014
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171
I have just purchased the Syslite set KAL II

I found that when I'm working if  I need extra light for a small job I can't be bothered to get an electric lamp out.
This little unit appears to be perfect for my needs.
Every position I need it for seems to be covered by its design.
If I need to get into the back of a cupboard, blocking the natural light with my body, I just put the Syslite in first and it's like sticking my head into daylight.
Another good use I have found it helps me,is when I need extra light on a fixed machine like bandsaw or pillar drill. It can be attached to the magnet mount and adjusted to shine on my work piece.
This syslite KAL II is bright, very bright. There is two settings of brightness.
Another good reason for purchase is when we have power cuts, which we generally have a fair few during the winter.
 

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the kal 2 looks cooler with the 12 leds, funny you mention this cause we just had a power outage last night and i was left to use my dewalt flash light [unsure]...kal 2 will be my next light.
 
The base MA SYSLITE (magnet ball bearing) only comes standard with the SET version.
It's also sold separately but more expensive as always with Festool stuff.
499814.jpg
 
Thanks for review - very helpful.

I'm very tempted by this light but it does look low on lumens for the price.

In high mode, it's only 750 lumens. I'm a bit of a torch geek and 750 lumens is pretty low - my Exposure bike torch I use for mountain biking is 2200 lumens (and will last 2-3 hours at this output)! Even an entry level Fenix pocket torch with a single 18650 battery will output around 900 lumens with the right LED.

So the question is, are the features of the Festool light worth it? It has some great mount options and I'm sure it's tough.

Any thoughts?

Thanks

 
festivus said:
Thanks for review - very helpful.

I'm very tempted by this light but it does look low on lumens for the price.

In high mode, it's only 750 lumens. I'm a bit of a torch geek and 750 lumens is pretty low - my Exposure bike torch I use for mountain biking is 2200 lumens (and will last 2-3 hours at this output)! Even an entry level Fenix pocket torch with a single 18650 battery will output around 900 lumens with the right LED.

So the question is, are the features of the Festool light worth it? It has some great mount options and I'm sure it's tough.

Any thoughts?

Thanks

I had looked at torches with high Lumens, (although I'm no expert), a torch with high lumens would be used possibly for long range I guess.
The Sys-lite is a work light.
It lights up a room no problem, more than enough power. I bought it, due to my eye sight demands more light as I get older, and glasses of course. The set gives you all the bits and pieces to enable you to put it in most places.

 
Woodchippie said:
festivus said:
Thanks for review - very helpful.

I'm very tempted by this light but it does look low on lumens for the price.

In high mode, it's only 750 lumens. I'm a bit of a torch geek and 750 lumens is pretty low - my Exposure bike torch I use for mountain biking is 2200 lumens (and will last 2-3 hours at this output)! Even an entry level Fenix pocket torch with a single 18650 battery will output around 900 lumens with the right LED.

So the question is, are the features of the Festool light worth it? It has some great mount options and I'm sure it's tough.

Any thoughts?

Thanks

I had looked at torches with high Lumens, (although I'm no expert), a torch with high lumens would be used possibly for long range I guess.
The Sys-lite is a work light.
It lights up a room no problem, more than enough power. I bought it, due to my eye sight demands more light as I get older, and glasses of course. The set gives you all the bits and pieces to enable you to put it in most places.

    It is actually quite bright. Though the lumens are comparatively low , it is a flood light and a very broad , even flood light. As such it will light up a back yard, or the inside of a cabinet very well. Inside a cabinet you can point it away from your eyes, not necessarily aimed directly at the work spot, and it will still light the interior. Or in a room, depending on the amount of light needed for the work being done, it can be placed on it's back on top of something to bounce light off the ceiling to light the room (handy in a power outage).

Seth
 
festivus said:
Thanks for review - very helpful.

I'm very tempted by this light but it does look low on lumens for the price.

In high mode, it's only 750 lumens. I'm a bit of a torch geek and 750 lumens is pretty low - my Exposure bike torch I use for mountain biking is 2200 lumens (and will last 2-3 hours at this output)! Even an entry level Fenix pocket torch with a single 18650 battery will output around 900 lumens with the right LED.

So the question is, are the features of the Festool light worth it? It has some great mount options and I'm sure it's tough.

Any thoughts?

Thanks

If you're worried it's not enough light you should look into milwaukee's 18v lanterns. They are much better
 
I recently purchased one Syslite, wasn't sure how bright and useful it would be, and the price is kinda steep!

Two nights ago, I used it outside during darkness to winterize (protect my sprinkler system back pressure valves) and found the light very useful.  It lit up the whole area, found it very handy!

Last night, we had our first power outage in a long time.  I grabbed the Syslite, it provided sufficient lighting in our kitchen and family room.  All of the family said the light was very bright.  Power was out for a little over an hour, light was still shining bright, and I had a number of my drill batteries for usage if needed.

I joked about getting another 10 or so Syslites so in the event of another power outage, we could place one in every room and make all the neighbors think we had power, or at minimum, a whole house emergency generator..... [eek]  I would prefer the generator, but we lose our power so infrequently, it's not worth the expenditure...
 
Baremeg55 said:
I joked about getting another 10 or so Syslites so in the event of another power outage, we could place one in every room and make all the neighbors think we had power, or at minimum, a whole house emergency generator..... [eek]  I would prefer the generator, but we lose our power so infrequently, it's not worth the expenditure...

Will Festool make me a Sys-heater? :) And a Sys-well? [tongue]
 
Many thanks.

With the mounting options I guess you can get the light close to your work so hopefully enough lumens. The Milwaukee has he same lumens according the specs?

 
festivus said:
I'm very tempted by this light but it does look low on lumens for the price.

In high mode, it's only 750 lumens. I'm a bit of a torch geek and 750 lumens is pretty low - my Exposure bike torch I use for mountain biking is 2200 lumens (and will last 2-3 hours at this output)! Even an entry level Fenix pocket torch with a single 18650 battery will output around 900 lumens with the right LED.

Watch out for lumens being used as a measurement or method for comparing lights.  Technically lux should be utilized, but in the day of bigger is better going with lumens is much easier to cook the numbers.

Here's an example:
a single 5 megawatt LED is put on a light.  If you stare right at it, it will burn a hole into your soul, so we'll call it 5 trillion lumens.  That's awesome if you need to cut steel or see anything in a 1" square radius around where you point the light, even from a mile away.

5 million 1 watt LEDs are put on a light.  If you stare right at it, it is bright, but your soul remains intact.  Aim it where you want to see something and it looks like it is daylight.  However, if you're more than 100feet out, it gets really dim when looking at a specific spot.  That said, it is like daylight within those 100 feet.

Make believe numbers, but hopefully illustrates the point.  The problem with lumens is it doesn't tell you the area over which you get those lumens.  Lux takes that into account.

I have all the Makita 18v lights and most of the Milwaukee 12v lights and while they're nice, they don't really illuminate much of an area.  They're much more of a spot light, so you have to be able to shine it right on what you're looking at to get things done.  Having been under cabinets for hours, packed with junk and no room for my head nevermind a spot light, one can appreciate a light that shines over a broad area.

I doubt my make believe examples above help explain the issue, here's a random website I found that seems to dive into the issue at hand.  While I'm all for bigger numbers and appreciate the coolness, don't be fooled into thinking that lumens allows you to compare two lights, sadly you really have to see them in person/get someones comparison review to really get an idea on what is better.
http://www.elzetta.com/blog/lumenwars/
 
I hate to disagree but I think you're getting mixed up between lumens and lux (which does relate to beam and isn't directly comparable - not really used anymore).

Lumens is a measurement and can be compared - it doesn't give any indication to beam distance etc. But if you go into a dark room with white walls and shine a light with 1000 lumens it will fill room with a certain amount of light pretty much regardless of throw (tightness of beam).

A 2000 lumen light will light the room more. It may not seem twice as much because of the way your eyes see light.

 
Also, there's little correlation between the number of LEDs and the spread/intensity of the light.
 
I use Milwaukee's M18 LED floodlight which throws 1100 lumens...i's like turning on the sun. :o
 
festivus said:
I hate to disagree but I think you're getting mixed up between lumens and lux (which does relate to beam and isn't directly comparable - not really used anymore).

Lumens is a measurement and can be compared - it doesn't give any indication to beam distance etc. But if you go into a dark room with white walls and shine a light with 1000 lumens it will fill room with a certain amount of light pretty much regardless of throw (tightness of beam).

A 2000 lumen light will light the room more. It may not seem twice as much because of the way your eyes see light.

festivus said:
I hate to disagree but I think you're getting mixed up between lumens and lux (which does relate to beam and isn't directly comparable - not really used anymore).

Lumens is a measurement and can be compared - it doesn't give any indication to beam distance etc. But if you go into a dark room with white walls and shine a light with 1000 lumens it will fill room with a certain amount of light pretty much regardless of throw (tightness of beam).

A 2000 lumen light will light the room more. It may not seem twice as much because of the way your eyes see light.

I don't believe I'm confused.  Lumens measures the amount of light coming from a source (LED in this case).  Lux is the number of lumens per square meter.

Unless you disperse those lumens over an area, higher lumens doesn't mean a room becomes better lit necessarily, just that there are more lumens of light in the room.  A laser and a light bulb both emit light, the laser is so focused you wouldn't use it to light a room, nor would shooting it into the ceiling necessarily light the room better than a light bulb.  The bulb lights the room, but it can't cut steel at the same lumen level.

Or to steal from a website:
The relationship between lumens & lux

One Lux is defined as being equivalent to one lumen spread over an area of one square metre, or to put it another way – a measurement of lux (light intensity) tells you how many lumens (total light output) you need given the area you are trying to illuminate.

So 1000 lumens, concentrated into an area of one square metre, lights up that square metre with a light intensity (illuminance) of 1000 lux. The same 1000 lumens, spread out over ten square metres, produces a dimmer illuminance of only 100 lux.

Therefore, lighting a larger area to the same measurement of lux requires a larger number of lumens – which is usually achieved by increasing the number of light fixtures (and the power consumed).

The problem is in real life you have to consider the area you want to illuminate.  Lighting a room and lighting a pinhead can be done with the same number of lumens, it just depends how bright you want it to be.  That's where lux comes in.  Technically you can *light* a room with 100 lumens and pinhead with 100 lumens, it'll be really easy to see that pinhead, kind of dark in that room though.

A problem with using lux is you'd have to standardize the area you measure all the lights against.  As using the pinhead example everyone would make a light that basically shoots a laser beam to up their lux values.  Festool would then still be making a light to illuminate a room and would show lower lumen & lux values.

So I should've really said you can't use only lumens, it is part of the picture, but I don't know that it is too meaningful in a lot of situations.  Now if I want efficiency (lumens/watt) then that's great.  If I want to know they're cranking out a lot of light from a unit, sure, but I still need to know the area/lux so I can determine which will work in my specific scenario.
 
sae said:
Also, there's little correlation between the number of LEDs and the spread/intensity of the light.

Technically you're right, however LEDs by their very nature are more of a pinpoint light than a broad/diffused light.  That's not to say you can't put a diffuser around them (ala LED light bulbs).  LEDs are nice bright, spot lights.  The challenge is to diffuse it properly to get coverage.  Just look at reviews of early (and to this day) LED light bulbs and you'll read about ones with a black spot at the top, where light isn't emitted/diffused from.

Using more LEDs in a unit, appears to make it easier to diffuse.  A good example is CREE's LED bulbs.  They're not using a single LED, they have 80 in there.  They technically have 4 LEDs grouped together into what looks like a first glance 1 LED.
http://www.designingwithleds.com/cree-60w-led-replacement-bulb-review-and-tear-down/

So I guess it would've been better in my make believe example to say better diffused light (like the syslite) lights an area better.  My point was more about lumen vs lux than the technology behind producing LED lights.  In that context a single 5 megawatt LED vs 5 million 1watt LEDs, I'd wager my house that the 5million LEDs have a higher lux rating.
 
Happy with this purchase also. My poor credit card.  [crying] Finding more uses everyday.  Hooking up cables to audio video equipment, looking in dark truck box, under counter repairs, that dark storage space, working on furnace.
 
FWIW, I decided to compare a KAL I to a KAL II for light output and color rendering. As Festool claims, the KAL II is significantly brighter and produces a truer color.

The 1st photo is a KAL I and the 2nd photo is a KAL II. You'll notice in the 1st photo the branches of the tree behind the cat are not visible at all.

Edit, sorry the FOG turned the images when I posted them. This has been happening alot lately.
 

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