fmerkel
Contributor
I don't know about you, but if I'm using a light for something like wreck or cave diving, I want the damn thing to work while I've got it turned on, regardless of it it's going flat. If there's ANYTHING left in the battery, I want the flashlight to turn that voltage it into visible light for me to use, not for some battery PCB (printed circuit board) to decide I'm about to harm the battery, and cut things off.
Functionally that's faulty reasoning, especially while diving. The PCB protection circuit cut-off is generally below 3.0v, somewhere in the 2.5-2.8v region depending on the chip used and quality of the electronics. There is essentially no capacity left in a lithium cell below 3.0v UNLESS the draw is high and the cell is kind of lame so that the protection is activated. In that case it doesn't matter because the light is going out, one way or another, either a PCB cut-off, or simply dying due to lack of capacity. In a very lame light it would slowly dim away. The DIV05 is not a lame light. It pulls some amps. A lame light (low amp draw like early LED lights) last 'forever' anyway, but are pathetic.
Amp draw: 2.3-2.8A (advertised current draw varies depending on site) I measured 2.78A at the tailcap
Burn Time: 1.5 hrs (advertised). 3 hrs with 3400mAh Panasonic (my results)
You need a backup. Cave and wreck diving, 2 backups.