I recently found a Mini Maglite flashlight in one of my dad's desk drawers. I replaced the old batteries and attempted to turn it on. As it turned out, the bulb was dead (at that time I didn't realize that I had a replacement bulb). I wanted it working and looking cool, so I went to Radioshack a few blocks away, got a SuperBright blue LED, did some fiddling, and ended up with this...
 
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Step 1: Gathering Materials

First thing you'll want to do is gather the tools and supplies for the project:

Tools
-Electric Drill/Drill Press
-Wire Snips

Parts
-Mini Maglite Flashlight
-SuperBright 5mm LED*

*I went to Radioshack and got a 5mm 2600 mcd SuperBright blue LED (catalog number 276-316. I really don't like going to Radioshack because they mark everything up so much ($4.49 for the LED at Radioshack, compared to $0.33 for a similar one from Jameco), but if I need something quick or want to browse, it's okay.
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sparky3489 says: Nov 3, 2011. 6:48 PM
This really isn't a HACK so much as it is a MOD.
Kevanf1 says: Jan 17, 2011. 9:18 AM
Good 'ible', well done. May I suggest using a cone drill or reamer to enlarge the hole in your reflector? It will be a lot neater and you have a heck of a lot more control over the final size of the hole.

Take care.

Kevan
NitroRustlerDriver says: Aug 19, 2010. 1:06 AM
I did this exact same thing a few months back. I put a UV LED in mine. One tip though, use a scotch bright pad or some fine sandpaper to "frost" the LED. This will help diffuse the light more and allow the reflector to work better.
sjoobbani says: Sep 3, 2010. 11:20 AM
Does this make the beam travel farther or make it disipate?
NitroRustlerDriver says: Sep 3, 2010. 1:55 PM
It didn't seem to have any effect on distance. Over a long distance (30+feet) it might be different, but for up close stuff within 10ft., all it did was spread the beam out.
thartaros says: Oct 9, 2009. 12:32 PM
i dont have drill so i had to use a drill bit and make the whole by hand :/ fits perfect though :D
mysss says: Jul 23, 2010. 11:48 PM
...should I even ask why you have a drill bit, but no drill? :P
sjoobbani says: Sep 3, 2010. 11:20 AM
That's creativity rite there :D
cowscankill says: Oct 14, 2008. 3:41 PM
I have a maglite, and I fiddled with my falshlight, but how do you get the maglight lightbuld out? I tried pullin it a little, but I don't want to break something...
Radioactive_Legos (author) says: Oct 14, 2008. 7:28 PM
It comes out. Just try wiggling it side to side as you pull, it should pop out. The bulbs are very small and are made of relatively thick glass, so you should be fine.
cowscankill says: Oct 15, 2008. 1:01 PM
Ok, I got it apart :D Only problem is getting a new bulb... I have a blue one, but it takes 5v... And the yellow and green ones I have aren't bright.
Radioactive_Legos (author) says: Oct 15, 2008. 6:44 PM
I hate to say it, but for ease of getting the LED, you should probably go to radioshack. They have quite a few LEDs in different colors. I actually find that their superbrite white ones (they come in a 2-pack for around $1.69) are the brightest for the money. Or, you could go to Rite Aid into their halloween section - I picked up a 4-pack of little finger flashlights, they have fiberoptic thingies on the ends which pop off easily. Best of all, the flashlights are very bright and the pack only costs $3. The colors are white, blue, red, and green.
cdousley says: Jan 10, 2010. 12:38 PM
what the ultrabrigts are like 5 dollars at my radioshack!!

Colonel88 says: Nov 27, 2008. 8:53 AM
YEAH i bought a super bright one for 5 bucks and it didnt work....
Radioactive_Legos (author) says: Nov 27, 2008. 8:59 AM
Did you check the polarity? It's hard to get an led to stop working unless out severely over-voltage or amp it. Just try turning it 180 degrees in the flashlight (just to swap the lead positions).
Colonel88 says: Nov 27, 2008. 9:40 AM
yes it just doesnt go as bright as the other one
cdousley says: Jan 10, 2010. 12:35 PM
the three led mini magliite upgrade is 5$ at wal mart but this is cool
applesaucemodifier says: Dec 13, 2009. 10:56 AM

Great idea and terrific exicution, worked perfectly!

djdehne says: Oct 14, 2009. 10:01 AM
What is the advantage of using the 5mm led insteadof using a 3mm? After a quick search it looks like a person can geta 3mm led that is just as bright as a 5mm. What is the approximtesize of the original hole?
Radioactive_Legos (author) says: Oct 14, 2009. 1:50 PM
Well, I happened to have 5mm LEDs lying around, and for me they tend tobe more powerful and accept a broader range of inputs.  Theoriginal hole is approximately 3mm in diameter.
pryrofreak119 says: May 25, 2009. 8:20 AM
i tried this once but it burned the LED out
Thenwcp says: Jul 26, 2009. 6:52 AM
You needed a resistor to limit the current in the led.
thartaros says: Oct 10, 2009. 6:12 PM
mie is the opposite i think. the LED is 3.3 volts, but the AA batteries r only 1.5 volts each. and the light isnt bright at all, barely enough to light up a room. also today my flashlight got very hot i was worried the batteris were gonna explode and blow half the city away :/
lilpepsikraker says: Jul 16, 2009. 8:59 PM
Oh, and I thought putting a Joule Thief into an AA case, so I can reuse "dead batteries". Has anyone ever done that?
lilpepsikraker says: Jul 16, 2009. 8:57 PM
Lol, I went out and bought a Maglite 2AA just to do this. Best flashlight I've ever owned. Same color as yours, lol. Still waiting for my shipment of LEDs to come in, so I will post a copy of your instructable when i get mine in. You know, everyone on instructables does that.
team_nes_1986 says: May 21, 2009. 2:03 PM
A couple of things: 1. Why is the anti-roll device/lens holder being used? 2. If you used one of those tiny 3mm LEDs, you wouldn't need to bore the reflector. I know this because in my own experiments, the LED I used was just big enough to fit through the original hole.
team_nes_1986 says: May 21, 2009. 2:04 PM
If you sand off the little flange around the LED base, it would fit even better.
dillee1 says: Jun 3, 2009. 8:56 PM
Indeed. 3mm LED only need the leads trimmed and shine filed. Resultant mod will be drop in replacement to original bulb. No drilling of reflector are needed. No current limiting resistor needed for blue/green/white LED.
01.PNG
dillee1 says: Jun 3, 2009. 10:17 PM
Cut away view of base-LED-reflector assembly
03.PNG
wisd0m says: May 27, 2009. 3:48 PM
This worked well for me. I used a 3mm Red LED that ran at 2.5v. Since I used the 3mm LED, I had to drill out less of the reflector.
Noodle god says: Mar 12, 2009. 3:00 AM
Now you can have a IR or UV min-mag! I just bored out my reflector with a knife. I wanna make a UV one that would be cool!
amakerguy says: Dec 6, 2008. 1:17 PM
I tried this and it fried my LED. :(
daelans says: Jan 28, 2009. 2:41 PM
i cant get my led to fit in the little black holes the wires are to far apart(it would appear, i know not much about flashlights, i mean duh, why else would i read your review, no offense) help good review tho
daelans says: Jan 28, 2009. 2:43 PM
nevermind, i dont know how you guys did this but, my led worked then i drilled the whole and then i put it in, it didnt work. so i tried 2 other leds, they did not work either, well they work just so dim you might as well not really have it. then i put the regular light in it and it was bright as day (exageration) and now im out a mini mag
daelans says: Jan 28, 2009. 3:11 PM
nvm my new unopened duracell batteries were not strong enough i used some wicked wierd not common AA and its like 1000000000000 times brighter than duracell no duracell
Radioactive_Legos (author) says: Dec 6, 2008. 3:02 PM
Did you make sure it was a 3-volt LED? You could have been using a 1.7V or something similar.
amakerguy says: Dec 12, 2008. 8:58 AM
I do not know I just salvadged it.
markymark1 says: Nov 29, 2008. 9:10 PM
can this light detect blood, urine, semen, and saliva on clothing? Please help.
cornflaker says: Dec 5, 2008. 1:05 AM
well if you shine torches with LEDs on a bench on an angle (like almost flat) then all the dust on the desk (you would be surprised how much there is) starts glowing white like in those CSI-like shows, but I don't know if it will actually detect bodily fluids. There is a chance though... Maybey someone else can elaborate on this (please reply to my comment cause I'm interested too)
markymark1 says: Dec 5, 2008. 3:35 PM
From what some websites say, it can, while others say they can't. If they can, it means LEDs, Ultraviolet lights and black lights are on the same playing field. Seeing as how LEDs can cost less than 5 bucks and UV lights and black lights up to 20, they aren't the same. Plus you have to spray luminol or something on the things you want to inspect. I'm so confused.
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