Olight Baton 3 Pro White Rechargeable Flashlight Review
The Olight Baton 3 Pro Rechargeable flashlight uses a single 18650 cell (included) as well as offering high output and a familiar user interface. Read on!
Official Specs and Features
Here’s a link to the Olight Baton 3 Pro rechargeable flashlight product page.
Versions
The Olight Baton 3 Pro rechargeable flashlight is up to quite a few body colors by now. There’s Black, OD Green, Desert Tan, Orange, Purple, and White (seen here.) Some or all of those are available in neutral white (4000K-5200k) or cool white (5700K-6700K) (seen here.) Copper is also available now!
Price
The white version seen in this post is in a separate listing (along with copper) from the other colors mentioned above. The white version is still $69.99 and has been produced in a limited number of 5000 pieces. Copper, which is $20 more, is also similarly limited. The other aluminum Olight Baton 3 Pro rechargeable flashlights all come in at $69.99, too.
Short Review
I couple of things right off the top here: I love the new switch cover offered on all these Baton 3 Pros. It’s bigger (comparatively really “much” bigger) and I love that. This increases usability greatly. Also, while I wouldn’t say that the clip change confers any difference in usability, but it somehow feels more solid.
The rest of the light is fairly standard. Batons are great! I’m a massive fan of Batons. This one is good, too, and I’m super pleased to be able to have neutral white.
Long Review
The Big Table
| Olight Baton 3 Pro (White) Rechargeable Flashlight | |
|---|---|
| Emitter: | Unstated (6500K Cool White) |
| Price in USD at publication time: | $69.99 |
| Cell: | 1×18650 |
| Runtime Graphs | |
| LVP? | Questionable |
| Switch Type: | E-Switch |
| Quiescent Current (mA): | ? |
| On-Board Charging? | Yes |
| Charge Port Type: | Proprietary Magnetic |
| Charge Graph | |
| Power off Charge Port | Lowest 4 modes |
| Claimed Lumens (lm) | 1500 |
| Measured Lumens (at 30s) | 1457 (97.1% of claim)^ |
| Candela per Lumen | 6.8 |
| Claimed Throw (m) | 175 |
| Candela (Calculated) in cd (at 30s) | 318lux @ 5.561m = 9834cd |
| Throw (Calculated) (m) | 198.3 (113.3% of claim)^ |
| Claimed CCT | 5700-6700 |
| Measured CCT Range (K) | 5100-6000 Kelvin |
| Item provided for review by: | Olight |
| All my Olight reviews! | |
^ Measurement disclaimer: Testing flashlights is my hobby. I use hobbyist-level equipment for testing, including some I made myself. Try not to get buried in the details of manufacturer specifications versus measurements recorded here; A certain amount of difference (say, 10 or 15%) is perfectly reasonable.
What’s Included
- Olight Baton 3 Pro rechargeable flashlight
- Olight 3200mAh 18650 (customized, proprietary)
- Velvet Pouch
- Charge cable (USB to proprietary charge base)
- Manual(s)
- L-bracket for wall-mount
- Spare bracket sticker
Package and Manual
Build Quality and Disassembly
The Baton 3 Pro is not all that much unlike the S2R Baton II. But this one’s Pro! This one I already reviewed is also Pro, and green. There’s really not any difference between these lights, except in this case I’m testing the cool white version. The Pro seems to have better runtimes and that could mean just better overall electronics.
For lack of talking about the white finish anywhere else in the text, let me just do that right here. Between these two big ol’ galleries of this incredible white Olight Baton 3 Pro rechargeable flashlight. I had some concern when removing the cell from the light (which you might only ever have to do once, if you always use onboard charging!). I thought the black clip might mark up the white body. Two things: it really did not seem to do so (also you could protect the body with a credit card between the pieces if you wished.) And 2: the white really does not feel like you probably think it feels. It’s not matte and chalky feeling. It also doesn’t exactly feel like anodizing. Based on the lights I’ve handled, I’d say it feels closest to a powder coat finish! Those are very robust so if that’s what it is, then I’d call that a huge win. (Though since the price here is the same as other anodized models in this line up, I’d guess it’s not actually powder coat.) Whatever the case is, this white isn’t the type to pick up tons of fingerprints and soak up color from all things it touches. I don’t think it’s like the Convoy MAO white (but I haven’t had those, so I don’t really know.) I like this Olight Baton 3 Pro rechargeable flashlight in white much more than I expected to!
The threads are square-cut and adequately lubed. One thing, in particular, I like about the knurling is that it makes unscrewing the body very easy. There is no [removable] tailcap; to remove the cell, one must hold the head and unscrew the body.
There’s a spring on the head and tail. The tail spring(s?) are for electrical contact and aren’t in any way for impact resistance. The spring on the head is quite stiff, though, so it should provide a reasonable amount of impact resistance.
Size and Comps
Length: 3.99 in (101.4 mm)
Head Diameter: 0.91 in (23 mm)
Body Diameter: 0.91 in (23 mm)
Weight: 3.63 oz (103 g) (Battery Included)
If the flashlight will headstand, I’ll show it here (usually the third photo). If the flashlight will tailstand, I’ll also show that (usually in the fourth photo).
Here’s the test light with the venerable Convoy S2+. Mine’s a custom “baked” edition Nichia 219b triple. A very nice 18650 light.
Also above on the left is a new feature light!! Laulima Metal Craft sent this titanium Todai for some size comparison photos like the ones above. Laulima has bunch of incredible items. I’ve tested one (the Laulima Metal Craft Hoku) (the official site for Hoku is here) that was a Friend Fund Friday review. I was impressed enough by that Hoku that I bought a Laulima Metal Craft Diamond Slim (also in tumbled aluminum) (review is upcoming!) These lights by Laulima have impeccable build quality and not only that, they’re quite configurable. There are some (great, actually) default configurations, but Joshua Dawson (of Laulima Metal Craft) is open to ideas and emitter options and the like. I haven’t reviewed this Todai, but I have to say, it feels absolutely fantastic and I love it thus far. (Notably, I love how warm and eggy those emitters look through the TIR.)
Retention and Carry
This light includes a pocket clip. The pocket clip has a specific place and orientation – just opposite the switch. This is a two-way clip, so technically could be carried bezel up or down, but the only reasonable way is really bezel up. Though the pocket clip is opposite the switch, I didn’t have any problems with accidental activation, and I didn’t tend to lock the light out.
The arms of this clip are much larger than on previous generations, too. This provides a much firmer attachment! In fact, it’s very firm.
The clip has a little hole, too, which is great for lanyard attachment. (Note: no lanyard is included.)
Of course, the base of the Olight Baton 3 Pro flashlight is magnetic because of the way this light charges. But that magnetic base also serves as a great connection point for the Baton 3 Pro, too.
Olight provides this L-bracket with some 3-M adhesive so that you can store the light … in places. This is not a charge base, and a charging base can’t really be added to this. It’s simply a sticky metal bracket. I could do with out this – I have plenty of metal around in the right places for this purpose, but if you really needed it somewhere very specific, I can see it being very useful.
Power and Runtime
The Olight Baton 3 Pro rechargeable flashlight includes a proprietary 18650. There are both positive and negative contacts on the positive end, (and only negative on the negative end). This facilitates onboard charging. These lights will not charge any type of cells except these specific Olight cells. 
Unlike the previous S2R Baton II, the cell on this Baton fits in the “normal” way – positive (button) toward the head. Despite that, regular button top 18650 cells will not work in this light.
Below you can see the runtime tests for the highest three levels.
While the Baton 3 Pro doesn’t seem to necessarily shut off with low voltage protection, the switch does give an indication that the cell voltage is low.
Green: Cell voltage acceptable
Red: Cell voltage low
Red flashing: Cell voltage very low (stop using)
I say “doesn’t necessarily” seem to shut off but it’s very warning-ey. The light steps down to such a low output that you can’t not notice. If the light is unattended, this could be a problem, but if you’re using the light, you’ll certainly notice the low voltage.
Charging
Like many other Olights, the Olight Baton 3 Pro rechargeable flashlight uses Olight’s very common proprietary magnetic charging connector. The charging base on this light is just a charge base and doesn’t double as a two-stage switch as we see on a light like the Warrior Mini 2.
The charging base is the common Olight MCC, which can charge at 1A, 1.5A, or 2A. As I said above, this cell can be charged in a regular bay charger too!
Charging proceeds at well over 1A, and the 3200mAh cell is charged in around 4-5 hours. The charging base is red when charging, and green when not being used or the cell is “completely charged.” I noted in charge testing that the indicator on the charger would turn green before the trickle CV phase had stopped putting power into the cell.
Modes and Currents
| Mode | Mode Claimed Output (lm) | Claimed Runtime | Measured Lumens | Tailcap Amps |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Turbo | 1500-600 | 2m-177m | 1457 | 4.14 |
| High | 600-120 | 180m-25m | 542 | 0.93 |
| Medium | 120 | 17h | 114 | 0.14 |
| Low | 15 | 100h | 16 | 0.02 |
| Moon | 0.5 | 120d | 0.16 | ~ |
Pulse Width Modulation
Nothing really to mention here. None of the modes seem to be using PWM. That wave graph on the second to lowest mode is fun, though.
Here you can see a “baseline” – a chart with almost no light hitting the sensor.
Then there’s the Ultrafire WF-602C flashlight, which has some of the worst PWM I’ve seen. It’s so bad that I used a post about it to explain PWM! Here are multiple timescales (10ms, 5ms, 2ms, 1ms, 0.5ms, 0.2ms) to make comparing this “worst” PWM light to the test light easier. That post also explains why I didn’t test the WF-602C at the usual 50us scale.
User Interface and Operation
The Olight Baton 3 Pro rechargeable flashlight has an e-switch on the head end of the side of the body. The switch cover has a bit of texture and is proud enough that it’s easy to find. It’s also not so proud or soft that it will easily activate accidentally.
As far as I can tell, this user interface is the same as previous Batons – the S2R Baton II, for example.
It’s an indicating switch, as I said above, too. It can indicate in green (seen below) and red. (And maybe orange, sometimes it’s faint enough to be hard to say for certain.)
The user interface is unchanged from the “historical version” of this light. Here’s a user interface table!
| State | Action | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Off | Click | On (mode memory)^ |
| On | Hold (release at desired mode) | Mode cycle (Moon, L, M, H) (no Turbo) |
| Off | Hold | Moonlight |
| Any | Double click | Turbo |
| Any | Triple click | Strobe |
| Strobe | Click | Off |
| Strobe | Hold | Previous Mode |
| Off | Long hold (past Moonlight) | Lockout |
| Lockout | Hold | Unlock to Moonlight |
| On | Click and Hold (quickly)^^ | Timer (Single blink: 3 minutes, Double blink: 9 minutes) |
| Timer | Click and Hold (quickly)^^ | Switch between 3- and 9-minute timers. |
^ Moon, Low, Medium, and High are memorized. Turbo is memorized as High.
^^ The manual states this as “Double click and hold” but I think “Click and hold” quickly. Any form of double click ends in Turbo or Strobe.
LED and Beam
In this version of the Olight Baton 3 Pro flashlight is probably a Luminus SST-40 emitter, just like we saw on the S2R Baton II. But Olight doesn’t say. Either way, that emitter is coupled with a TIR and provides a very pleasant beam profile.
My white copy of the Olight Baton 3 Pro rechargeable flashlight is labeled as CW for “Cool White.”
LED Color Report (CRI and CCT)
Here’s really the main issue with this emitter. It’s green. This is more noticeable on the low modes. In the highest couple of levels, it’s trending toward “ok”, but the positive Duv on the lower modes is not something I look for in an emitter.
It’s noteworthy though, that the CCT is warmer than the range that Olight claims – between 5100K and 6000K. That’s actually great, because the claimed 5700K-6700K would really be too cool. The CRI that Olight claims on the bezel is 70, but by these tests that number seems a bit optimistic – I’m seeing between 65 and 71 CRI. That’s low!
Beamshots
These beamshots always have the following settings: f8, ISO100, 0.3s shutter, and manual 5000K exposure. These photos are taken at floor level, and the beam hits the ceiling around 9 feet away.
Tint vs BLF-348 (KillzoneFlashlights.com 219b version) (affiliate link)
I keep the test flashlight on the left and the BLF-348 reference flashlight on the right.
I compare everything to the KillzoneFlashlights.com 219b BLF-348 because it’s inexpensive and has the best tint!
Conclusion
What I like
- Build quality is quite good
- Complete package includes charging and cell
- The user interface retains neat features from previous models, like the 3 or 9-minute timer
- Knurling makes for great in-hand feel and usage
- Cool white is warmer than I would have expected
- Timer feature is neat
What I don’t like
- Proprietary cells are required for charging
- Very green tint
- Very low CRI
Notes
- This content originally appeared at zeroair.org. Please visit there for the best experience!
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Good review as always. This light is of course a good light. But…
-no Anduril. Anduril is very pleasant in daily use.
– low CRI. Thats my biggest remark here.thats really bad.
Let me compare. The Wurkkos TS10. With CRI98 (!) and Anduril 2. Sure you know the light. I have it for a month now and it is my very best EDC. 15600, small, 1400lm, too much, it gets very warm. At 300lm its the best light for indoors you can wish. The floody beam has a perfect natural tint.