Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
popular Posted by StrongLake4786 • 5d ago
popular Posted by StrongLake4786 • 5d ago

Sofirn BLF LT1 Rechargeable Camping Lantern - $54.99 w/ free Prime Shipping

$55

$85

35% off
Amazon
17 Comments 5,483 Views
Get Deal at Amazon
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Best prices I've ever seen this for at Amazon.

Amazing high-tech, long life LED Lantern designed by a bunch of flashlight nerds and made into a real product by Sofirn.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B097MN6P1B
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Best prices I've ever seen this for at Amazon.

Amazing high-tech, long life LED Lantern designed by a bunch of flashlight nerds and made into a real product by Sofirn.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B097MN6P1B

Community Voting

Deal Score
+9
Good Deal
Get Deal at Amazon
Leave a Comment
To participate in the comments, please log in.

17 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

5d ago
317 Posts
Joined Mar 2017
5d ago
blocky
5d ago
317 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank blocky

I've got this light. The white balance adjustment is great, the runtime is very good, but the form factor is clunky and the diffuser is awful. Probably half the lumens it generates never exit the flashlight. It's a little too chunky for hand carry and it's a terrible thing to bang your head on in a tent. On the table, the 360 doesn't light things well downwards so you're left with a bright light in front of you while trying to make out what's next to it. Because it's a 360 light with downward oriented LEDs and no cone or parabolic internally, it doesn't bounce efficiently if you try to place it out of your direct sight. I've opened it to see about modding the diffusor, but annoyingly the LEDs are mounted into the cap rather than on the body.

I've considered making this a desk light using the 1/4"20 threads on a microphone boom arm and keeping it permanently wired, but I think I'd still want to build some kind of foil to redirect the light and at that point, I'm basically just using it for parts. Instead of all that, it lives by my keys where it's easily found when the power goes out. I keep the top unscrewed to reduce phantom power drain.

In body charging is very slow, but I know most enthusiasts will charge externally. USB-c is cool, and I like that I can run it by cable without batteries, although the light can't quite manage max brightness through usb-c alone. The machining is great. I bought it for the white balance adjustment feature and on that point, it delivers.

It's been a few years now; I'd be interested in a revision.
3
1
5d ago
407 Posts
Joined Jan 2007
5d ago
idahoski
5d ago
407 Posts
Quote from blocky :
I've got this light. The white balance adjustment is great, the runtime is very good, but the form factor is clunky and the diffuser is awful. Probably half the lumens it generates never exit the flashlight. It's a little too chunky for hand carry and it's a terrible thing to bang your head on in a tent. On the table, the 360 doesn't light things well downwards so you're left with a bright light in front of you while trying to make out what's next to it. Because it's a 360 light with downward oriented LEDs and no cone or parabolic internally, it doesn't bounce efficiently if you try to place it out of your direct sight. I've opened it to see about modding the diffusor, but annoyingly the LEDs are mounted into the cap rather than on the body.

I've considered making this a desk light using the 1/4"20 threads on a microphone boom arm and keeping it permanently wired, but I think I'd still want to build some kind of foil to redirect the light and at that point, I'm basically just using it for parts. Instead of all that, it lives by my keys where it's easily found when the power goes out. I keep the top unscrewed to reduce phantom power drain.

In body charging is very slow, but I know most enthusiasts will charge externally. USB-c is cool, and I like that I can run it by cable without batteries, although the light can't quite manage max brightness through usb-c alone. The machining is great. I bought it for the white balance adjustment feature and on that point, it delivers.

It's been a few years now; I'd be interested in a revision.
Thanks for the feedback. I am sucker for Sofirn flashlights, so I was considering this, but will pass on it.
5d ago
70 Posts
Joined Jul 2011
5d ago
ganggangbuzzbuzz
5d ago
70 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank ganggangbuzzbuzz

Quote from blocky :
I've got this light. The white balance adjustment is great, the runtime is very good, but the form factor is clunky and the diffuser is awful. Probably half the lumens it generates never exit the flashlight. It's a little too chunky for hand carry and it's a terrible thing to bang your head on in a tent. On the table, the 360 doesn't light things well downwards so you're left with a bright light in front of you while trying to make out what's next to it. Because it's a 360 light with downward oriented LEDs and no cone or parabolic internally, it doesn't bounce efficiently if you try to place it out of your direct sight. I've opened it to see about modding the diffusor, but annoyingly the LEDs are mounted into the cap rather than on the body.

I've considered making this a desk light using the 1/4"20 threads on a microphone boom arm and keeping it permanently wired, but I think I'd still want to build some kind of foil to redirect the light and at that point, I'm basically just using it for parts. Instead of all that, it lives by my keys where it's easily found when the power goes out. I keep the top unscrewed to reduce phantom power drain.

In body charging is very slow, but I know most enthusiasts will charge externally. USB-c is cool, and I like that I can run it by cable without batteries, although the light can't quite manage max brightness through usb-c alone. The machining is great. I bought it for the white balance adjustment feature and on that point, it delivers.

It's been a few years now; I'd be interested in a revision.

Agree with most of this. I flip the lantern upside down to get more light pointed up.
1
5d ago
236 Posts
Joined Dec 2015
5d ago
nextcity
5d ago
236 Posts
Quote from idahoski :
Thanks for the feedback. I am sucker for Sofirn flashlights, so I was considering this, but will pass on it.

I wouldn't pass on it. It's the best lantern money can buy in this size and form factor. And it has Anduril 2.0. I lost count, but I have at least ten of these scattered throughout my two homes, garages, workshops, etc.
Pro
5d ago
490 Posts
Joined Feb 2015
5d ago
coopscoop
Pro
5d ago
490 Posts
Quote from blocky :
I've got this light. The white balance adjustment is great, the runtime is very good, but the form factor is clunky and the diffuser is awful. Probably half the lumens it generates never exit the flashlight. It's a little too chunky for hand carry and it's a terrible thing to bang your head on in a tent. On the table, the 360 doesn't light things well downwards so you're left with a bright light in front of you while trying to make out what's next to it. Because it's a 360 light with downward oriented LEDs and no cone or parabolic internally, it doesn't bounce efficiently if you try to place it out of your direct sight. I've opened it to see about modding the diffusor, but annoyingly the LEDs are mounted into the cap rather than on the body.

I've considered making this a desk light using the 1/4"20 threads on a microphone boom arm and keeping it permanently wired, but I think I'd still want to build some kind of foil to redirect the light and at that point, I'm basically just using it for parts. Instead of all that, it lives by my keys where it's easily found when the power goes out. I keep the top unscrewed to reduce phantom power drain.

In body charging is very slow, but I know most enthusiasts will charge externally. USB-c is cool, and I like that I can run it by cable without batteries, although the light can't quite manage max brightness through usb-c alone. The machining is great. I bought it for the white balance adjustment feature and on that point, it delivers.

It's been a few years now; I'd be interested in a revision.

Not sure if it's the successor but I recently got the Sofirn LT1S lantern ($30.27 at Ali) and love it. Seems like it might solve some of the issues you described. It was super useful on recent camping trip and gets used regularly at home as reading light. My only (minor) complaint is the hook. It comes out too easily (once accidentally compressed and it came out).
4d ago
251 Posts
Joined Nov 2015
4d ago
underworldtaker
4d ago
251 Posts
Forgive my intrusive comment but as a camper myself I have to bring up the fact that the rechargeable husky tripod light is still on sale at the home depot with free home shipping , it has a lot of potential considering the fact that the battery lasts 17 hours at medium mode and you can take it down from the tripod I just got it yesterday and it's about to be my favorite camping light
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Husky.../325210051
Last edited by underworldtaker April 14, 2025 at 09:14 PM.
4d ago
124 Posts
Joined Dec 2010
4d ago
tonight
4d ago
124 Posts
Quote from underworldtaker :
Forgive my intrusive comment but as a camper myself I have to bring up the fact that the rechargeable husky tripod light is still on sale at the home depot with free home shipping , it has a lot of potential considering the fact that the battery lasts 17 hours at medium mode and you can take it down from the tripod I just got it yesterday and it's about to be my favorite camping light
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Husky.../325210051

Does it have a camera style mount to attach to the tripod?

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

4d ago
251 Posts
Joined Nov 2015
4d ago
underworldtaker
4d ago
251 Posts
Yes it does !! It's also magnetic and has a hook as well it's just a no brainer. The tripod itself is of very good quality 👌
4d ago
251 Posts
Joined Nov 2015
4d ago
underworldtaker
4d ago
251 Posts
Quote from tonight :
Does it have a camera style mount to attach to the tripod?

Yes it does !! It's also magnetic and has a hook as well it's just a no brainer. The tripod itself is of very good quality 👌
4d ago
9 Posts
Joined Sep 2020
4d ago
EagerDesk594
4d ago
9 Posts
84$ for a flashlight makes me want to save it for a ecoflow backup battery, with solar panels and plug in a bunch of things not only just light: https://www.ebay.com/itm/146390154100
1
4d ago
1,767 Posts
Joined Sep 2009
4d ago
chaoticz
4d ago
1,767 Posts
Done with rechargeable shit when it comes to camping, at the end of the day when you're out in the woods you just need something to take some big batteries to last like flashlights and lanterns
4
4d ago
47 Posts
Joined Dec 2022
4d ago
Duydawg
4d ago
47 Posts
Quote from underworldtaker :
Forgive my intrusive comment but as a camper myself I have to bring up the fact that the rechargeable husky tripod light is still on sale at the home depot with free home shipping , it has a lot of potential considering the fact that the battery lasts 17 hours at medium mode and you can take it down from the tripod I just got it yesterday and it's about to be my favorite camping light
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Husky.../325210051

i have both lights, albeit it's the mini Sofrin lantern which i LOVE

i love my husky for bright lights for automotive or power outage

however it's not a dim light to leave at bedside. lowest setting will blind you if you're not mindful and accidentally turn it on and catch a glimpse of it unexpectedly.
4d ago
1,824 Posts
Joined Jun 2004
4d ago
Falqon
4d ago
1,824 Posts
Quote from chaoticz :
Done with rechargeable shit when it comes to camping, at the end of the day when you're out in the woods you just need something to take some big batteries to last like flashlights and lanterns
This thing is great, I'm confused by the negative comments. One person says it doesn't light downward and the other says they turn it upside down to light more up. Ok???

It is rechargeable, but you can bring extra 18650s if you are that worried. It also works as a power bank recharging other usb-c devices which is great for peace of mind.

I love ours, it hangs over the table for meals after the sun has gone down and then is hung in our tent. I've given it to the kids and left it on the lowest setting all night so they don't wake up in a dark tent. After 2-3 nights, battery still is at least half full.

No it stinks as a flashlight, but it's great as a lantern and power bank.
3d ago
8 Posts
Joined May 2016
3d ago
Blunter
3d ago
8 Posts
Wish I was willing to drop $55 on a lantern right now. Was just watching a video on this thing yesterday and it looks great. I went with a much cheaper option instead. Revamping my whole camping setup and this would have been a nice addition.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Yesterday
2 Posts
Joined Jul 2014
Yesterday
MarkG3241
Yesterday
2 Posts
Quote from blocky :
I've got this light. The white balance adjustment is great, the runtime is very good, but the form factor is clunky and the diffuser is awful. Probably half the lumens it generates never exit the flashlight. It's a little too chunky for hand carry and it's a terrible thing to bang your head on in a tent. On the table, the 360 doesn't light things well downwards so you're left with a bright light in front of you while trying to make out what's next to it. Because it's a 360 light with downward oriented LEDs and no cone or parabolic internally, it doesn't bounce efficiently if you try to place it out of your direct sight. I've opened it to see about modding the diffusor, but annoyingly the LEDs are mounted into the cap rather than on the body.I've considered making this a desk light using the 1/4"20 threads on a microphone boom arm and keeping it permanently wired, but I think I'd still want to build some kind of foil to redirect the light and at that point, I'm basically just using it for parts. Instead of all that, it lives by my keys where it's easily found when the power goes out. I keep the top unscrewed to reduce phantom power drain. In body charging is very slow, but I know most enthusiasts will charge externally. USB-c is cool, and I like that I can run it by cable without batteries, although the light can't quite manage max brightness through usb-c alone. The machining is great. I bought it for the white balance adjustment feature and on that point, it delivers.It's been a few years now; I'd be interested in a revision.
I've had this light for a while and agree with all the points mentioned. On paper, it's amazing. In reality though, it's a big let down that I should have returned.
1

Popular Deals

View All

Trending Deals

View All