Most flashlights ask you to choose. Throw or flood. Pocket size or runtime. A simple beam or specialty features. Jetbeam’s E28 walks into the room and suggests you stop choosing altogether. This flat, brick-shaped EDC light packs dual independently controlled white beams (one flood, one throw), a 365 nm UV emitter, a 520 nm green laser, an RGB side strip with nine modes, and a 7,000 mAh power bank into a single 251-gram body. It is the sort of design that makes you wonder whether the engineers were trying to solve real problems or just win a feature-count contest.
Here’s the thing: the spec sheet sounds like overkill until you actually think about the situations where you need more than a basic beam. Checking a hotel room for cleanliness with UV. Using the laser as a presentation pointer by day and a pet toy by night. Mounting the light magnetically under a car hood while the flood beam lights your work and the throw beam spotlights a distant part number. The E28 is betting that enough people want a true multi-tool in flashlight form, and the early reviews suggest Jetbeam might be onto something.
Designer: Jetbeam
Click Here to Buy Now: $87.45 $159.95 (45% off). Hurry, only a few left!
Two 18650 cells sit inside a flat aluminum body measuring 107.6 × 48 × 26.6 mm, delivering 7,000 mAh of total capacity. That translates to 8.3 hours at 500 lumens in flood mode or 13.2 hours at 300 lumens in throw mode, which are the runtimes that actually matter when you cannot swap batteries mid-hike. Moonlight mode allegedly hits 350 hours, though nobody is realistically running a light that dim for two weeks straight. The dual-cell setup adds weight, pushing the E28 to 251 grams with batteries installed, but that heft comes with the benefit of never worrying about your light dying during an evening walk or a weekend camping trip.
Jetbeam gave each beam its own proper optics instead of cramming compromised emitters into a too-small head. The flood side uses a 7070 LED with a wide, shallow reflector, maxing out at 3,300 lumens (briefly, before stepping down to 1,500 then 1,000 as heat builds). It is a wall of light that illuminates everything within 10 meters with zero shadows, exactly what you want for close work or navigating a dark campsite. The throw channel uses a Luminus SFT-42R with a smooth, focused reflector, hitting 2,480 lumens and reaching 365 meters with a 33,375-candela hotspot. That is search-and-rescue level throw from a light you can slip into a jacket pocket. Running both channels simultaneously gives you a beam profile with bright center punch and complete peripheral coverage, which is how dual-beam lights should work but rarely do because most manufacturers cheap out on one emitter or the other.
A rotary dial handles mode switching, which immediately sets this apart from the “click seventeen times to find strobe” nonsense that plagues most multi-mode lights. Rotate to flood, throw, dual-beam, UV, laser, or RGB, then tap the side button to turn on or cycle brightness. It takes maybe ten minutes to learn and then becomes completely intuitive. You can operate it one-handed even with gloves because the dial has positive detents and the button is chunky and easy to find by feel. Jetbeam clearly spent time thinking about how people actually use lights in the field instead of just designing a UI that looks good on paper.
The UV emitter sits on one side at 365 nm, which is proper ultraviolet (not the 395 nm purple wash that cheap lights use). This wavelength makes currency security features glow, reveals pet stains on carpets, highlights HVAC leak-detection dye, and generally makes invisible contaminants visible. If you work in automotive, HVAC, or forensics, this is a tool you already carry separately. If you travel frequently and care about hotel cleanliness, same deal. For everyone else, it is a fun party trick that might come in handy twice a year. The 520 nm green laser sits opposite, useful for presentations, pointing out distant landmarks, or entertaining pets. It is low-powered enough to be safe but bright enough to be visible across a parking lot at night. The RGB strip runs along the side with nine different modes: solid colors, breathing patterns, meteor effects, rainbow flow. Red light preserves night vision when you are reading maps. Multicolor modes create ambient lighting at camp or act as fill light for photos. Solid white functions as a secondary task light. Some people will use this constantly; others will turn it on once, say “neat,” and forget it exists.
Aerospace-grade aluminum with HA III hard anodizing means the body can take scratches, drops, and general abuse without looking like it fell off a truck. The machining cuts along the flat sides double as heat fins and grip texture, which is functional design instead of just aesthetics. IPX8 waterproofing handles 2 meters of submersion, and the USB-C port hides behind a sealed rubber cover. The magnetic tail holds firm on steel surfaces even when the light is pumping out heat on high mode, making hands-free work actually practical. A removable clip mounts in either direction for cap-brim carry, backpack straps, or belt attachment, and the base plate is compatible with GoPro-style action camera mounts, so you can stick this on bike handlebars, helmets, or quick-release brackets.
The power bank function turns 7,000 mAh of onboard capacity into emergency phone charging via USB-C. You can fully charge most phones at least once, which makes the E28 useful during power outages or long days away from outlets. It is not replacing a dedicated battery bank, but as something that lives in your car or go-bag anyway, having that backup option adds real value. The RGB strip shows battery status for five seconds on power-up, cycling through colors to indicate remaining charge, which is smarter than trying to guess voltage by how bright the beam looks.
Jetbeam ships the E28 with two 3,500 mAh 18650 cells, a USB-C cable, lanyard, mounting clip, hardware, and a hex wrench, so you can use it immediately without buying accessories. Pricing lands at $87.45 with 2 color options to choose from – a tactical green, and a classic grey, which feels reasonable for a light that consolidates a flood beam, throw beam, UV source, laser pointer, and power bank into one 251-gram package. If you already carry multiple single-purpose tools, the E28 is the Swiss Army knife consolidation you did not know you needed. If your lighting needs are simple, a $25 single-beam EDC or even your phone’s flashlight will serve you fine. But for anyone who regularly finds themselves thinking “I wish I had X tool right now,” Jetbeam built exactly that.
Click Here to Buy Now: $87.45 $159.95 (45% off). Hurry, only a few left!






