A flashlight is often bought for one job and judged during another. A campsite needs a broad pool of light, a roadside stop needs a beam that reaches beyond the shoulder, and a power cut can turn a phone battery into part of the same problem. The Wurkkos TS27 is built around that overlap. Its published specification combines a 3200-lumen beam, an 845-metre throw claim, adjustable white light, lantern and RGB modes, reverse charging, and a removable 15000 mAh LiFePO4 battery.
For this editorial interview, Maya Lin, Wurkkos Product Manager, discusses the product as a portable lighting system rather than a single-purpose torch. The conversation examines why capacity changes behaviour, where multi-mode products can become difficult to use, and how a company can give consumers more options without asking them to study a manual in the dark.
Maya Lin, Product Manager: We did not begin with the idea that every light should be smaller. We began with the moments when a small light runs out of usefulness: a family arriving at a dark campsite, a driver checking a vehicle at the edge of an unlit road, or a home dealing with an extended outage. In those scenes, users are not comparing pocket comfort alone. They are asking how many separate tools they still need to carry. The TS27 accepts more volume because.
Maya Lin, Product Manager: A focused beam and a lantern solve almost opposite problems. A beam lets a user read distance, identify a trail marker, or see what is moving at the far edge of a field. A lantern lets people work close together, arrange gear, cook, or find items in a tent without constantly sweeping a harsh spot across each other. Carrying both is sensible for specialists, but many consumers will not. The design question was how to make the switch meaningful rather than.
Maya Lin, Product Manager: The important phrase is low mode. Nobody should assume maximum output lasts for 300 hours. But the published low-mode runtime matters because many real tasks are not high-output tasks. A tent entrance, a hallway during an outage, or a table where someone is sorting equipment may need reliable modest light for a long time. The larger battery also changes charging habits: users do not have to treat every evening away from a wall socket as a countdown. Our aim was to.
Maya Lin, Product Manager: Capacity gets attention, but battery chemistry and serviceability are the deeper decisions. The product page identifies a removable 15000 mAh LiFePO4 battery and cites more than 3000 charge cycles. For a light intended for repeated outdoor and emergency use, the battery cannot be treated as a sealed afterthought. Removability makes storage, replacement planning, and practical charging arrangements easier to understand. LiFePO4 also fits the product brief because stable, repeatable use matters more than chasing a thin profile. We want customers to.
Maya Lin, Product Manager: Colour temperature becomes practical when people are working for different reasons. A warmer setting can make a tent, cabin, or late-night table feel less severe. A cooler setting can help a user inspect equipment, organise a vehicle, or concentrate on a detailed task. We did not want to suggest that one setting is correct for every person. The point is to let the lighting environment follow the task. In portable equipment, flexibility is valuable when it is easy to access and.
Maya Lin, Product Manager: RGB can be playful, but it also gives a portable light a different social and practical character. In camp, coloured light can create a lower-intensity shared area without turning every conversation into a spotlight. In an emergency kit, signalling or distinct ambient lighting can help a family organise a small space. The design discipline is to keep those modes from competing with the core functions. We do not treat colour as a replacement for a reliable white beam or lantern. It.
Maya Lin, Product Manager: A phone can become more important as conditions get worse because it holds maps, contacts, weather information, and a camera. That is why reverse charging belongs in the same conversation as light. We wanted the TS27 to offer a reserve when a user has planned poorly or simply encountered a longer day. It is not intended to make every trip depend on one device; redundancy is still sensible. But a product that can keep a phone alive for a necessary call.
Maya Lin, Product Manager: The temptation is to add every mode because the hardware can support it. That approach transfers the design burden to the user. We had to keep returning to the first action someone takes under pressure: they want useful light, immediately. The basic lighting path must remain dependable before optional functions matter. A user should be able to move from a long throw to a broad area-light situation with clear intent, not by guessing. Product teams should remember that feature count is.
Maya Lin, Product Manager: It is not designed as a minimal everyday-carry light. Someone who needs a slim torch for a shirt pocket or a very short walk will likely prefer a smaller model. The TS27 makes more sense when the user expects to be away from charging, needs coverage for several people, or wants a single item for camping, vehicles, household backup, and travel. We think that limitation should be stated plainly. Versatility works when it has a clear boundary. A product becomes more.
Maya Lin, Product Manager: The principle is preparedness without a pile of equipment. We wanted a person to pack one substantial light and know it could handle distance, shared space, long low-level use, and a small charging emergency. That does not mean one product removes the need for judgement. It means the product gives people more room to make good decisions when conditions change. A well-designed tool is not one that demands attention. It is one that gives attention back to the situation in front.
As the conversation went on, what became clear was that the TS27 is organised around continuity rather than maximum output alone: its design asks how light, battery reserve, and usability can remain available through a changing night.
The Wurkkos TS27 reflects a useful correction to the usual flashlight conversation. Output and throw still matter, particularly when a user needs to identify something at distance. Yet the product is more interesting as a system of trade-offs. Its larger removable battery supports extended low-level use and reverse charging; its lantern and adjustable white-light functions recognise that most time outdoors is not spent searching into the far distance; and its RGB capability adds a secondary layer without replacing its central purpose.
From an editorial perspective, the strongest idea is not that one device can do everything. It is that the consequences of a dark, unpowered situation often arrive together. A practical product design can acknowledge that overlap without overstating its role. The TS27 appears intended for users who would rather carry one deliberate piece of kit than discover, after the sun has set, that their separate light, lantern, and battery reserve were each left somewhere else.