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Light Alloy

5  /  268 Reviews
2,662,868 Downloads
Jun 29, 2026 Last updated

Old Light Alloy Versions

The packages listed here belong to earlier Light Alloy releases, not the current build. The archive represents versions 4.10.3 and 4.10.2, while the main package page currently records 4.11.1.

The archive is intended for version research and package identification rather than as a second review of the same software. Its value comes from showing which older builds existed, how they were packaged, and which operating systems those files targeted.

Light Alloy Version Archive

The page contains 4 archived packages across 2 recorded versions. The visible version set is 4.10.3 and 4.10.2, and the package rows identify Windows Installer and Windows Portable as the associated operating-system coverage.

Package identification can be checked against names such as LA_Setup_v4.10.3.exe, LA_Portable_v4.10.3.zip, LA_Setup_v4.10.2.exe, and LA_Portable_v4.10.2.7z. Across the inventory, EXE, ZIP, and 7Z formats appear, reflecting the different installation or portable-delivery methods used by these releases.

  • Archived versions: 4.10.3 and 4.10.2.
  • Recorded platforms: Windows Installer and Windows Portable.
  • Package formats: EXE, ZIP, and 7Z.
  • Stored package records: 4; records with checksums: 4.

Working With Archived Light Alloy Releases

Use this archive when the exact Light Alloy version is part of the problem being investigated. Examples include checking an inherited workstation, rebuilding an older environment, validating a migration, or matching a package name found in deployment records.

Version age introduces trade-offs. An old build may match a legacy dependency but lack later fixes, current platform support, or changes to external services. Testing should therefore happen on non-critical data or an isolated system before the package is used operationally.

Package and Platform Compatibility

The archived package rows cover Windows Installer and Windows Portable. A package should only be evaluated against the platform and architecture it was built for; similarly named files can still target different systems or installation methods.

The EXE, ZIP, and 7Z formats shown in the file set represent different delivery methods. Record the selected filename alongside the version so another person can identify the same historical package later.

Checksums and File Identification

The archive retains checksum values for 4 packages out of 4. Available digest types include MD5, SHA1, and SHA256; these are identification records rather than a substitute for compatibility or security review.

A checksum comparison only works when both sides use the same algorithm. Exact filename, version, size, source record, and digest should be considered together when documenting the provenance of an old package.

Choosing Between Old and Current Versions

The main listing and archive serve different purposes: 4.11.1 appears on the current page, while 4.10.3 and 4.10.2 are preserved here for historical package identification.

In most cases, start with the current Light Alloy page because later releases may include compatibility changes, maintenance fixes, and updated platform support. Choose an archived version only when a documented requirement justifies it.

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