Test/Review of Charger Soshine H2

HKJ

Flashaholic
Joined
Mar 26, 2008
Messages
9,715
Location
Copenhagen, Denmark
[size=+3]Charger Soshine H2[/size]

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This charger looks like a two channel and improved version of the S7. The charger suppors 3 chemistries and up to 26650 cells, but only one charge current.

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There is a lot of explanation on the box.

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The contents of the box is only the charger and a power supply, i.e. the box is the manual.
I wonder about the white power supply to a black charger.

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The charger has a small display and two buttons, one for each channel.
With no battery in the channel the button selects between ICR and IFR batteries.
With a battery in the channel the button toggles between used charge time and mAh.

FullDisplay.png


Here is the full display, it was caught during self-test at power on.
The background led will turn off after a short time, pressing a button will turn it on again for some time.
Li-Ion is for ICR/IMR (LiCoO2/LiMn) batteries.
Li-FeP is for IFR (LiFePO4) batteries.

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The charger can be supplied with 12 volt from the supplied power adapter or with 5 volt from usb, but a high power usb supply is needed, it can use up to 2A according to specifications.

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The slider is very smooth and can handle from 31mm to more than 72 mm long batteries.

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The charger can handle 70 mm long batteries including flat top cells.
Due to the "high" charge current, small LiIon batteries cannot be charged in it.



[size=+2]Measurements[/size]


  • When not connected to power it will discharges with up to 6mA (LiIon).
  • When power is connected with a full battery, the charger will charge, when the voltage drops slightly below termination voltage.
  • Any voltage drop, reinsertion of battery or power cycling will restart charging.
  • At 0 volt on the battery the charge current is 3.6mA (Display shows Stby).
  • At about 0.6 volt the charger activates and starts testing for LiIon/NiMH, voltmeter shows -.-
  • The voltmeter can show up to 2.4 volt in NiMH mode.
  • At about 2.5 volt LiIon (LiIon/LiFePO4 settings has the same threshold) is selected, the voltmeter has a minimum value of 3.2 volt for LiOn.
  • The voltmeter is limited to 4.2 volt maximum in LiIon mode.
  • While charging it is possible to switch between time and mAh on the display
  • The channels on the charger are independent, i.e. there are small differences between them.


I do not use my usual scale on the curves, because the charger overcharges I uses a higher maximum voltage

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The charger uses a CC/CV charge curve with 800mA charge current, but check the voltage scale.
The charger goes up to 4.29 volt, that is not good.

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The second channel goes above 4.4 volt, this is very bad.
Notice: The PA (Panasonic) batteries I am testing with are unprotected.

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Something went completely wrong with this cell, the voltage jumps up and down and the up is above 4.7 volt!
It is probably because the overcharge protection in the battery trips, then the charge voltage goes up.

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My 3400mA cell is also overcharged.

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The old 16340 cell does never terminate, it has way to high leak current at 4.4 volt.

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The charger is not heating the batteries much.

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M1: 35,0°C, M2: 36,5°C, HS1: 46,4°C

But there is some heat just below the display.

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M1: 44,3°C, HS1: 58,3°C

And on the usb power connector.

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The charger runs a 10 second test cycle, before engaging full charge current.

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The pulsing is probably for voltage measurement.



[size=+1]IFR LiFePO4[/size]

Pressing the button for a channel, without any battery in that channel, will select between ICR and IFR batteries. Default is ICR, i.e. 4.2 volt charge, pressing the button will select IFR, this is supposed to be 3.6 volt charge.

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With IFR or LiFePO4 batteries, the charger is supposed to stop charging at about 3.6 volt. This charger does reduce the current, but not to zero. This means the voltage raises to above 4 volt, instead of dropping to 3.4 volt.



[size=+1]NiMH[/size]

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With a 2000mAh eneloop, the charger only chargers 1000mAh, this is not very good.

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On channel #2 I only got 600mAh.

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Two eneloops, does not work better.

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The eneloop XX does also get a partial charge.

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With NiMH it uses the same 10 second startup.

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And pulsing while charging.


Testing with 2500 volt and 5000 volt between mains and low volt side, did not show any safety problems.



[size=+2]Conclusion[/size]

The charger did not charge one battery satisfactory during my test. It looks like the charger has 3 separate problems: To high charge voltage for ICR batteries, does not turn off on IFR batteries and partial charge on NiMH.
I cannot recommend this charger.



[size=+2]Notes[/size]

Here is an explanation on how I did the above charge curves: How do I test a charger
 

snakyjake

Enlightened
Joined
Nov 28, 2007
Messages
668
Location
WA, USA
Thanks for the review. At first I was pretty excited (IFR+independent channels to charge a single battery), then became extremely disappointed in the dismal IFR feature.
 

shelm

Flashlight Enthusiast
Joined
Dec 8, 2011
Messages
2,047
Thanks for the tests and results! :)


This review basically shattered trust in Soshine Co. tbh
 
Last edited:

ChrisGarrett

Flashlight Enthusiast
Joined
Feb 2, 2012
Messages
5,726
Location
Miami, Florida
Thanks for the tests and results! :)


This review basically shattered trust in Soshine Co. tbh

I bought a pair of 700mAh 16340s from Orbtronics back in 5/12 and I got about 2-3 months of minor/moderate use out of one before it started to discharge right before my eyes. The second one still works a little, but it only charges up to 4.13-4.14v.

Small sample size and all, but I won't be buying Soshine anything, anytime too soon.

Chris
 

Dr. Mario

Enlightened
Joined
Mar 4, 2010
Messages
459
I actually am glad that you, HKJ, are testing the chargers for Lithium-ion charging safety checklists. I will chalk this charger up on the list of chargers to avoid.

Also, I bought FourSevens single bay charger, really happy with the purchase as I would prefer to buy any charger that has CPF blessings because I have couple Li-ion batteries and I take safety seriously.
 
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