Test/Review of Charger NiteCore F1

HKJ

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[size=+3]Charger NiteCore F1[/size]

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This charger from Nitecore is a very light weight single cell charger with two charge currents and power bank function.



The blister pack lists some specifications, battery types and features.

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The box contains the charger and two rubber bands.

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The charger is powered from a micro usb connector. The word "IN" is molded in the plastic.
The usb output is at the other end and the word "OUT" is molded in the plastic.


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The charger has 3 leds hidden under the plastic, they have a couple of different functions:
When a battery is put into the charger they will show voltage: 3 flash on the first and 7 flashes on the next means 3.7 volt.
During charging and power bank they show the usual charge bar, i.e. 1, 2 or 3 leds on depending on power level.
When charging the flashing speed will indicate charge current: slow=0.5A.
All leds flashing means error (A small battery used for power bank).

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The slots uses the usual construction and the slider is very smooth. It can handle batteries from 29mm to 71.4mm long, that means just about any protected and unprotected LiIon cell.
Depending on the position of the slider the charge current will be 0.5A or 1A, the changeover is around 61mm.

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The rubber bands can be used to secure a cell to the charger when it is used "on the move".

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supportedBatterySizes.png
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The minimum charge current is 0.5A and that is a bit high for 10440 cells.
The charger can handle 71mm long batteries, inclusive flat top cells.



[size=+2]Measurements[/size]


  • Around 61mm battery length it will switch between 0.5A and 1A charging.
  • When charger has selected charge current it will stay with it.
  • Below 1 volt the charger will sometimes charge with a low current.
  • Between 1 volt and 3 volt the charger will charge with 60mA or 120mA depending on battery length.
  • Above 3 volt regular charge current it applied.
  • When not powered the charger will discharge with about 0.4mA
  • Charger usb current consumption when battery is full is 40mA
  • Charger will not restart if battery voltage drops.
  • Charge will restart charging after power loss or battery insertion.


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The charge curve is sort of CC/CV curve, but it goes out of constant current some time before it reach constant voltage. On this copy of the charger the termination voltage near the lower bound and with a fairly high termination current, the final cell voltage will be a bit low.

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This cell has higher voltage and the charger drops to low charge rate. This has the advantage of lower termination current and the battery is filled a bit more.

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Same with this cell.

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This cell also drops to 0.5A charge current, but uses a termination current of nearly 200mA, the final cell voltage is a bit on the low side.

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The two small cells are charger with 0.5A current and the low termination current. The end result looks fairly good.

Nitecore%20F1%200.5ohm%20(PA18650-31).png


Adding a 0.5ohm resistor in series with the usb power to simulate a weak usb charger or a long cable makes the charger drop to 0.5A current and then do a acceptable charging.

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M1: 39,4°C, M2: 34,6°C, HS1: 43,5°C
The charger has some heat it needs to get rid of and some of that heat ends up in the battery. The battery do not get too hot.

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When putting a battery in the charger it runs a analysis phases, before it will start on the real charging.

Poweron1A.png


It works the same on 1A range.

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In this case the battery was in the charger some time before I applied power and the analysis was considerable shorter.



[size=+1]USB output[/size]


  • When usb output is powered it uses 15mA from the battery
  • When usb output is turned off it uses 0.4mA from the battery
  • Without a battery the charger uses about 30mA from usb input
  • Usb output is on while charging and powered directly from usb input.
  • Charge can be used as ups, but output voltage will be a bit low.
  • Usb output is coded as usb charger (DCP)


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With a full battery the usb output can deliver about 1.2A before the voltage drops.

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With external power connected that power is passed to the usb output connector, the actual voltage will be a bit low.
The jump in efficiency is because the battery charging stopped.

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Removing the battery do not change the usb output function.

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Running with 0.5A load works very well with good efficiency.

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At 1A the output voltage cannot be kept stable when the battery voltage runs down.

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There is not much noise in the output: 7mV rms and 50mVpp

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And no change with increased load: 7mV rms and 53mVpp




[size=+2]Conclusion[/size]

As a charger it work fairly well, but the low charge voltage and high termination current means the cell will be a bit low in charge, As can be seen it do not happen to all cells, but mostly to fairly new 18650/26650 cells.
The automatic current selection makes it fairly safe to use with most battery sizes, but do not always provide the fastest charging (Some smaller cells can be charged at 1A).

The boost converter in the power bank is not really powerful enough to handle 1A, when the battery voltage get a bit low. The output from the power bank is very low in noise.



[size=+2]Notes[/size]

The charger was supplied by a Gearbest for review.

Here is an explanation on how I did the above charge curves: How do I test a charger
Read more about how I test USB power supplies and chargers
 

Andrey

Newly Enlightened
Joined
Feb 4, 2009
Messages
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HKJ, thank you for yet another great review!

Interestingly, my F1 terminates charge at 60 mA and 4.17 V. I.e. almost fully charging the cell.
Tested with 'Watt's up' in-line watt-meter charging NCR18650GA.
Is it due to F1 sample difference or NCR18650GA charge specifics?
Watt-meter voltage and current values are verified to be within 20 mA and 20 mV of those shown by MC3000 under the same conditions.


Another observation. F1 blinks all cell voltages in the range of 2.1-2.7 V as 2.7 if no USB power is connected and correctly when powered. With cells under 2.1 V it does not power up at all without USB.


With this new charger available, I'm having a hard time choosing between it and the familiar Miller ML-102 to give with lights to non-flashaholic people for primary use as a charger.
ML-102 is faster, provides higher charge, even slightly overcharging, and works better as power bank.
At the same time F1 is smaller, has more attractive overall build quality, and safer with over-discharged cells: will not charge ones under 1 V. ML-102 will charge starting with 0.5 V...
ai.gif
poof.gif
 

sidecross

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I like using this charger, I even keep mine on a desk to quick check voltage on my batteries. On all my round bare batteries I use for usb charging I have connected a dedicated yzxstudio usb3.0 black battery monitor.

I try not to discharge by batteries below 3.5 volts; I keep an ample amount of charged batteries on hand to change when voltage drops.
 

HKJ

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Interestingly, my F1 terminates charge at 60 mA and 4.17 V. I.e. almost fully charging the cell.
Tested with 'Watt's up' in-line watt-meter charging NCR18650GA.
Is it due to F1 sample difference or NCR18650GA charge specifics?
Watt-meter voltage and current values are verified to be within 20 mA and 20 mV of those shown by MC3000 under the same conditions.

I wonder if you test are done with the low charge current selected.
There will be sample differences, but this difference sounds a bit high for that.
 

blah9

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Thank you for this review! I never saw this product before but I'm interested. Might be handy to have a usb power bank with easily replaceable batteries and backup charger. :)
 

CuriousOne

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This is actually an USB power bank, just rebranded as charger, so nothing new here.
 

sidecross

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This is actually an USB power bank, just rebranded as charger, so nothing new here.
I have three similar small usb-power banks and chargers, and this one has features my others do not. It is a step forward in the development of this type low priced charger.
 

HKJ

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This is actually an USB power bank, just rebranded as charger, so nothing new here.

I call it a charger with power bank function.

If I had tested it as a power bank it would have gotten some minus points:
1) Batteries must be mounted with a rubber band
2) Why use a slider, when small batteries cannot be used for power bank
 

sidecross

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The Nitecore F1 charger (two of them) is my choice for my zippered 14 watt SunJack folding solar panel. It fits in the zippered pocket and connects to the two usb ports on the SunJack. I have found this model of a chager/usb out device a current favorite. :thumbsup:
 

sidecross

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2) Why use a slider, when small batteries cannot be used for power bank

Sliders are for fitting different size batteries only for charging; smaller batteries like 16340 according to Nitecore F1 documentation will not support the F1 as a 'power bank'. :caution:
 

HKJ

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Sliders are for fitting different size batteries only for charging; smaller batteries like 16340 according to Nitecore F1 documentation will not support the F1 as a 'power bank'. :caution:

Yes and that is some of the reason it is a charger with power bank function and not a power bank with charger function.
 

oKtosiTe

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Sliders are for fitting different size batteries only for charging; smaller batteries like 16340 according to Nitecore F1 documentation will not support the F1 as a 'power bank'. :caution:
That's probably why it wasn't reviewed here as a power bank. :)

Edit: Wow, I'm slow. I blame this awful work computer's awful keyboard with its awful Swedish layout. :devil:
 

davidt1

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Love this charger. Works great as power bank too. I have used it to charge my phone and wireless keyboard. There is no need to use the rubber band for power bank function. There is enough room to push the battery further back to prevent discharge when it is not in use, or you can insert a piece of plastic or paper between the battery and the charger. If this thing can charge Eneloops too, I would buy two and chuck my other chargers.

Charging my phone. No rubber band needed.
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sidecross

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I use an Ipod Classic and Ipod Nano for my music and audio book libraries and the largest battery is 450mAh LiPo.

Recent and popular power-banks above a capacity of 10,000mAh will not all charge these kinds of devices.

Thankfully products like the one being reviewed by HJK has provided me with a way to charge my audio devices when the power grid might not be functioning.
 
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Andrey

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I wonder if you test are done with the low charge current selected.
There will be sample differences, but this difference sounds a bit high for that.
No, it was with the high current.
Just repeated the charge test for two modes: 1 and 0.5 A. In both cases F1 terminated at 0.05 A and 4.16 V.
 

vadimax

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I cannot stop to enjoy the charger. It's size makes it a perfect EDC one. Terminating a bit early is not a bad feature -- thus your batteries live longer :) Now I have UEi DM393 and Lumintop's 18650 3400mAh battery on charge. Will check the final voltage.

Edit: Charging stopped at 4.15 V.
 
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Overclocker

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i like that it accommodates longer cells, unlike the ML-102. but at the end of the day i still prefer ML-102 v9 even if it takes only unprotected cells. the 5-LED fuel gauge is easier to use than waiting to count the blinking lights on the nitecore

the same way i prefer the fuel gauge on Zebralights
 

ma tumba

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HKJ: have you teared this down? I wonder if it could be hacked so that the powerbank feature would work with an imr 18350? I am sure the restriction is mechanical because adding a spacer makes it perfectly happy even with an imr 16350.
 

HKJ

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HKJ: have you teared this down? I wonder if it could be hacked so that the powerbank feature would work with an imr 18350? I am sure the restriction is mechanical because adding a spacer makes it perfectly happy even with an imr 16350.

No, my guess is that the signal used to reduce charge current is also disabling the power bank function.
 
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