Test/review of Varta LCD Ultra Fast Charger 57675

HKJ

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[size=+3]Varta LCD Ultra Fast Charger 57675[/size]

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Varta makes both batteries and chargers, here I am looking on a four channel super fast charger/analyzer.



I got the charger in a blister pack. As can be seen on the pack the charger needs 15 minutes to charge batteries, but is this correct?

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The pack contained the charger, a power supply, a car adapter, four batteries and an instruction sheet.



The power connector is placed on the bottom of the charger, this means only angled DC connectors can be used with it (At least if you want the charger to stand on its feet's). The actual power input is marked on the label, but not near the connector.

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The user interface is a LCD display and two buttons.
The DISPLAY button is used to select between current, voltage, time and capacity.
The MODE button is used to select between Charge, Discharge, Discharge refresh, charge test. The mode is common for all slots and can be changed at any time.

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With one or two batteries the charge current is 8A, with 3 or 4 batteries it is 4A. The "Charge test" function will "only" charge with 2A.
For AAA the charge current is 3A and 0.75A during test.

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The different display settings.

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The charger is filled with air vents and has a fan, when it is charging the fan will be on and blow air around the batteries.

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The charger has the typically two level slots used for AA and AAA batteries.

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[size=+2]Measurements charger[/size]


  • When not powered it will discharge the battery with 0.1mA
  • Charge will restart charging after power loss, or battery insertion.
  • Power consumption when idle is 1.6 watt


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Due to the very high charge current the battery voltage is also very high. To get a good -dv/dt termination the charge will use a lower current to finish the charge and add a top-off charge at about 200mA for one hour.
Display shows 2197mAh in 19 minutes.

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The other slots looks the same.
Display shows 2347, 2344, 2150mAh in 19, 19, 21 minutes.

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I only tested with two high capacity cells here and they worked fine.
Display shows for eneloopPro 2758mAh in 25 minutes.

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The AAA cell is charged with lower current, but it is a very high current for the cell size and the charging is fast. The top-off charge is reduced to 70mA.

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With this type of high speed charging the charge must be fast at detecting a full cell and with 2 minutes it is fairly fast, but it includes a top-off charge anyway.

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With four cells in the charge the current is reduced to about 3.5A and the charge time is longer.
Display shows 2315, 2243, 1730, 2134mAh in 34, 33, 25, 32minutes (Cell in slot #3 is an older cell).

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M1: 38,1°C, M2: 36,7°C, M3: 37,0°C, M4: 40,3°C, M5: 37,4°C, HS1: 51,7°C
The fan keeps the cell temperature down.

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The charger needs a bit above 4 seconds to initialize, before it turns the current on.

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With 3 or 4 batteries the charger is time sharing the charge circuit reducing the average current to 3.5A.

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During discharge the average current is down to 1.8A, again done with time sharing.

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At the end of a 8A charge the charger will reduce charge current to 4A, but the display will not shows this.

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The top off charge is done with 3A pulses, each pulse is 0.146s and is repeated each 2.07s, i.e. current is 7% of the 3A or 210mA



[size=+1]Discharge[/size]

Calling this function discharge is a bit misleading, it will both discharge and charge again. The values shows are the charge values.

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The discharge current will vary slightly with battery voltage.
Display shows 2284mAh in 1:08

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The charger can do all four slots simultaneous, but the batteries are handled individually, as can be seen on the temperature curve (It is for another battery).
Display shows 2352, 2400, 1767, 2061mAh in 1:10, 1:12, 0:53, 1:01

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M1: 35,5°C, M2: 36,7°C, M3: 36,1°C, M4: 33,1°C, M5: 42,8°C, M6: 37,7°C, HS1: 43,5°C
The charger do not use the fan when discharging and it keeps cool enough.

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Discharge is done with constant current.



[size=+1]Discharge refresh[/size]

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Refresh discharges and charges 3 times.
Display shows 2248mAh in 1:07


[size=+1]Charge test[/size]

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The charge test will charge, discharge and charge again.
Display shows 2134mAh in 1:09



Testing the transformer with 2830 volt and 4242 volt between mains and low volt side, did not show any safety problems.




[size=+2]Conclusion[/size]

This charger is not the right solution for long battery life, but it is very useful if you need batteries charged fast and don't mind replacing them frequently. With the build in analyzer it is fairly easy to see when the batteries are worn down.

As a general purpose charger or analyzer I will not recommend it, but for people needing very fast charging it is useful, but as usual the announced charge time is rather optimistic, 35 to 40 minutes is a more realistic time for four 2000mAh cells.



[size=+3]Notes[/size]

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

Chaitanya

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Overall it seems like there are far too many bad Ni-MH chargers on market compared to Li-ion chargers. I would like to see how Maha Powerex chargers(C401FS, C800S and C801D) stack up against these chargers.
 

Chaitanya

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I will not call this a bad charger, but a special purpose charger.
Still its too fast and might end up wearing cells too fast. Also for some reason multi-purpose chargers like Nitecore i2, Xtar SV2, etc. seem to be doing a better job of charging Ni-MH cells than dedicated Ni-MH chargers. Either most of these Alkaline chargers have a timer which ends up cooking cells or they charge too fast which means they dont fill cells to full or overcharge them or they need to be charged in pairs with monitoring for one of the cells causing issues. I dont know why but there arent many good Ni-MH chargers.
 

Cekid

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Sep 20, 2016
Messages
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Still its too fast and might end up wearing cells too fast. Also for some reason multi-purpose chargers like Nitecore i2, Xtar SV2, etc. seem to be doing a better job of charging Ni-MH cells than dedicated Ni-MH chargers. Either most of these Alkaline chargers have a timer which ends up cooking cells or they charge too fast which means they dont fill cells to full or overcharge them or they need to be charged in pairs with monitoring for one of the cells causing issues. I dont know why but there arent many good Ni-MH chargers.

maha c-9000
technoline bc-700 and others in series
opus bt-c2000


and simple nimh chargers like ikea ladda or xiaomi zi5

so, choice is not so bad...
 

Chaitanya

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Messages
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Location
Pune(India)
maha c-9000
technoline bc-700 and others in series
opus bt-c2000


and simple nimh chargers like ikea ladda or xiaomi zi5

so, choice is not so bad...
All 3 are analysers which are quite big and not very convenient to carry around while travelling. For home use I have Maha Powerex C9000 analyzer and 8 slot charger(C800) but looking for a decent dedicated Ni-MH charger for travel. I might end up getting another Xtar charger SV2 rocket looks quite good. Also since its a universal charger it might save me some space in bag but add inconvenience in case I have to charge multiple sets of batteries.
 

Cekid

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Messages
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@Chaitanya

you are flip flopping around your complaints about "lack of good nimh chargers"...you didn't say a word about traveling...and since when is bc-700 big? you have bc-500 which is even smaller...and both ikea or xiaomi are perfect for traveling, small and good 4 channel nimh chargers...
 
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Chaitanya

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Messages
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Location
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@Chaitanya

you are flip flopping around your complaints about "lack of good nimh chargers"...you didn't say a word about traveling...and since when is bc-700 big? you have bc-500 which is even smaller...and both ikea or xiaomi are perfect for traveling, small and good 4 channel nimh chargers...
You were the one who brought up analysers when I was talking about Ni-MH chargers. If you look at majority of Ni-MH chargers they are travel chargers(except for those 8bay chargers and the ones which accept C/D sized cells) as they dont have external power brick(in most cases the power connector is foldable) and are seriously compact. Ikea or Xiaomi Chargers aren't available in India so I am restricted to choosing Panasonic, Powerex, Energiser, Gp, Duracell and Varta.
 

Cekid

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Sep 20, 2016
Messages
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@Chaitanya

what about online shopping? aliexpress, gearbest, bangood, dx, and many more, there are plenty of choice to get any charger you want...and you have amazon and ebay in india as well...

forget local retail shops, choice of nimh chargers is pathetic in most places all over the world...even in america choice is not much better and the list of brands is the same as yours...
 

markr6

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Jul 16, 2012
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I'd have no problem charging 4 cells at 4A. It wouldn't be a common thing, just even once in a while. A good example is my 4AA camera flash. That thing can sit on the shelf for weeks or months, then when I need it the Eneloops are nowhere near full. Most times when I'm using the camera is on fairly short notice and need to charge them quickly. I currently use a Maha charger at 2A (perfect), but 4A wouldn't be a problem for me either.
 
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