Eizfan Lux S4 LCD Touch Screen Smart Charger, Analyzer - my favorite UI in a charger

What voltage are the cells when measured straight after it says full(preferably using a fluke mm)?

Can not for the life of me find it on Nealsgadgets.

Here

Thank You.

wow, what a complex, nice and huge charger. I am astonished how many features it has, and what a nice display.

I’m not sure if no response is telling me it falls short of 4.2volts.

At the moment, I am testing/charging one partially discharged 30Q. (Actually, my first time to fully charge a cell, so I don’t know how it terminates!)
Here are the initial photos:
Tapped the #1 bargraph, then this screen appears to choose charging rate. I tapped 2a, it’s highlighted, albeit poorly!

When “type” is tapped, screen will show the auto detection of cell chemistry, in this case the 30Q is Li-ion 3.7 ( the Li-ion 3.8 is for some special cells that terminates at 4.35v)

Screen showing starting point:

At 1 minute elapsed time, 2a rate:

34 minutes later:

After 40 min:

After 56 min:

100% after 1hr., 4.20v

4.20v @ 100%, (graph not shown)

Ok thanks ,I like the touchy screen ,but what’s important to me is accuracy & consistency.

You have the photographic answer in my post # 12.

Thanks very much for taking the time to show this :+1:
But I was more interested in confirming that the actual battery voltage is accurate by using an accurate multimeter to see if the chargers idea of 4.2volts is really 4.2 volts.

In other words is the charger calibrated properly.

While most modern, well-designed chargers of today terminate @ 4.20v, almost all batteries, if not all, almost immediately go to their ‘natural’ resting voltage of below 4.20v anyway, for me, I have no practical purpose of checking about exact voltages to the thousandths of a volt.

Hello friend, for more exact datas, pls kindly check the HKJ review of Eizfan S4: Test/review of Efan Lux S4 LCD charger

I’m not sure if this post is aimed at me ,I think it may be so I’ll reply,
I’ve read HKJ’s review , he’s very good & I highly rate him,
But I’m not sure if he has time to verify each test with a multimeter because he’s very busy with the amount of stuff he tests , so I’m sure he’s talking the termination volts from the chargers display, I have bought & use charges he’s tested & ive bought because he said this or that charger terminates at 4.2v but when I’ve tested them they usually fall a bit short eg 4.16 ,4.17 etc , or maybe if he has got time to verify that it terminates at a real 4.2 then it’s possible manufacturers may cherry pick before sending to him because their credibility is on the line. :open_mouth:
Sinical old me…

Most chargers do terminate at 4,20V.

However, for the cell to stay at 4,20V, it needs to be overcharged a little, or termination current needs to be lower.

There’s almost no measurable capacity difference between 4,13V-4,20V if the cell charges correctly.

Yes I agree with you BUT I’m not talking about a cell staying at 4.2 v ,it is obviously going to settle to around 4.18 after a while , I’m actually talking about cells leaving the charger STRAIGHT after the charger says full @4.2.
If it’s actually terminating at 4.17 v verified with accurate multimeter but charger reports 4.2
Then the cell will settle at something like 4.14-4.15v ,I hope that’s made it clearer to understand.

My curves are made with a 6½ digit multimeter and I read the termination volt from them (From the curve, not from the logfile).
Termination voltage is highest voltage while current is on, as you can see on all my curves voltage drops immediately when current is turned off.

I’ve stoped using the all88 charger with lithium ion because if I check the voltage a day after charging the voltage is 4.13 –4.16 (the gyrfalcon isn’t consistent on all slots) but if I charge on mc3000 they read about 4.18 v a day or so after charge ( I set termination to 4.2v )
Hey HKJ ,Do these manufactures know you are going to publish your tests on forums
Is there a chance these are cherry picked for reviewers ?
Do you actually get mainstream production units ? I’ve noticed you sometimes don’t get the retail boxes
Maybe it’s the luck of the draw & some chargers of the same type are accurate & some not so!
Well anyway I’m very happy with my two mc3000’s ,my opus (after modifying) &my xtar vc4 they all terminate at a verified 4.2 ,the rest stay in their boxes.

When I say the charger is supplied by the charger manufacturer, like the Xtar, Eizfan, Golis chargers. When I buy the chargers or they are supplied from a shop the manufacturer will not know it.

Mostly no, I do sometimes get defective chargers for review.
Missing retail boxed is either early production units, from Ebay or from a reader.
The charge voltage will vary for copy to copy of a charger, how much depends on the quality of the parts used and if they do calibration.

Thanks HKJ that’s what I suspected :+1:

It seems to me that everything is very simple. If you want the voltage on the cell to be as close to 4.2 V as possible, choose a charger that is as low as possible with a cut off current and, as a result, a longer charging process.

For example:
MiBoxer C4-12 - cut off 60mA. 18650 taken out of the charger - 4.195V.