Test / Review: Samsung INR18650-20R (also AW dethroned)

Well, but its out of scale for people with a lower res. Just like your signature.

The needs of the many are more important than the needs of the few..

I doubt ones who can’t fit 781 px image (of HKJ’s comparator) are “many”, according to latest hardware surveys, most popular resolutions are 1. 1366x768 and 2. 1920x1080 :wink:

Removed that signature, though - it was outdated for a few months.

I have 1280*800 and its too big. Same for most smartphones and overall most laptops. Its not that bad with this particular image, but its a bad habit in general.

I didnt want this to be a thread to discuss picture sizes, its about IMR cells. Particularly the old king being dethroned by Samsung.

1280x800 is too big? Google Workspace Updates: New community features for Google Chat and an update on Currents
But yeah, derailing this thread is a bad idea. I just HAD to note that 1280x800 is not too big, particularly because I’m pissed off by manufacturers who cut costs of their hardware by putting low-res displays in them.

That’s a nice comparison, and good news…wonder if they’ll stay on top for long with what some of the other companies are doing. Thanks for sharing that. Still, with single LED emitters in every light I have that uses 18650 I still don’t see AW being dethroned, no need for 20A and I can’t see the Samsung cells having anything to offer above and beyond. Will definately be keeping an eye on these though, as I have someone here working on something for me that these might actually come into play! :slight_smile:

@antonkochubey: My laptop is a few years old. Wanna donate me a new one?

@DBC: This is about IMR only. And I actually think they will stay on top for a while. Panasonics new high-power cell NCR18650E is inferior, Sanyos UR18650WX is inferior.. maybe the Sanyo UR18650RX could come close, but its not available.

Price-performance-wise AW has been dethroned a long time ago btw..

Samsung has a lot of cells to offer, some are better, some are worse, some are the same as the currently beloved cells.

I’m very new to the 18650 cell. Like I’ve gotten 3 in the past month. When I was searching for what to get, seemed AW had the highest standing quality wise and was offering the new 3400mAh cell. So that’s what went into my very first 18650 light, the Solarforce L2P with M3 head. The next one I got, just a week or so ago was for a Solarforce P1d for my wife, went with the AW 2600mAh. Then I discovered, last week, the RediLast 2600mAh cell utilizing the Japan made Panasonic cell, for considerably less monies. So that one sits here awaiting it’s L2P host for my 3rd light, to use the EDC+ Triple Nichia 219 P60 drop-in.

Now I realize that the IMR cells are a horse of a different color, and I’m seeing where they can have advantage. But, at the same time, just acquired a couple of 26650’s with 18A rating made with Li-Ni-Mn-Co technology…are these the same or similar in a larger format? I got these for a 1 cell build that’s being worked on…1 for the light one for the charger. What do I need to know to ensure bad things don’t happen? Other than don’t take it too low, don’t overcharge (Ultrafire WF-188 or Cottonpickers USB @ 200ma) and above all, don’t Short! Will following these religiously make sure it operates with the safety of any other cell?

Thanks for helping out a noob.

Dale

Now you should discover Intl-outdoor (raised top, 2600mAh/3100mAh/3400mAh) and Keeppower (button top, same capacities) batteries, which use the same Panasonic cells, for even less money than RediLast :wink:

Yeah, there are a lot of alternatives to AW.. for example KeepPower, EnerPower, Intl-Outdoor..

As for your cell.. what cell is it? LiNiMnCo could be about anything. 200mA will take ages though. And I'm no fan of Ultrafire chargers, I prefer Xtar.

Normally, LiIon cells are safe. Unprotected are a little more dangerous because there is no electronic to prevent some user errors. But with some common sense and caretaking, you should be fine. Dont short, dont let get too hot, dont overcharge, dont overdischarge..

Yeah, that makes me feel so much better after having paid $20 a cell for the AW’s. :stuck_out_tongue: The dang L2P didn’t cost as much as the cell! This is an expensive addiction people! (or maybe that’s the custom lights I’ve got being made?) Addiction, nothing less! :slight_smile: Where do I sign?

I got 2 cells from Powerizer, here BatterySpace.com/AA Portable Power Corp. Tel: 510-525-2328 - Powerizer Battery Official Site and indications are they’re in-house brand.

Please tell me this wasn’t a mistake!

No, they are good. Batteryspace doesnt sell crap. Those are high power but not as high power as true IMR cells. I would guess it some mix-chemistry like the CGR18650CH (rated 5C).

Owned…I wish IMRs would come with low voltage protection, just in case.

They don’t make protected IMR’s for a reason, not “just because”.
Protection would cause significant voltage drop at high currents. That’s unacceptable in situations where IMR cells are used.
See e.g. NCR18650B unprotected vs protected, and that’s just 5A:

When I got those 26650’s I was looking at putting a pcb on em, the only thing or the best thing I could find would limit em to 8A, so why bother to buy 18A capable cells in the first place?

Wow, I really had no idea protection circuits involved that magnitude of resistance. Makes sense then. Thanks!

The resistance in protection circuits depends on the trip current. Depending on chip uses they will trip with a voltage loss of 0.05 to 0.3 volt, the designer of the protection PCB then select enough fet transistor to keep the voltage below the trip voltage, until the desired trip current.

I.e. as long as the same IC is used for protection a 5A trip limit will have same voltage drop at 5A, as a 20A trip limit will have at 20A. This is probably also the reason that some protected batteries has a trip point at around 12A, instead of a more correct 5A to 7A value.

Thanks for doing the test :slight_smile: Nice result :slight_smile:

Ooo... I may have to order some of these up, if only there was a place in the US that stocked them. ;)

must follow this up :stuck_out_tongue: