Test/Review of Charger NiteCore Intellicharger D4

Charger NiteCore Intellicharger D4





This charger is based on a i4 with a display added and a couple of improvements. This makes it possible to charger more battery types than the i4 and also follow the charging in more details.



The cardboard box lists lot of specifications, battery types and features.



The box contains the charger, a mains cable, a manual and a warranty card.



The charger has two power connectors, one for mains input (100-240VAC 50/60Hz) and one for 12 VDC input.



The charger has two switches combined in one rocker:
SLOT: Used to select slot.
MODE: Used to change value displayed (Volt, mA, time), with longer presseds it can also be used to select low charge current and LiFePO4.



The charger has a large display with background light.




The display looks good, but is a bit on the technical side. The upper part of the display shows the four charge bays, the lower part shows the status for one bay. The actual bay is selected with the SLOT switch.
The numbers will automatic switch between volt, mA and time, but can also be switched with quick presses on the MODE switch.
Holding the MODE switch for about one second will select "Low", i.e. 300mA charge current. Average charge current may be halved due to time sharing (Display will show 150mA in that case).
Holding the MODE switch for about two seconds will select "LiFePO4", i.e. 3.6 volt charging. Releasing the button and pressing again will select low current for LiFePO4.
There is a small "Chg. Finished" text on the lower display, this is used on finished channels. When all channels with batteries in are charged the charger will show "ALL" in the numeric display.

Displayed charger currents (They will slowly reduce when entering CV phase of a LiIon charge):
750mA: The charge circuit is only charging one battery.
375mA: The charge circuit time sharing between two batteries.
300mA: The charge circuit is in low current mode and only charging one battery.
150mA: The charge circuit is in low current mode and time sharing between two batteries.



The slots uses the usual construction and works well. They can handle batteries from 30mm to 69.3 mm long.
That excludes some of the longest batteries, especially some protected 26650.








The charger can handle 69.3 mm long batteries, inclusive flat top cells.
With 26xxx batteries there is only space for one battery.
With C batteries there is a problem with the small button top sliding off the plus pole on the charger.




A look inside the charger

Nitecore asked me to show the inside of the charger:



Four screws has to be removed to get into the charger.



The display uses a long zebra connector between it and the circuit board. The background light is a separate module.



On the circuit board can be seen:
A long isolation slot between the mains and the rest of the circuit.
Mains input has a fuse, NTC, a noise suppression capacitor and uses a IC for controlling the mains switcher.
Safety capacitor between mains and low volt side.
The two inductors marked 101 is for the two charge channels.






Measurements

  • Discharges LiIon with 0.8mA and NiMH with 0.16mA when not connected to power
  • With a empty battery the charger will try to activate it, then show "Err" after a short time.
  • At 0.8 volt the charger will assume NiMH and start charging.
  • The charger will assume NiMH below 1.8 volt and LiIon above 1.8 volt.
  • Will not restart if battery voltage drops.
  • Charges with 0.2mA when LiIon battery is full.
  • Voltmeter readout freezes when charging is finished
  • Voltmeter is within 0.03 volt.
  • Voltmeter has a max. readout of 4.20 volt.
  • Current readout is not average charge current.
  • Charge will restart charging after power loss or battery insertion.
  • The button marked "SLOT" will change the display to the next slot with each press.
  • The button marked "MODE" will change value displayed (Volt, mA, time), with longer presseds it can also be used to select low charge current and LiFePO4.
  • C cells has a tendency to slide off the plus pole, i.e. some aluminium foil must used to get a stable connection. It is difficult to fit more than one C battery at a time.
  • The charger has two charge circuit, one is serving slot #1 and #4, the other is serving slot #2 and #3 using time sharing.
  • Low current selection is seperate for each slot and is independend of time sharing.
  • When a charge circuit has batteries in both slots, in will use 7.5 second on each in a 15 second cycle.
  • When a slot is finished, the current is not redirected to the other slot in the group.



LiIon charging



The charger does a simulated CC/CV charger with a 50mA termination, this is fine.
I do not know where the jump in current comes from, it does make the charging a bit slower, but does not affect the quality of the charging.





The other channels has the same CC/CV curve.




There is not much variation in charge time for the different capacities.



Selecting low current mode will reduce the peak charge current to 300mA, it does not change the terminaiton current.



The old 16340 cell, does also have a jump in current, here the reason is obvious: The voltage gets too high and the charger has to do a fast adjustment in the current.



The 18350 at 750mA works fine



The 14500 at 300mA is also fine.



With more batteries in the charger it will alternate between (time share) the slots and the effective charge rate is halved. Due to the low charge rate, there is not that much heat.



When using the DC input the charger needs slightly above 0.8A. Notice the temperature is about the same with DC supply as with mains supply, i.e. the build in mains supply do not generate much heat.



M1: 38,4°C, M2: 40,2°C, M3: 38,6°C, M4: 35,6°C, M5: 46,9°C, M6: 51,2°C, HS1: 53,5°C



M1: 36,8°C, M2: 38,3°C, M3: 37,2°C, M4: 34,1°C, M5: 44,4°C, HS1: 69,8°C
Inside the box it get fairly hot and this makes the DC connector hot.



The charger need some time to start a charge, it first does a test, probably to reset any LiIon protection and detect LiIon/NiMH.



The charger measures voltage with current off.



When a charge channel charges two batteries it will use 50% of the time on each slot.



When a battery is put into a slot, all slots will pause for a few seconds.



IFR (LiFePO4) charging

Holding the MODE button pressed for about 2 second will switch to LiFePO4 mode.



The charge voltage is too high, but this is not as critical with LiFePO4 as with ordinary LiIon batteries. The charge is a CC/CV charge with termination at about 50mA and no trickle charge.
The voltage is no accident, the charger is marked 3.7 volt for LiFePO4 charge.



NiMH charging



The NiMH charging stops on -dv/dt and do not use trickle charge.





All channels works the same.



The eneloop XX needs a bit more time.





I did the AAA cell at the low setting and it also terminated on -dv/dt.



With -dv/dt termination it takes some time to detect a full battery, but this charger is very slow at it with 28 minutes.



With four cells, the charge current is halved.



Charging NiMH uses less current on the DC input, compared to LiIon cells, only about 0.5A.



M1: 40,8°C, M2: 42,1°C, M3: 39,8°C, M4: 36,8°C, M5: 45,1°C, M6: 46,5°C, HS1: 54,3°C



The charger also uses a lower test current here, before it switches to the full charge current.



Voltage is measured with current turned off.



When a charge channel charges two batteries it will use 50% of the time on each slot.



LiIon+NiMH charging



With one NiMH battery and 3 LiIon batteries, the charger has no problem with charging the NiMH (Temps sensor is on LiIon battery).



With one LiIon and 3 NiMH batteries, the LiIon is also charged fine (Temp sensor is on NiMH battery).




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



Conclusion

The charger does a good charging on both LiIon, LiFePO4 and NiMH.
The charge can be used for 26650 cells, but are not ideal for it, I would have liked the slots 2 mm longer, some protected 26650 are rather long.
I like the display, but it is a bit technical to look at and it only shows data for one channel at a time.

The D4 is a good universal charger and the low mode makes it better for small cells than the i4. Charging two batteries is reasonable fast, but four batteries requires some patience.



Notes

The grouping of slots is not the same as in the i4 series chargers.

The charger was supplied by a Nitecore for review.

Review of old i4 (V2)

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

Nice job. Thanks for your hard work.

Great that it can handle most chemistries & cell sizes that concern us. Looks like a nice upgrade to the i4 for charging medium sized batteries.

Fantastisk recension!
:slight_smile:

Are there any chargers in this class and price range you would recommend?

Good Day HKJ,

Great review.

I have been waiting for your NiteCore Intellicharger D4 review, now I will go ahead & order it....

Thank You Very Much,

Best Regards,

George

The last generation of i4 and D4 are fairly good chargers, but my favourite chargers are Xtar. I do not really follow the price on the different chargers.

I just received one of these D4 along with two Nitecore 18650 2600 batteries.

These charged OK but the timer did not display any elapsed time - stared at “0”.

Then tried charging two AA Duracell Ion Core batteries.
They became very hot (could still touch them) but the heat seemed excessive.
Also - The charging process would never terminate - stayed at 4 bars with the 5th flashing. This went on for 3 hours or so until I removed the cells.
Also - The timer seemed to be counting the elapsed charge time but, at some point, it dropped to “10” and seemed to be counting down. Went to “6” and stayed there.

I’m new to this and have Fenix PD35 and LD22 flashlights. Have been using the Duracell Ion Core AA batteries and their charger with good success. Cells hold their charge and perform well. Before getting them, the LD22 would lose the turbo mode after a short time using disposable AA batteries. The Ion Core cells seem to do very well in this light. Wanted to try 18650 in the PD35 to avoid buying more CR123 batteries.

Any advice would appreciated. I’m thinking that it is just a defective charger.

Any thoughts on a different charger with similar capabilities?
Thanks

Thanks for the review , i picked one up for 22.99

Thanks for an awesome review HKJ

I have one as well and it is a good charger; just a little on the slow side.

There are fake/counterfeit versions of this charger being sold. FreemMe has a great thread on the topic. I included the link below:

FreeMe’s thread

Nitecore has an identification guide to help consumers identify fakes:

Nitecore Identifiction Guide

Bob