Gearbest: Samsung Wrapper -- what's inside? Opinions and descriptions vary (seems likely all OK)

Right now I’m not too happy, because I also ordered four of them recently and they are already on the way.
But didn’t we have a gearbest “official” representative here as a forum member?

Yep, I bet they would like it if they could sell fakes without getting caught. But they know they would get caught if they tried to fake cells like that. All it takes is one person with proper battery analyzer. And cells from different manufacturers also have physical differences that could give them away. So it would be really, really hard to make a fake that nobody would notice.

If they would seriously try to fake something, it would most likely be the rebranded cells, not the bare ones. The rebranded ones usually cost more than the bare cell inside, so they could just add branded wrappings to the same cells that the brand manufacturers use - and they might even get away with that, since the performance and physical appearance would be identical.

Anyways, if the 25r’s and 30q’s they sell are fake, then it will be the last time I’ll buy anything from them.

What is real these days :stuck_out_tongue:

I have an order in process as well — so I left email asking for confirmation these are Samsung cells I’m getting.

The quality control problem may be entirely in the writers/web page end.

I notice they have among those questioned pictures that are clearly button top batteries, and Q&A below saying they are defniitely flat top.
They have that “5000 mAH” cell for sale and right in the text description, in a bright color, it says Actually 1500

A guarantee something is “as described” is pretty weak when the title descriptions don’t agree with the text or the pictures or the answers to questions.

EDIT: title edited to reflect how uncertain all this is

They sold fake convoys…. Why wouldn’t they sell fake batteries? They could be drop shipped from somewhere else easily.

Well, whoever gets the batteries, test them, and report back. Make them refund you if they are fake.

I received an order this week containing 4x protected icr 26f, 2x LG he2, 2x Panasonic 2900pf, and all of them seemed genuine from looks and opus capacity test.
They were packaged badly though, that’s the only bad thing about the order

Tks OscarM. Did you test the HE2 in high output lights vs known high output batteries?

Woohoo I got a free fake torch! I would have rather had a real one and paid for it.

Personally I received 4 of these cells and feel they are the real deal, but you can surely understand all the questions here:

‘Hi Dustin,these is 18650 Lithium-ion batteried not Samsung Brand’

Well, I dunno, and am not gonna be knowing until someone wiser than me takes the plunge and puts them on an Analyzing charger.

It just seems strange to me that they don’t even mention “Samsung” in the product header.

“INR18650 - 30Q 18650 3.7V 3000mAh Rechargeable Li-ion Battery - PINK”

http://www.gearbest.com/batteries/pp_196913.html

If I knew that I would receive Real ones, at that price I would order for sure. - But that’s another red flag for me - Why are they so much cheaper than anywhere else? - I don’t see their usual xx% off either, and no mention of a sale.

But like I said, I dunno, and won’t be ordering until do.

Thanks,
-Chuck

But the “Samsung” is clearly shown in the battery picture.

I see that Sam,

So why don’t they “say” what it is? - Most things that are advertised for sale spell it out, in the Header and in the description.

Thanks,
-Chuck

the AWT “style“ batteries have a picture of real AWT cells.

soooo….

THey look interesting - but they are $10 cheaper than from FastTech - and that’s a bit too good to be true…

Read what the people have to say in “Customer Questions & Answers”:

http://www.gearbest.com/cell-phones/pp_178120/ask.html

http://www.gearbest.com/batteries/pp_178120.html

Very Stylish:-(

-Chuck

Ya know, sometimes in life, you just have to swallow your pride. When all the warning signs are there and there are questions galore and you still go ahead and buy a too good to be true product, at a too good to be true price,how is that fair to then a paypal dispute because you went into it eyes wide open?
This abuse of PayPal’s protection will ruin it for everyone.
If not for the Paypal protection, you would never buy from there in the first place given all the issues that are posted here yet you choose to spend money there and then open a dispute when it ends up being fake. How will you ever learn with that way of thinking?
You can’t wish for the western worlds quality standards for the exact same price you are paying now, if that is what you want, then the price will go up and then you will stop buying from there.

The only place I have bought from is Intn outdoors and Mountain Electronics. I paid a bit more but I bought on the trust that has been built with many members here. I don’t know either of the owners but I trusted members opinions. I would have never even found those sites but for this forum.

So if you are going to ignore the warning signs, who’s fault is it?

All these questions, speculations won’t be settled until somebody actually do some testing. I am sure some ordered this already and will report back on these questions. Wait 2-3 weeks?

I agree we buy at our own risk. However any seller selling fake products takes a bigger risk. Not just PayPal refunding customers but to it’s reputation. There is no excuse to sell fake goods purporting to be something else.

Marc

There are plenty of threads reporting issues with this very vendor though so why go there, that’s more my point than anything else. Lost in translation or not, if customer questions are replied to saying these batteries are not genuine, why risk your health and go and buy any battery there to save a few $$.

Would you get a cheap builder in for house modifications that your neighbor told you had ruined his house?

Yes but I bought these cells and they are genuine. They do have a product knowledge problem and things get lost in translation but that’s not a good enough reason to avoid them.

Marc