Review: Soshine SC-S1max V3 Charger

Review of charger Soshine SC-S1max V3




Soshine makes a couple of chargers and I have reviewed some before (S7,S2) they where acceptable but not perfect. This is revision 3 of a four channel charger, lets see if everything is perfect this time.







The charger arrives in a cardboard box, that does also work as manual.



Actual contents is the charger, a universal power supply (100-240 VAC 50/60Hz) and a car power adapter.



Power input on the charger is a small DC connector, it need 12 volt 1.8A according to the label on the bottom of the charger.



The bottom has the label and a lot of slots for air. The slots are not going to help much because the top of the charger does not have matching vents and when stuffed with batteries there is very little space around them (I did not notice any excess heating during tests).



The charger has 4 leds one for each channel, that can be either red or green.

  • Red: Charging.
  • Flashing green: nearly done charging.
  • Green: Battery fully charged.
  • Off: No battery, very low battery or reverse battery.
  • Flashing red/green: Non rechargeable.





The connections are slightly raised, i.e. it can charge flat top batteries. The slider does slide smooth.



Each slot is clearly marked with polarity and supported battery sizes.





The charger is not rated for 26650 batteries, but it is possible to put one or two in the charger and charge them.

The charger can handle over 70 mm long batteries, including flat top cells.



Measurements

  • Discharge battery with 3mA when power is disconnected.
  • Discharge battery with 0.2mA when power is connected.
  • Charge will restart if battery voltage drops to 3.9 volt.
  • The charge will restart when a battery is inserted or power is cycled.
  • Will flash green/red and charge with about 4mA below 1.6 bolt
  • Between 1.6 volt and 3.2 volt it will show steady red light and charge with 0.46A
  • Above 3.2 volt is till use CC/CV charge algorithm, see below.
  • Charge termination current is about 100mA.
  • The channels are independent and there is small variations between them.





Charging a 3400mAh battery takes about 4½ hours. At 225 minutes (Where the green current line gets thick), the charger starts flashing green, i.e. signally that the charger is nearly finished. This feature is very useful when short on time, as can be seen on the blue mAh curve there is very little capacity gain during the next 30 to 60 minutes, before the battery is full. I.e. removing the battery when the green led flashes will give nearly full capacity, but save 30 to 60 minutes in charging time.







The other 3 channels looks nearly equal to the first channel.



Charging on all four channels at the same time, does not reduce the charge current, i.e. it will charge four batteries just as fast as one battery.
There is more noise in the charge current, showing that the internal regulator is working much harder.



A 3100mAh battery is slightly faster to charge.



Going down to 2600mAh reduces the charge time to 3½ hour.



The charger does also handle my old IMR cell, without any problem.



This charger does not use softstart, but goes to full charge current shortly after power is connected.


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



Conclusion

This charger is not a charger with a lot of smart features, but for charging up to four 18650 batteries it does a very good job and the "nearly finished" indication on the leds is nice. For people that need to charge many 18650 it is a good solution.



Notes

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

Thanks HKJ! I think I'm going to pick this one up sometime in the near future! Thanks for confirming 26650 fitment!

This is available at HKE for $28.99 +$2 tracking.

-Garry

Great review. Thanks HKJ for sharing the knowledge. I think I want one now

Thanks HKJ. Would it still charge at the same current level on 12 volts?

Yes, the charger is always running on 12V (The external power supply is a 12V supply).

Thanks HKJ Yes I should of realised that. Cheers.

I hope the excitement about this charger picks up. It doesn't feel like it's getting the attention it deserves.

-Garry

Great review hkj,added to next weeks order skint at the mo lol…

Thank you for another great review. I like the idea of moving the power supply to a wallwart and keeping the case cool during charging. Full charge current available at each station regardless of number of cells being charged is a real plus. The DC car adapter is something I could use. I wonder if the lack of a softstart feature might increase the chances of a premature failure?

Will 16340 or 14500 fit? Yeah, I know +900mah charge current would be to high in most applications.

Probably not the best place to ask, but do you have a better recommendation in a 4 station 18650 charger, or is the best youve come across so far? Im only concerned about performance and reliability, not bells and whistles but will certainly take both if you suggest a better one.

Thanks again!

Thanks hkj, I’ve been eyeing this charger since my i4 debacle, I see I shall be ordering one at month end. I do like that your not reducing charge current using it at full capacity.

I doubt it will give any problems.

You will need a spacer for 16340 and it is best to only charge IMR cells in that size.

This is the first charger that does real CC/CV without any pulsing and maintains full charge current with a full load of batteries. I will call it the best 4+ channel I have tested to date (The other I have tested are Xtar WP6, UltraFire WF-128 and Sysmax i4).

It is not going to replace the VP1 as my preferred charger (I love the voltmeter and current settings), but it will probably be used as supplement when I need to charge many 18650 batteries.

Thank you for the great answers and recommendations. I go through 18650’s like crazy and anticipate my I4 to blow out any day now. It throws a nice blue spark at the plug every time I plug it into the wall. I have many other chargers but would like to have a good 4 station I can rely on while charging off the grid. Thanks to you, it looks like this will be the one.

Hi,

Thanks for the review (been waiting for it). Does anyone have any idea when the VP1’s will be more readily available?

Jim

DX has this charger for just $28: http://dx.com/p/173135

Seems to be a great value… Thanks for the review, as always, HKJ! :stuck_out_tongue:

Sometimes, words fail me…

:wink:

Not sure what this thread is about :wink:

A four battery-slot charger. That’s great. I feel I like to get a SC-S1max V3 soon. lol S)

:slight_smile:
Does this charger have four slots?
Sorry. Had to. :stuck_out_tongue:

Thanks HKJ for the review! Finally there’s a (better) alternative to i4.

Yes! Thanks HKJ! Really appreciate the work you put into these reviews. I need to step up from my little MP1, this looks good.