Test/Review of 3.1A 3 port usb charger

3.1A 3 port usb charger







Official specifications:

  • With LED indicator light, blue light when powered.

  • 3.1A=Port 1 + Port 2 + Port 3


I got it from Ebay dealer: sanheshunau2012






Measurements
  • There is a lot of blue light behind the usb connectors

  • Power consumption when idle is 0.12 watt

  • Usb port #1 is coded as Apple 1A

  • Usb port #2 is coded as Samsung

  • Usb port #3 is coded as usb charger (DCP)

  • All outputs are in parallel.







The dealer has a note saying that the 3A output current is for all ports together, as can be seen above a single port has trouble delivering 1A. There is no overload protection.



And because all ports are in parallel, the total current is also 1A, not the rated 3.1A



I could draw 1A for 1 hour, but the output voltage was a bit low.
The temperature photos below are taken between 30 minutes and 60 minutes into the one hour test.



M1: 41,5°C, HS1: 62,1°C
HS1 is the transformer.



M1: 48,5°C, HS1: 65,1°C
HS1 is the transformer.



M1: 47,4°C, M2: 39,8°C, HS1: 50,1°C



M1: 37,9°C, HS1: 44,7°C



M1: 53,1°C, HS1: 64,6°C



Noise at 0.5A load is 128mV rms and 1080mVpp



Noise at 1A load is 133mV rms and 1200mVpp



Tear down



A hit with my mallet and it was open, nothing is glued together, it is only clips.



This is an all discrete design. There is a resistor instead of a fuse. The bridge rectifier, the switcher that is built with two transistors, one is marked Q1. The blue capacitor is supposed to be a safety capacitor, but is only a 1000 volt capacitor that will short on overvoltage (Very bad).
Close to the transistors is the “big” low volt rectifier diode. To stabilize the output voltage there is a zener diode and a opto coupler.



The reason for all the blue light is easy to see here, there is four leds between the usb connectors.



The “fusible” resistor can be seen here and on the other picture the blue capacitor.





There is only a few resistors on this side of the circuit board.





The distance between mains and low volt side is supposed to be above 6mm, here it is only 2mm.

The charger passed an isolation test with 2500 volt, but failed a 5000 volt test and shorted between low volt side and mains, this makes the charger dangerous everywhere.



Conclusion

This charger is very far from its specifications and has very bad safety, stay away.



Notes

Index of all tested USB power supplies/chargers
Read more about how I test USB power supplies/charger

I do seldom bother with refunds for these cheap devices.

Have you ever tested Anker usb charger devices Not sure if they are available in Europe or not, but I take a Power port 4 and a euro plug adapter with me on vacation. Can charge two of the kids tablets, and a nitecore UM-20 with two 18650’s at the same time no problem.

I have tested some, check this list: Index of tested and reviewed USB power supplies/chargers

Quite a list. I found the one I own and it tested out very well. Good to know. Thank you for all the work you put into all this testing. Quite impressive !

Whaaaaaaaat?

You mean, this $1.34 charger is not going to be good?
I think mine will be excellent - the listing says “100% Brand new and high quality” - and because chinese sellers never lie, the one I bought will be much much better
:wink:

It’s a shame that you tested it before I got mine. No fun anymore for me opening it :c

Can it be destroyed by overloading it? I got a 20W USB load yesterday…

Sooo, I got mine today and opened it immediately.
The PCB is different - even has an IC on it.

The chip says “FM6535S” - can’t really find data on this one
At a load of 1.1A, the voltage is already down to 4.4V, so this thing is even worse than yours :stuck_out_tongue: