XTAR MX4 Review

Good afternoon everyone, XTAR reached out to me and asked me to share my thoughts on their newest charger they’ve brought to market. They sent it to me along with a few cells (for testing) in exchange for sharing my thoughts. This is a link to the product description on their
website

TLDR: It’s a nice value charger for the money, small, and capable of charging all chemistries.

Let’s get into the weeds. It’s their newest offering, being very small and simple. In the box you get the charger, USB-A to USB-C cable of 80cm/32” and multi-language manual. It will also work with a C-C cable and proper USB-C PD power supply.



Since it has no screen, and only indicating LEDs, it takes up a little more than half the space of my other chargers of similar capacity

Here is a picture of the back of the box which shows all the cell sizes and chemistries it can do. Lithium ion, LFP, NIMH, and the new 1.5V regulated lithium ion which I’ll cover a little later

The two outside bays will charge at 1A and the two inside bays will charge at 0.5A. But if all 4 bays are used each cell gets 0.5A. So this is not a fast charger, especially for larger cells. More for overnight with set and forget functionality. I was able to charge from small AAA cells all the way to button top 21700 ( they barely fit lengthwise, and I do not believe protected or chargeable 21700s will fit, but XTAR clearly states this).

Here is a picture showing from L to R: XTAR protected 26650, Vapcell button top 21700, Ladda AA, and Liitokala Flat top 21700. They all fit easily.

There is a small switch on the side that allows it to switch between lithium ion 3.7V charging mode and LFP mode, the other chemistries will charge properly regardless of the switch position

I have no way of testing the charging, but XTAR has been around a long time and I believe they know what they’re doing. All my tests had the lithium ion cells stop charging at 4.16V. LFP were at 3.6V before their quick voltage drop.

The indicating LEDs make it easy to tell what the charger is doing. Solid red is charging, solid green is finished. NIMH can take up to ten minutes to start charging as the charger is analyzing it, but in practice this hasn’t taken more than 2 minutes. With LFP cells, charging indication is orange instead of red, so it’s easy to distinguish what mode you have it in if you’ve made a mistake.

Here it is charging some Soshine LFP 16340 cells, an XTAR 1.5V lithium ion, and a NIMH AA. The light looks red for the LFP, but that’s the camera. It is a very distinctive amber/yellow (mix of red and green RGB).

Pros:

  • Well built of sturdy plastic

  • Spring loaded bays seem to be made of a thick alloy and should last a long time.

  • I like the ease of use, you just pop the cells in and let it do the rest.

  • It’s quite compact for a 4 bay charger, especially with such a full feature set.
  • Ability to charge the new 1.5v regulated lithium ion seamlessly.
  • Very well priced.

Cons:

  • No screen. I’m a battery nerd and I have no idea the current or voltage the cells are charging at.
  • Missing some of the advanced features like discharging.
  • It’s a bit slow. I would’ve liked if it had the ability to use a USB-C PD and at least support 1A for each bay, with selectable rate.

These cons being “fixed” though would just make it into another charger, which is already available from XTAR and elsewhere, so not true cons.

If you’re interested, it’s available here at this amazon link Amazon.com

As an extra, they did send me some of their cells to include in the review, but I thought I would add some extra context.

First an 18650. It’s protected and rated at 3600MAh. Unfortunately I did not get that much. I used my Miboxer C4 and discharged at 400ma to 3.0V

Still it is a nice cell and it more than likely has some of that extra capacity down below 3V, as I’ve found with these high capacity 18650s

Also, a protected 26650 labeled at 5200mah, and this one, at the same discharge settings, measured at labeled capacity. These are both rated 10A CDR

Now these were nice, but what I was really excited by were the 1.5V regulated lithium ions. I’m definitely a NIMH guy. I hate alkaline and carbon zinc, think energizer lithiums are pretty great, but I like my LSD NIMHs. Now these come along. What’s the point? NIMH work great. They are low self discharge. They have a pretty flat discharge curve. They’re affordable and last many cycles. They don’t leak. Can handle a healthy amount of amps. What’s not to like? Well, in some rare occurrences the voltage on really low drain devices can be a bit low. Usually I use Lithiums for this use, but these could work for that too. XTAR claims they’re low self discharge and should last 1200 cycles. Labeled as 2500mah at 1.5V. Now I don’t have any proper way to test just the cells and gather all the data on them. What I do have is an incandescent Maglite ML25it with stock bulb, the ceiling bounce app, and an integrating dremel box. Which, btw, is surprisingly accurate and repeatable.

So first, ANSI measurement 30s after turn on

  • NIMH Ladda 1900mah cells: 42 Lumens
  • XTAR 1.5v regulated: 65 Lumens.

So the extra voltage gives 36% brighter output at 30 seconds. Not bad. It’s quite a bit whiter too. But lets look at some runtime graphs.

First, the regulated XTAR cell. Has a pretty flat and steady runtime of 120 minutes where it stayed above 90% output. And that sharp fall off. XTAR claims these cells have a 1.1V “low mode”. I wasn’t able to measure the voltage, but this shows more than a 1.1v output. There’s some current limiting here too. It was far too dim to only be at 1.1V. But it gives a good indication you need to charge without leaving you in the dark.

Here is the IKEA Ladda 1900 runtime graph. A bigger drop in the beginning and much less output in the second half of the runtime. This is still pretty good, vastly better than an alkaline, but I can’t deny, the performance of the XTAR cells is much better. It’s brighter for longer, and fully regulated. They didn’t ask me to talk about these at all, but I really think they’re a good product. And I’m keeping them in that light now and they’re just plain better.
Here is the link XTAR 1.5V AA 4150mWh Battery_ShenZhen XTAR Electronics Co., LtdShenzhen XTAR Electronics Co., Ltd. - XTAR originated in 2006, is an electronic technology company integrating research and dev

There are some dubious claims of NIMH performance in their description and maybe a bit of misleading information, but the product speaks for itself. I think they are a viable alternative if the extra voltage and flat discharge curve will work in your use case. Especially for us incan guys.

7 Thanks

If you want your images to be inline, you should upload them to an image hosting site instead of mega.nz
I use https://imgbb.com/, but there are many other free image hosting sites.
With imgbb, it’s best if you create an account first. :+1:

1 Thank

You can also just upload them directly to BLF if you downscale the resolution a bit.

3 Thanks

Are my links not working? Mega is a legitimate file sharing site

I haven’t found a good way to do that. It’s too bad. I understand wanting to save server space, but we left behind 3mp cameras a while ago. 1mb is really small. I wasn’t expecting it. Imgur seems to be more about making memes. Photoshop is gone. I’m not looking at paying a fee just to upload photos. The forum should have that build in. Hopefully people don’t mind just clicking the link

thanks for the review, congrats on your new kit,
appreciated your comments about 1.5V LiIon being useful for incan lights

1 Thank

If you drag the photo from your desktop directly into the text editing box it uploads the image automatically to blf’s servers. The image quality on BLF is fine for use in 2024

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The problem is that one megabyte is as large as the file can be. I did try dragging pictures directly into the text box. I did try dragging pictures directly into the text box. I was given a pop-up that the file size was too big. All of my pictures are bigger than that because I’m using a modern camera. That was all I meant.

Thank you, John

A resizing is extremely quick. There are a myriad of free options both offline and online that will allow you to resize photos at acceptable quality and no cost to you but a few seconds of your time.

I’m only making a point of this because seeing a forum review with hyperlinks to a filesharing site in place of images is likely to turn most people to click off your review almost immediately. So it would be a shame for your hard work to go overlooked due to this relatively minor issue of a 1mb file limit.

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You were right. It was a bit of a pain to read. The sizing isn’t perfect. But it’s better now. Took a few tries to get an app that worked. Thanks

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IrfanView for Windows is a pretty good app for resizing. You can press B for Batch editing, add a folder, resize all, save to a new folder.

I reduce the size of my photos to 800x600 pixels roughly because the bandwidth used is pretty high on my site with compressed and cached files.

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Yeah, I usually use IrfanView for cropping and resizing images.
The only common thing it doesn’t do is save webp images with a transparent background.
For that, I use GIMP.
And for more advanced operations, I use PhotoShop.

By the way, you can upload images up to 32MiB in size with imgbb, though that won’t be very helpful to those with a slow internet connection, so resizing images is a better solution. :grin:

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FastStone Photo Resizer is free and it is very good program.

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I did the review on an iPad. So I’m stuck with whatever’s available there. This worked all right

Thank you for review :slight_smile:

But for me this much to simple charger is not worth a buy.

I wish Xtar would add features which is standard at most competitors

You’re welcome. It is definitely missing some features. That’s kind of the point. But obviously it is doesn’t work for you, it’s not for you

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Never understand Xtars philosophy in many cases, charger which supported so many chemistries is mostly interesting for non-standard-users, not for ppl who buy cells in discounters :wink:

So I hope a bit for a new Xtar charger, at least they include the features I mentioned in this topic

Thanks for the review. Shows on AliExpress for about £14 before tax/shipping, this isn’t too bad, I might pick one up if a few more good reviews come out and they go on sale.

This looks like a very simple charger- the default charging current is quite low (500mA) but that should help battery longevity and also is more appropriate for smaller cells. I do wonder if they could have chosen 750ma, and said 10440 cells are not compatible…

The box says NiMh is 0.5A, I assume this is even with only 2 cells in the outer slots?

I’d be interested to see the NiMh charging performance, given multi-chemistry chargers often struggle.

Also of interest, would be stability on voltage brown-out conditions, there’s a possibility that this would make an excellent USB Solar Panel charger.