AA to USB Power Charger Review

Posted by: Teslinhiker

AA to USB Power Charger Review - 04/15/14 05:03 AM

Quick Review of an AA to USB Power Charger.

Purchased 2 of these chargers from Ebay for $3.78 each with no shipping charges. I wanted an AA battery to USB power charger so that I could extend the battery life of my small handheld video cameras without spending a fortune on factory replacement batteries. Plus I have a surplus of AA Eneloop batteries that are not being used. I was bit leery of purchasing the charger, both in terms of quality and country of origin. However I was pleasantly surprised that the chargers arrived in 12 business days. More on the quality below.

This charger is made of an all plastic casing and for the price, the quality is better then I expected for $3.78. The case consists of a simple 4x AA battery tray with a sliding and removable sleeve that gives access to the batteries.


Controls on the charger are a simple OFF, LED light and USB selector. When in USB mode, there is a red indicator light that shuts off whenever the device that is being charged, is completed. The same indicator light will blink in a slow steady pattern when the AA batteries are low in voltage.


The USB port (cable not included) is securely attached in the case and I have not experienced any loseness nor movement while plugging and unplugging the cable several times. The 3 clear LED lights only purpose is to be used when the selector switch is in flashlight mode. While not the brightest, the 3 LED's are suffucient enough to give low level light in a darkened room but I would not recommend that the flashlight mode be put to use for any real emergency where brighter and longer throw lighting is required.


Likes
- Small size - 3-1/8" height and 2" wide which is smaller then a deck of cards

- Quality vs price. For $3.78 each, the chargers are a bargain and much better then a $45.00 charger I previously purchased but returned as the claimed mAh did not measure up.

Grumbles
- The selector switch can be accidentally bumped on to either flashlight mode or to USB mode. I have found though that a small piece of electrical tape will keep the selector in the off position.

Summary
In my limited testing so far, the charger has performed fine as its only real primary purpose is to convert the 4x Eneloop batteries combined 8000 mAh to USB - 5v at 500mAh. At this point, I can say that charging time is on par with other 500 mAh chargers I have used. For my intended use, I will be using the charger to extend the run time of my video cameras via a small digital camera bag attached to my belt or via the charger mounted on the camera tripod leg.

For other users, the charger would make a suitable battery backup for a cell phone, GPS etc and is small enough to fit into almost any EDC bag. One thing to keep in mind. On Ebay, most of the descriptions clearly state the charger is not meant for tablets. I also noticed that the charger would not charge my friend's Samsung Galaxy Note II...which is almost tablet size.
Posted by: TeacherRO

Re: AA to USB Power Charger Review - 04/15/14 05:45 PM

thanks for your review - useful

teacher RO
Posted by: Mark_R

Re: AA to USB Power Charger Review - 04/15/14 07:45 PM

It would be a good way to avoid the photos under the "Photos: sharing electricity" entry.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/oct/31/superstorm-sandy-cleanup-live

For a home/vehicle setup, there are a number of DIY chargers that use 4+ D-cell alkaline batteries (3-4 times the capacity of AA batteries) in series with a 5V regulator and a power resistor. Alkaline battery shelf lives have reached the point where they are now viable for extended storage.
Posted by: bws48

Re: AA to USB Power Charger Review - 04/15/14 09:06 PM

I ordered one. My phone sucks down the battery on 4G. Planning trip to Eastern Europe in a couple of months, and 4g is universally available where I'll be. I wanted a backup that used AA batteries (almost universally available.) Not one that I have to recharge to to charge the phone (seems slightly redundant to me). We shall see. Note---long delivery time, as it comes from China (bought via Amazon, no affiliation.) At less than 6 bucks including shipping, its worth a try.
Posted by: Teslinhiker

Re: AA to USB Power Charger Review - 04/15/14 11:06 PM

Originally Posted By: Mark_R

For a home/vehicle setup, there are a number of DIY chargers that use 4+ D-cell alkaline batteries (3-4 times the capacity of AA batteries) in series with a 5V regulator and a power resistor. Alkaline battery shelf lives have reached the point where they are now viable for extended storage.


I have seen these on the internet and look easy to make. If I were to go this route though, I would use a 12 volt SLA (Sealed lead acid) battery which come in a number of different amp hour capacities and can also be readily stored and recharged.
Posted by: RNewcomb

Re: AA to USB Power Charger Review - 04/16/14 02:24 PM

I bought one of these. Read the instructions carefully (cause I didn't), and ONLY use it to charge 1.0A devices. I tried to use it to charge my IPAD (2.1A), and it let out the magic white smoke in about 10 minutes... and was so hot I could smell the plastic melting.

Too bad they couldn't put in a protection circuit to prevent that, because otherwise, that one was pretty much exactly what I was looking for.
Posted by: Eugene

Re: AA to USB Power Charger Review - 04/17/14 12:04 PM

I have this one
http://www.verbatim.com/prod/accessories/power-pack-chargers/aa-power-pack/

It charges my tablet fine and look like it supports Apple's 'interpretation' of the USB spec.
Posted by: RNewcomb

Re: AA to USB Power Charger Review - 04/17/14 07:08 PM

Originally Posted By: Eugene
I have this one
http://www.verbatim.com/prod/accessories/power-pack-chargers/aa-power-pack/

It charges my tablet fine and look like it supports Apple's 'interpretation' of the USB spec.


Only charges at 1.0A. Might get the job done, but it'll take eight hours to do it...
Posted by: Teslinhiker

Re: AA to USB Power Charger Review - 04/18/14 04:02 AM

Originally Posted By: RNewcomb
I bought one of these. Read the instructions carefully (cause I didn't), and ONLY use it to charge 1.0A devices. I tried to use it to charge my IPAD (2.1A), and it let out the magic white smoke in about 10 minutes... and was so hot I could smell the plastic melting.

Too bad they couldn't put in a protection circuit to prevent that, because otherwise, that one was pretty much exactly what I was looking for.


That is why I mentioned in my original post:

One thing to keep in mind. On Ebay, most of the descriptions clearly state the charger is not meant for tablets.

And you are absolutely right -always read the instructions!