Battery charger

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KCBeatty

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Jun 16, 2016
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Need a recommendation on a deferent charger. I have a good charger from efest "LCD universal". The charger works just fine. The problem I have is the slide mechanism that slides to fit the different size batteries, in my case 18650, is so strong it is causing damage to the insulation on the positive end of the batteries when inserting removing the battery. I retire the battery if there is damage to the positive insulation and is getting expensive. The chargers I have looked at online seem to be built the same way.
 
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KCBeatty

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Jun 16, 2016
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I use an Enova Gyrfalcon All-44, an Enova Gyrfalcon All-88, and an Xtar Dragon VP4 Plus. All have similar slides. The trick is to grab the battery and push it down, then lift it out.

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Thanks for your reply Shawn, I like the xtar Dragon you have, maybe I should also need to buy a better grade of battery also.

It is hard for me to get my big fingers around and grip the side of batteries and safely remove the battery.
 

Shawn Hoefer

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Thanks for your reply Shawn, I like the xtar Dragon you have, maybe I should also need to buy a better grade of battery also.

It is hard for me to get my big fingers around and grip the side of batteries and safely remove the battery.
That's why those Gyrfalcons are so nice. The slots for the batteries are very wide. The All-88 will handle 8 x 26650 at the same time. 18650 and 2x700 cells just pop right in (or out). The Dragon is certainly more feature rich, but I prefer the design of the Gyrfalcons.

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UncLeJunkLe

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I retire the battery if there is damage to the positive insulation and is getting expensive.

Battery wraps and insulators are extremely cheap and easy to change.

Battery Wraps | Li-ion Wholesale

But I do agree that any charger that rips insulators and wraps is best placed in the round file (aka a garbage can). There's no excuse for such poor design/engineering.
 

UncLeJunkLe

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Wait a minute. It just dawned on me that you might be talking about the Efest LUC 2 or LUC 4 chargers. I have both.

They do not rip the insulators on the batteries unless you're just pulling the battery straight up and out of the charger.

In that case, a new charger will never solve your problem as this is a user error problem, not a charger problem. You absolutely must pull the battery back in it's bay and then lift it out for save removal without damage to the battery insulator or wrap.

Learn how to remove batteries properly. Those LUC chargers are very good, long lasting chargers for their price point. Mine are over 5 years old.
 

KCBeatty

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Wait a minute. It just dawned on me that you might be talking about the Efest LUC 2 or LUC 4 chargers. I have both.

They do not rip the insulators on the batteries unless you're just pulling the battery straight up and out of the charger.

In that case, a new charger will never solve your problem as this is a user error problem, not a charger problem. You absolutely must pull the battery back in it's bay and then lift it out for save removal without damage to the battery insulator or wrap.

Learn how to remove batteries properly. Those LUC chargers are very good, long-lasting chargers for their price point. Mine are over 5 years old.

Thanks, Unclejunkle, I promise that I remove the batteries carefully The damage starts as a slight crack and progresses from there. I haven't discarded any batteries, just put them in a safe place. I will take your instructions on shrink wrapping my own batteries. Thanks, guys.
 

stols001

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You can also lubricate and stretch your slides. My first charger, the sleds were really rough so I stretched and lubricated them until they slid more easily after messing up a battery or two.

I mean, you don't HAVE to the instructions for removal you are getting are correct but doing so might make your life a little easier. Etc.

Anna
 

Marper

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Best way is to carefully position negative end in the charger and then slide back and fit the positive end in place and charge, to remove grip the battery and push backwards slightly keeping tension on the slide and charger and let the battery move forward while holding it after you have released the positive end, otherwise the slide will spring and cause damage
 

KCBeatty

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Jun 16, 2016
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You can also lubricate and stretch your slides. My first charger, the sleds were really rough so I stretched and lubricated them until they slid more easily after messing up a battery or two.

I mean, you don't HAVE to the instructions for removal you are getting are correct but doing so might make your life a little easier. Etc.

Anna

Thank you, sounds good advice.
 
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KCBeatty

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The tension on the slide should not cause damage to the positive cap or the bottom of the battery if you fit and remove in the correct manner,and as you said above make sure the batteries are legit and not fakes, I only use Samsung 18650 and ljoy 20700 batteries from a reputable supplier

The actual issue is caused by my fingernails. I have to push down on the top of the battery before being able to lift it out of the charging channel. This overtime stresses the shrink. My charger has a negative terminal on the slide.
 
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DaveOno

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The slide doesn't hurt the battery IF you place and remove the batteries carefully.

But it happens. A bit of juice on the fingers, doing it one-handed while holding the mod and the next battery, I'm guilty. I have a LUC 2 bay.

These springs are too strong, IMHO. So much so that one of them broke at the solder joint. They shouldn't be strong enough to launch the battery!

So, I opened mine up, replaced the broken spring with a much gentler spring. I didn't have another to replace the other bay, so I stretched the original spring to weaken it's pull. I suggest you do the same, if you are confident in your ability to fiddle with it.

At the least, put the mod down and use 2 hands.

Best of luck.
:)
 
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Marper

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The slide doesn't hurt the battery IF you place and remove the batteries carefully.

But it happens. A bit of juice on the fingers, doing it one-handed while holding the mod and the next battery, I'm guilty. I have a LUC 2 bay.

These springs are too strong, IMHO. So much so that one of them broke at the solder joint. They shouldn't be strong enough to launch the battery!

So, I opened mine up, replaced the broken spring with a much gentler spring. I didn't have another to replace the other bay, so I stretched the original spring to weaken it's pull. I suggest you do the same, if you are confident in your ability to fiddle with it.

At the least, put the mod down and use 2 hands.

Best of luck.
:)
The problem is its a side loaded charger, not a spring slide loaded
 
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