Tearing Down A Cheap External USB Battery

[cpldcpu] recently received an external USB battery as a promotional gift and thought it would be a good idea to tear it down to see its insides. At first glance, he could see that the device included a USB micro-b socket used as a 5V input (for charging), a USB-A socket for 5V output, a blue LED to indicate active power out and a red one to indicate charging.

Opening the case revealed that most space was taken up by a 2600mAH ICR18650 Li-Ion battery, connected to a tiny PCB. A close inspection and a little googling allowed [cpldcpu] to identify the main components of the latter: a battery mangement IC, a 2A boost converter, a 3A Schottky diode, a few 2A N-Mosfets, a 300mA 2.5V LDO and an unknown 6-pin IC. It is very interesting to learn that every last one of these components seems to be sourced from China, which may explain why this USB battery is given for free. Do you think they designed it in-house and outsourced the manufacturing, or is this a product Digi-Key simply bought and put their name on?

Editorial Note: Digi-Key is an advertiser on Hackaday but this post is not part of that sponsorship. Hackaday does not post sponsored content.

Unrelated video of extremely similar hardware. [Thanks James from comments]

55 thoughts on “Tearing Down A Cheap External USB Battery

    1. “Unfortunately, access to this particular item has been blocked due to legal restrictions in some countries. We are blocking your viewing in an effort to prevent restricted items from being displayed. Regrettably, in some cases, we may prevent users from accessing items that are not within the scope of said restrictions because of limitations of existing technology. Please accept our apologies for any inconvenience this may cause, and we hope you may find other items of interest on eBay.”

      >> damn it.

          1. It’s the latest annoying eBay ‘trick’.

            You post expensive multiple items along with a cheap one (the cable), that way your $500 iPad shows up first in the listing because of the $1 cable.

            The multiple listing is supposed to be so you can select colours, sizes etc, but people will game anything.

            The battery always cost 6 pounds, but the listing is rigged to look like it’s only 2.

          2. @ColdTurkey… the link i reacted on (from polossatik) was 2 pounds for the cable and 6 for the battery.

            your link is 1.89 pounds for all items.

  1. That one is not a cheap one, it is somewhat well built. I tore down a cheap one and found that there was NO battery management at all just a couple of zenier diodes and some passive components with a pic.

    Cheap china ones are built horribly unsafe, not using a charge controller on a LiPo turns it from a battery into an IED. It’s why I will not touch any of the low cost ebay or amazon china crap. I dont need my battery to explode on the airplane and spend the next 10 years in Gitmo because I was too cheap to pay for a real portable battery device.

    1. So just open them and check.

      Also there are no time limits on being held in guantanamo, nor charges levied or actions needed by the victim to initiate a kidnap and being held.

    1. The interesting point is that all the ICs are from mainland China companies – not Taiwan, were a usually many ICs come from. There are many small designhouses in mainland china, but very few of relevance and with more widely known products.

      Quick! Name five IC companies from mainland China. You most likely will not be able to do so.

  2. This is sold by some promotional gimmick firm that’ll print your logo on it. I received an identical one last week as a promotional gift with a big bold “Ambac” logo on it.

  3. You can get these for about $1.50 on Aliexpress without the cell included. Just the extrusion, the pcb, the end caps, some tiny screws and a couple of square stickers to cover them. I picked up a handful to populate with cells from dead laptop batteries.

      1. Pics were all I could take. The components are mostly transistors and a diode, the unknown 17 component, a boost converter and schottky power rectifier. My unit does have three leds on it though. On (blue), fully charged (green) and being charged (red). I would guess the 17 component handles the leds.

  4. I have this exact external battery but I had to buy it from Frys Electronics for $10 USd since I don’t get cool swag anymore. :( It’s branded “inLand” and “ProHT”. identical specs, button placement, light colors, etc.

  5. Batteries in those things are usually of poor quality, so declared 2500mAh is more like 1000-1500mAh. I’ve found better solution, case for two 18650s, with proper battery management electronics, and you choose the cells yourself. Funny thing, but Sanyo cells from “dead” laptop battery last in my case longer than new Chinese cells.
    URL : http://www.ebay.com/itm/360852001776 , you can probably find it cheaper than this. I tore it apart, found three chips, nine transistors and three diodes. Pretty decent. :)

  6. I took apart a few USB batteries from China, and some are decent and others aren’t. I literately opened one up and found padding on the inside to fill up empty spaces in the case. I normally would state it was for shock protection, but the wadding was FAR bigger than it needed to be.

  7. Hello, fellow nerds.
    I have close to none knowledge in electricity and things related.
    However, I am concerned about battery banks as I wish to use them. Well, as a matter of fact, I am concerned with a number of issues related to electronics.
    So I’d like to learn more about PCBs, voltage regulators, what are LDOs, charge controllers, IEDs, and so on.
    Can anyone recommend me some books (Amazon links are welcome) so I could start learning by myself?

  8. On a somewhat related note, I’d really love to find a decent UBS battery pack with a built-in AC charger. Just flip out the AC plug and charge it anywhere. Anyone know of one?

  9. I actually tore down quite a few of these devices, at least 6 different models. They were bought as DOA but they were actually quite well made. The problems were either cosmetic, USB plug torn off and in one instance the output capacitor was blown. I gave some away and using some for powering up embedded projects.

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