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Maximal Power, FC600 NIK EN-EL3/EL3A/EL3E, FUJ NP-150 Rapid Travel Charger for Nikon and Fuji Battery
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Technical Details
- Nikon EN-EL3/EL3A/EL3E, FUJ NP-150 Rapid Travel Charger for Nikon and Fuji BatterySee more technical details
By Frances L. Williams (Long Beach, CA USA)
I carry a spare charged battery and charger. It works fine and charged my battery as quickly as the Nikon charger does.
By K. Nash
The chargers does the job. It is a no frills looking charger. So far, I've had no problems. It is definitely much cheaper than a Nikon branded charger, and it does the job just as well. Save your money and get this, unless you just have the Nikon charger :)
By Venky (Houston, TX)
Does its job - no problems at all. Very compact.
I travel internationally so needed a compact universal voltage charger unlike the one I got from Nikon with my D90 - shame on you Nikon.
Strangely it has problems with one of my EN-EL3 batteries - as if the contacts are loose ... if I keep the charger horizontal then no problems. But that happens with only one of my two EL3's so probably an issue with the battery ...
By georgehd
This charger is cheap for a reason. It does not work. Save your time and money and do not buy
By MikeCG (Chicago, IL United States)
I bought this as a low cost backup charger for my D90's EN-EL3e batteries. I like to have a spare charger when traveling, so if I lose an only charger (and I have been known to leave one or two in hotel rooms), I'm out of business until I can find a new one. Also, this one is 90-260 volt and comes with a European plug adapter plus an auto "cigar lighter" power plug, so it works just about anywhere. And it works fine.
My only question mark is this:
The specs on the charger label say exactly as follows:
Input:
AC 90-260V (50/60 Hz);
DC 12V-15V.
(I know what those numbers mean: it works in the U.S and most parts of the civilized world, and in most automobiles with power takeoffs.)
Output:
4.2V===450mA [The === symbols are exactly as on the spec label.]
8.4V===450mA
(I haven't the slightest idea what those numbers are supposed to mean.)
When does it put out 4.2V and when does it put out 8.4V? Hard to believe those numbers are paired with the input numbers. And it doesn't make sense (to me) that the 450mA is the same for both 4.2 and 8.4V outputs.
There is no instruction manual even though the label on the charger says ""Carefully read user manual before use."
As I said, the charger seems to work as advertised, and it operates in most electrical environments and with the specific battery for which it was purchased, so perhaps it doesn't matter what the output and input specs are, but it would be nice if they made sense.
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