Hi!
Disregarding the warning that says "this topic has not been posted in for at least 120 days."

Family is priority, so once again I've been drawn away from my hobby for several months, but I did manage to buy the first Lithium Ion charging board. I've used it for a while now and it's good, usable. My experience is subjective since I didn't take any serious measurements, but I'll hopefully manage to buy a meter with basic logging capability and check the efficiency of the board. For example
THIS ONE was presented by a good ol' English man, Julian Ilett, on his YouTube channel.
The charging board physically comes in two pieces, identical in size, which connect together via some pins. Maybe this board wasn't intended for an end user, but if it was then it's a bad idea, because the two pieces wiggle and bend and twist too much, there's nothing to hold them strongly together. So, this would be a negative point. I'll point out that versions II and III have a different structure so I'll make a comparison when I have one of those in my hands.
I remain at the drawbacks and quickly mention that I found the LCD to be a very good idea, but the one they used with this charger board is not the best. It's usable, but quite hollow. The back-light has a strong blue color, but at least it helps to read the information. The display is controlled by a 12 bit analog to digital converter and shows the charge state of the battery in percentage, has a bar graph too in this regard and shows the output current.
Technically, the board does what they say: uses a 5-6 Volt input to charge a Lithium Ion battery and then boosts the electrical energy coming from the battery to deliver a stable 5 Volt output. On the input side it has a micro USB port and on the output side a regular female USB socket. It has the necessary resistors to charge iPhones or other sophisticated smartphones, tablets and gadgets. Over-voltage and under-voltage protections are a must. I believe what it doesn't have is reverse polarity protection so one must be careful when connecting the battery to the board.
I bought a Boston Power Swing 4400 battery:
http://www.boston-power.com/products/swing-4400Datasheet:
http://www.tme.eu/ro/Document/a6369bd7221221e62bfbb11b3daf3733/ACCU-18650X2_BP.pdfIt seemed like a good choice for about 10 USD. What I found extremely difficult is soldering the cable to the positive terminal. The metal part there is about 4 cm x 1 cm and I was having a hard time getting the solder to stick even with my 3 mm chisel tip. First I tried with 350 degrees Celsius which is the usual temperature I utilize when soldering, but I had to go up to 450 degrees and then I managed. Although I succeeded in the end, I think I put the battery through a lot of stress. Unfortunately, the whole body of the battery got heated up several times so I'm pretty sure its life-cycle got reduced. After this procedure I did some reading and I realized that in fact I should be happy that it didn't explode in my face. So, everybody, be careful when soldering directly to battery terminals! If there's a possibility, don't do it, try other/safer methods. If you really have to do it, then do it with a very hot iron, choose a large enough tip and make very short (i.e. 2 seconds max) contact. I'll be honest and say that I don't know of other possibilities for home DIY people, so if you know of some techniques, please share.
Since I still lack a HD video camera, this would be a brief description regarding this type of Lithium Ion charging board. I connected my small solar panel to it and it charged the battery quite well. Photos below.
- Board A one side -
http://i.imgur.com/6qARDKw.jpg- Board A other side -
http://i.imgur.com/NrIbdTH.jpg- Board B one side -
http://i.imgur.com/Poqc4Bz.jpg- Board B other side -
http://i.imgur.com/iI0VULA.jpg- Assembled one side -
http://i.imgur.com/asazLaK.jpg- Assembled other side -
http://i.imgur.com/VK9JMLy.jpg- Assembled positive terminal -
http://i.imgur.com/xkZSQbo.jpg- Assembled negative terminal -
http://i.imgur.com/sgfF12p.jpgPlease let me know what you think. Cheers!
