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💥Чек-лист корупціогенних факторів: що це і для чого
У КПІ ім. Ігоря Сікорського впроваджено важливий інструмент, що сприяє формуванню прозорого середовища в університеті – чек-лист корупціогенних факторів.
Ascent Solar closes up to $25m private placement
Atomera’s GaN-on-Si concept advances to PowerAmerica proposal stage
Стажування науковиць КПІ в компанії "Bio-H2 Umwelt GmbH"
В межах договорів з асоціацією "Ukraine Energy Autark", метою яких є поширення інноваційних дослідницьких проєктів та їхньої реалізації для енергетичної самодостатності України, старший викладач кафедри теплової та альтернативної енергетики НН ІАТЕ Ольга Власенко та асистент кафедри біоенергетики, біоінформатики та екобіотехнології ФБТ Діна Колтишева успішно пройшли в Німеччині стажування на тему "Біогаз та утилізація енергетичної біомаси" (на фото).
La Luce Cristallina launches CMOS-compatible oxide pseudo-substrate
Anritsu Launches TestDeck Web Solution to enhance Test & Measurement
ANRITSU CORPORATION has launched TestDeck, a web-based solution designed to promote digital transformation (DX) of mobile device testing. TestDeck integrates test planning, configuration, execution, and results management by connecting multiple communication test and measurement systems to a web server and aggregating test data. This centralized approach streamlines test operations and supports new perspectives in test analysis.
TestDeck web-based solution enhances the efficiency of test operations for communication test and measurement systems. TestDeck users can centrally manage test results and progress to rapidly identify performance trends and issues by device version using collected historical data. Furthermore, by visualizing and sharing centralized communication test and measurement systems, TestDeck optimizes testing across multiple domestic and international sites, helping cut test costs and shortening mobile device development cycles.
Anritsu is continuing to expand TestDeck functions to further advance test operations in the Beyond 5G and 6G eras.
Development Background
The number of required mobile device test items continues growing as communication standards and device functions evolve, increasing the test burden for vendors. Additionally, fragmented test data from different global test environments makes cross-functional analysis and results sharing difficult. TestDeck addresses these challenges by aggregating and visualizing equipment and test data for efficient testing.
Product Overview
TestDeck web solution promotes the digital transformation of testing. It supports efficient use of communication test and measurement systems, streamlines workflows, and optimizes testing on a global scale for both efficiency and new analytical perspectives.
Key Features:
• Test Vision: Centralized management of test results for failure cause and device trend analyses
• Test Hub: Aggregated management of test environments, plans, reservations, execution, and results
• Test Utilization: Centralized management of test equipment and licenses
• Comprehensive Test Automation (for PCT*1/RFCT*2): Automated GCF/PTCRB-based test planning for efficient measurement system operation
Supported Products:
• 5G NR Mobile Device Test Platform ME7834NR
• New Radio RF Conformance Test System ME7873NR
• Rapid Test Designer Platform (RTD) MX800050A
• SmartStudio NR MX800070A
Contact Anritsu to learn more about TestDeck MX710000A
Technical Terms
*1 PCT
Abbreviation for Protocol Conformance Test—key ME7834NR function for evaluating whether device adheres to various 3GPP communication protocol procedures following GCF/PTCRB certification requirements
*2 RFCT
Abbreviation for RF Conformance Test—key ME7873NR function for evaluating whether device TRx characteristics meet 3GPP radio parameter specifications following GCF/PTCRB certification requirements
The post Anritsu Launches TestDeck Web Solution to enhance Test & Measurement appeared first on ELE Times.
КПІшниці — серед переможниць CTF-змагань SHE DEFENDS: CYBER & OSINT
Одразу кілька команд Київської політехніки увійшли до числа лідерів на Всеукраїнських жіночих CTF-змаганнях SHE DEFENDS: CYBER & OSINT. Турнір спрямований на розвиток практичних навичок жінок у кібербезпеці та OSINT і посилення кіберстійкості сектору нацбезпеки та оборони.
КПІ ім. Ігоря Сікорського розпочинає партнерство з Dwarf Engineering
Підписана угода про співпрацю між КПІ ім. Ігоря Сікорського та українською інженерно-продуктовою компанією у сфері DefTech Dwarf Engineering дає дає старт новим освітнім можливостям для університету, як-от запуск нової міждисциплінарної освітньої програми «Комп’ютерний зір роботів».
⭐ Конкурс студентських ініціатив "Енергоефективність: від ідеї до дії"
Шановні здобувачі вищої освіти!
Another silly simple precision 0/20mA to 4/20mA converter

A recent Design Idea (DI), “Silly simple precision 0/20mA to 4/20mA converter,” by prolific DI contributor Stephen Woodward uses the venerable LM337 regulator in a creative configuration along with a few passive components, to translate an input 0-20 mA current source (say from a sensor with a separate power source that outputs a 0-20 mA signal current) into a 4-20 mA two-wire transmitter current loop (a standard 2 terminal industrial current source).
Below is another novel, ‘silly simple’ way of implementing the same function using the LM337. It relies on tapering off an initial 4 mA current to zero in proportion to the input 0-20 mA, and adding the input and the tapered off 4mA signal to create a 2-wire 4-20 mA output loop. It is loosely based on another Woodward gem [3]. Refer to Figure 1.

Figure 1 An input 0-20 mA is added to a tapered-off 4-0 mA at OUT to give an output 4-20 mA.
Wow the engineering world with your unique design: Design Ideas Submission Guide
First, imagine ‘0 mA’ current input (input loop open). The series arrangement of R1 parallel ‘R2 + Pz’ (‘Rz’@250E) and R3 parallel ‘R4+Ps’ (‘Rs’@62.5E) having a nominal value of 312.5E, sets the value of output loop current into OUT at 0mA+4mA (1.25V/312.5E), set using Pz.
Now, feeding a 20mA input current, imagine it pulled from junction X and pushed into the OUT terminal. This current is sourced from the output loop ‘+’, dropping 62.5E x 20mA=1.25V in Rs, in a direction opposing the internal reference voltage. With proper calibration, this reduces the drop across Rz to zero, and in doing so, reduces the original 4 mA contribution through Rz into OUT, also to zero.
The output loop current is now equal to the input current of 20mA+0mA (added at OUT), transferred from the input loop to the output loop from OUT to IN of U1. We have converted a current source input of 0-20 mA to a 2-wire loop current of 4-20 mA. The 20 mA setting is done by Ps.
Accurate current setting requires 2 S/Z passes to set the output current to within 0.05% or (much) better. Pots should be multi turn 3296 types or similar, but single turn trimmers will also work fairly well as both pots have a small trim range, by design.
The performance is excellent. The input to output linearity of the basic circuit is 0.02%. With a small heat sink, short term stability is within 0.02%, and change in loop current is 0.05% over a voltage from 5 V to 32 V. Transfer accuracy and stability are high because we aren’t transforming the input signal, only transferring it into the output loop. Reference drift affects only the basic 4 mA current and thus has a smaller effect on overall drift. The heat sink improves drift and di/dv by a factor of 3 to 4.
For intermediate input currents, the 4mA basic current via Rz into OUT is tapered off in proportion to the input 0-20 mA current. Thus at 10 mA (half) input current, the voltage at X changes suitably to maintain @500 mV across Rz, this supporting a contribution of 2 mA into OUT, down from the original 4 mA set at 0 mA input current. Output loop current into OUT is now the input 10mA+2mA=12mA, the halfway point of the 4-20 mA loop too. Similar reasoning applies to other input/output loop currents relationships.
A reverse protection diode is recommended in the 4-20 mA loop. Current limiting should be applied to limit fault current to safe levels. A series 2-transistor current limiter with appropriate resistance values is an excellent candidate, being low drop, low cost, fast acting and free from oscillation. A 40-mA ptc ‘polyfuse’ in the loop will protect the load from a complete short across both circuits (an unlikely event).
The basic drop seen by the 0-20 mA signal is -1 V to 0 V. Two diodes or an LED in series with the + of the 0-20-mA input allow the source to always see a positive drop.
Regarding stability: only the 68E(R3) and the 270E(R1) need to be 25 ppm 1% types to give low overall temperature drift, which is a significant plus. Pot drift, typically larger than that of fixed resistors, has less effect in the configuration used, wherein pots Ps and Pz, relatively high valued, control only a small part of the main current. Larger pot values also help minimize the effect of varying pot contact resistance.
A 3-V minimum operating voltage allows as much as 1000E of loop resistance with a 24-V supply, for the basic circuit.
It is a given that one of the loops will (need to) be floating. This is usually the source loop, as the instrument generating the 0-20 mA is powered from a separate supply.
Ashutosh Sapre lives and works in a large city in western India. Drifting uninspired through an EE degree way back in the late nineteen eighties, he was lucky enough to stumble across and be electrified by the Art of Electronics 1 and 2. Cut to now, he is a confirmed circuit addict, running a business designing, manufacturing and selling industrial signal processing modules. He is proud of his many dozens of design pads consisting mostly of crossed out design ideas.
Related Content/References
- Silly simple precision 0/20mA to 4/20mA converter
- A 0-20mA source current to 4-20mA loop current converter
- PWM-programmed LM317 constant current source
- https://www.radiolocman.com/shem/schematics.html?di=150983
The post Another silly simple precision 0/20mA to 4/20mA converter appeared first on EDN.
Choosing power supply components for New Space

Satellites in geostationary orbit (GEO) face a harsher environment due to plasma, trapped electrons, solar particles, and cosmic rays, with the environmental effect higher in magnitude compared with low Earth orbit (LEO)-Low Inclination, LEO-Polar, and International Space Station orbits. This is the primary reason why power supplies used in these satellites need to comply with stringent MIL standards for design, manufacturability, and quality.
GEO satellites circle around the earth in approximately 24 hours at about 3 km/s, at an altitude of about 35,786 km. There are only three main satellites that can cover the full globe, as these satellites are far from Earth.
In comparison, LEO satellites travel around the earth at of 7.8 km/s, at an altitude of less than 1,000 km, but they could be as low as 160 km above Earth. This is lower than GEO but still >10× higher than a commercial plane altitude at 14 km.
Total ionizing dose (TID) and single-event effects (SEEs) are two of the key radiation effects that need to be addressed by power supplies in space. Satellites placed in GEO face harsher conditions due to radiation compared with those in LEO.
GEO being farther from Earth is more susceptible to radiation; hence, the components used in GEO satellite power supplies need to be radiation-hardened (rad-hard) by design, which means all of the components must comply with TID and SEEs, as high as 100 Krad and 82 MeV cm2/mg, respectively.
In comparison, the LEO satellite components need to be radiation-tolerant with a relatively lower level of requirement of TID and SEEs. However, using no shielding from these harsh conditions may result in failure.
While individual satellites can be used for higher-resolution imaging, typically constellations of a large number of exact or similar types of relatively smaller satellites form a web or net around the earth to provide uninterrupted coverage. By working in tandem, these constellations provide simultaneous coverage for applications such as internet services and telecommunication.
The emergence of New Space has enabled the launch of multiple smaller satellites with lighter payloads for commercial purposes. Satellite internet services are slowly and steadily competing with traditional broadband and are providing more reliable connectivity for remote areas, passenger vehicles, and even aerospace.
Microchip offers a scalable approach to space solutions based on the mission. (Source: Microchip Technology Inc.)
Configurability for customization
The configurability of power supplies is an important factor for meeting a variety of space mission specifications. Voltage levels in the electrical power bus are generally standardized to certain values; however, the voltage of the solar array is not always standardized. This calls for a redesign of all the converters in the power subsystems, depending on the nature of the mission.
This redesign increases costs and development time. Thus, it is inherently important to provide DC/DC converters and low-dropout regulators (LDOs) across the power architecture that have standard specifications while providing the flexibility for customization depending on the system and load voltages. Functions such as paralleling, synchronization, and series connection are of paramount importance for power supplies when considering the specifications of different space missions.
Size, weight, power, and costDue to the limited volume available and the resource-intensive task of sending the objects into space against the pull of gravity, it is imperative to have smaller footprints, smaller size (volume), and lower weight while packing more power (kilowatts) in the given volume. This calls for higher power density for space optimization and higher efficiency (>80%) to get the maximum performance out of the resources available in the power system.
The load regulations need to be optimal to make sure that the output of the DC/DC converter feeds the next stage (LDOs and direct loads), matching the regulation requirements. Additionally, the tolerances of regulation against temperature variations are key in providing ruggedness and durability.
Space satellites use solar energy as the main source to power their loads. Some of the commonly used bus voltages are 28 V, 50 V, 72 V, 100 V, and 120 V. A DC/DC converter converts these voltages to secondary voltages such as 3.3 V, 5 V, 12 V, 15 V, and 28 V. Secondary bus voltages are further converted into usable voltages such as 0.8 V, 1.2 V, and 1.5 V with the help of points of load such as LDOs to feed to the microcontrollers (MCUs) and field-programable gate arrays (FPGAs) that drive the spacecraft loads.
A simplified power architecture for satellite applications, using Microchip’s standard rad-hard SA50-120 series of 50-W DC/DC power converters (Source: Microchip Technology Inc.)
Environmental effects in space
The space environment consists of effects such as solar plasma, protons, electrons, galactic cosmic rays, and solar flare ions. This harsh environment causes environmental effects such as displacement damage, TID, and SEEs that result in device-level effects.
The power converter considerations should be in line with the orbits in which the satellite operates, as well as the mission time. For example, GEO has more stringent radiation requirements than LEO.
The volume requirement for LEO tends to be higher due to the number of smaller satellites launched to form the constellations. The satellites’ power management faces stringent requirements and needs to comply with various MIL standards to withstand the harsh environment. The power supplies used in these satellites also need to minimize size, weight, power, and cost (SWaP-C).
Microchip provides DC/DC space converters that are suitable for these applications with the standard rad-hard SA50 series for deep space or traditional space satellites in GEO/MEO and the standard radiation-tolerant LE50 series for LEO/New Space applications. Using standard components in a non-hybrid structure (die and wire bond with hermetically sealed construction) can prevent lot jeopardy and mission schedule risk to ensure reliable and rugged solutions with faster time to market at the desired cost.
In addition to the ruggedness and SWaP-C requirements, power supply solutions also need to be scalable to cover a wide range of quality levels within the same product series. This also includes offering a range of packaging materials and qualification options to meet mission goals.
For example, Microchip’s LE50-28 isolated DC/DC power converters are available in nine variants, with single and triple outputs for optimal design configurability. The power converters have a companion EMI filter and enable engineers to design to scale and customize by choosing one to three outputs based on the voltage range needed for the end application. This series provides flexibility with up to four power converters to reach 200 W. It offers space-grade radiation tolerance with 50-Krad TID and SEE latch-up immunity of 37-MeV·cm2/mg linear energy transfer.
The space-grade LE50-28 series is based on a forward topology that offers higher efficiency and <1% output ripple. It is housed in a compact package, measuring 3.055 × 2.055 × 0.55 inches with a low weight of just 120 grams. These standard non-hybrid, radiation-tolerant devices in a surface-mount package comply with MIL-STD-461, MIL-STD-883, and MIL-STD-202.
In addition, the LE50-28 DC/DC power converters, designed for 28-V bus systems, can be integrated with Microchip’s PolarFire FPGAs, MCUs, and LX7720-RT motor control sensors for a complete electrical system solution. This enables customers to use cost-effective, standard LE50 converters to customize and configure solutions using paralleling and synchronization features to form more intricate power systems that can meet the requirements of LEO power management.
For New Space’s low- to mid-volume satellite constellations with stringent cost and schedule requirements, sub-Qualified Manufacturers List (QML) versions in plastic packages are the optimal solutions that provide the radiation tolerance of QML (space-grade) components to enable lower screening requirements for lower cost and shorter lead times. LE50 companions in this category are RTG4 FPGA plastic versions and the PIC64 high-performance spaceflight computing (PIC64-HPSC) LEO variant.
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Vertical gallium nitride could transform high-voltage power electronics and support UK net-zero ambitions, says CSA Catapult
Перша конференція магістрантів ФМФ, присвячена результатам дисертаційних досліджень
Наприкінці осені на фізико-математичному факультеті КПІ ім. Ігоря Сікорського відбулася І науково-практична конференція магістрантів ФМФ, присвячена результатам дисертаційних досліджень здобувачів магістерського рівня освіти.
Nuvoton releases high-power 1W 379nm UV laser diode
STMicroelectronics recognised as a Top 100 Global Innovator 2026
- Clarivate’s list ranks the organisations leading the way in innovation worldwide
- ST earns the distinction for the eighth time overall, including five consecutive years since 2022
STMicroelectronics (NYSE: STM), a global semiconductor leader serving customers across the spectrum of electronics applications, has been named in the Top 100 Global Innovators 2026. In its 15th edition, the annual benchmark from Clarivate, a leading global provider of transformative intelligence, identifies and ranks organisations that consistently deliver high-impact inventions, shaping the future of innovation across industries. The Top 100 Global Innovators navigate complexity with clarity and set the pace for invention quality, originality and global reach.
“We are honoured to be recognised as a Top 100 Innovator by Clarivate for 2026, marking our fifth consecutive year and eighth time overall receiving this distinction. This achievement underscores STMicroelectronics’ unwavering commitment to sustained, large-scale innovation in products and technologies, driven by the creativity and dedication of our global teams,” said Alessandro Cremonesi, Executive Vice President, Chief Innovation Officer, and General Manager, System Research and Applications. “As the pace of technological change accelerates, we work in open collaboration with customers and partners to develop disruptive semiconductor technologies and solutions in sensing, power and energy, connectivity, data communications, compute and edge AI, helping them turn ambitious ideas into market-defining solutions.”
ST invests significantly in R&D, and about 20% of company employees work on product design, development and technology in extensive collaboration with leading research labs and corporate partners throughout around the world. The company’s Innovation Office focuses on connecting emerging market trends with internal technology expertise to identify opportunities, stay ahead of the competition, and lead in new or existing technology domains. ST is recognised as a leading semiconductor technology innovator in several areas, including smart power technologies, wide bandgap semiconductors, edge AI solutions, MEMS sensors and actuators, optical sensing, digital and mixed-signal technologies, and silicon photonics.
Maroun S. Mourad, President, Intellectual Property, Clarivate, said: “Recognition as a Top 100 Global Innovator is a remarkable achievement given the pace of change. Multi-year winners and new entrants are investing in AI innovation as it redefines the boundaries between research, engineering and commercial execution. The leaders we celebrate today are not just responding to this shift, they are designing for it.”
The Top 100 Global Innovators analysis is underpinned by the Clarivate Centre for IP and Innovation Research. Their analyses are founded in rigorous research leveraging the proprietary Derwent Strength Index, derived from the Derwent World Patents Index (DWPI) and its global invention data to measure the influence of ideas, their success and rarity, and the investment in inventions.
Detailed Methodology
The Top 100 Global Innovators uses a complete comparative analysis of global invention data to assess the strength of every patented idea, using measures tied directly to their innovative power. To move from the individual strength of inventions to identifying the organisations that create them more consistently and frequently, Clarivate sets two threshold criteria that potential candidates must meet and then adds a measure of their internationally patented innovation output over the past five years.
About STMicroelectronics
At ST, we are 50,000 creators and makers of semiconductor technologies, mastering the semiconductor supply chain with state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities. An integrated device manufacturer, we work with more than 200,000 customers and thousands of partners to design and build products, solutions, and ecosystems that address their challenges and opportunities, and the need to support a more sustainable world. Our technologies enable smarter mobility, more efficient power and energy management, and the wide-scale deployment of cloud-connected autonomous things. We are on track to be carbon neutral in all direct and indirect emissions (scopes 1 and 2), product transportation, business travel, and employee commuting emissions (our scope 3 focus), and to achieve our 100% renewable electricity sourcing goal by the end of 2027.
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Aimtron Electronics acquires US-based ESDM and ODM company to expand global footprint
- Acquisition adds USD 17 million current revenue base, with a target to scale to ~USD 25 million within three years; consolidation from Q4 FY26
- Strengthens engagement with global OEM customers in mission-critical segments
- Advancing full-stack, mission-critical electronics capabilities
Aimtron Electronics Limited, an India-based electronics system design and manufacturing (ESDM) company with operations in the United States, announced the acquisition of ICS Company, a US-based ESDM and ODM company headquartered in Decatur. Based on CY 2025 estimates, the acquired business is expected to generate approximately USD 17 million in revenue, with stable performance across the year. Aimtron plans to consolidate revenues from Q4 of FY26.
The acquisition strengthens Aimtron’s capabilities by adding experienced engineering teams, proprietary intellectual property, and long-standing customer relationships, enhancing its end-to-end offerings across product design, manufacturing, and lifecycle support. ICS serves leading global OEMs across industrial and mission-critical segments, including Caterpillar and John Deere. This deepens Aimtron’s presence in high-reliability electronics and strengthens its engagement with global OEM customers.
The acquired facility is currently operating at around 54 per cent capacity utilisation, offering strong headroom for growth. Aimtron intends to scale utilisation to approximately 90 per cent over the next three years through improved procurement, enhanced operating leverage, and targeted capacity expansion.
The transaction has been evaluated on both trailing and forward financials and is expected to be margin- and EPS-supportive from year one, while remaining aligned to Aimtron’s ROCE and ROE benchmarks.
Mukesh Jeram Vasani, Founder, Aimtron Electronics Limited, said, “This acquisition is a decisive step in Aimtron’s global journey. It significantly expands our footprint in North America, deepens our engineering strength, and positions us closer to customers building mission-critical products. With scalable infrastructure, strong regional opportunity, and a highly capable team, this integration accelerates our move toward a truly full-stack ESDM platform and reinforces our ambition to build a global electronics powerhouse.”
The acquired company operates a 58,000 sq. ft. manufacturing facility located on approximately 3.9 acres in Decatur. Strategically positioned within an established industrial and OEM ecosystem, the facility serves customers across agrotech, oil and gas, mining, hardened electronics, heavy engineering, and medical technology.
Dennis Espinoza, Founder & CEO, said, “Joining the Aimtron family marks an exciting new chapter for ICS. By aligning our deep-rooted Midwest engineering focus with Aimtron’s global resources and manufacturing scale, we can now offer our long-standing customers even more comprehensive end-to-end solutions. This partnership empowers us to accelerate innovation and better serve the rising demand for rugged, high-reliability electronics in critical industries like agrotech and heavy engineering.”
Nirmal Vasani, Chief Operating Officer, Aimtron Electronics, said, “The acquisition of ICS is a cornerstone of our ‘Glocal’ strategy, combining the engineering precision of the US with the immense scale of our Indian manufacturing ecosystem. This is a significant leap toward our vision of becoming a ₹1,000 crore global ESDM powerhouse.”
Chris Espinoza, Vice President of ICS Company, said, “Under the Aimtron umbrella, we now have the scale, resources, and global reach to accelerate growth while continuing to serve our customers with the same engineering focus and operational discipline. Our Midwest location—at the heart of North America’s most productive farming regions—also positions us well to support the rising demand for advanced agrotech and rugged electronics solutions.”
Recently, Aimtron incorporated Aimtron Mechatronics, a wholly owned subsidiary in Gujarat, and raised ₹100 crore through preferential convertible warrants. Together with this US acquisition, these initiatives are expected to play a key role in fulfilling Aimtron’s mission of achieving ₹1,000 crore in revenue over the next three years.
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I had an Office Space moment and I don't regret it
| I dedicate this composition to Office Space... Some of these parts will be upcycled in new projects... some others will be used for target practice... [link] [comments] |
Ascent Solar announces up to $25m private placement
Now, _this_ is how you ask for help identifying a connector.
A battery charger that does even more

Multifunction devices are great…as long as you can find uses for all (or at least some) of those additional functions that you end up paying for, that is.
All other factors being equal (or at least roughly comparable), I tend to gravitate toward multifunction devices instead of a suite of single-function widget alternatives. The versatile smartphone is one obvious example of this trend; while I still own a collection of both still and video cameras, for example, they mostly collect dust on my shelves while I instead regularly reach for the front and rear cameras built into my Google Pixel phones. And most folks have already bailed on standalone cameras (if they ever even had one in the first place) long ago.
Speaking of multi-function devices, as well as of cameras, for that matter, let’s take a look at today’s teardown victim, NEEWER’s Replacement Battery and Charger Set:

It comes in three variants, supporting (and bundled with two examples of) batteries for Canon (shown here), Nikon, and Sony cameras, with MSRPs ranging from $36.49 to $73.99. It’s not only a charger, over both USB-C and micro-USB input options (a USB-A to micro-USB adapter cable is included, too), but also acts as a travel storage case for those batteries as well as memory cards:

And assuming the batteries are already charged, you can use them not only to power your camera but also to recharge an external device, such as a smartphone, via the USB-A output. My only critique would be that the USB-C connector isn’t bidirectional, too, i.e., able to do double-duty as both a charging input and an external-powering output.

As part of Amazon’s most recent early-October Prime Big Deal Days promotion, the company marked down a portion of the inventory in its Resale (formerly Warehouse) section, containing “Quality pre-owned, used, and open box products” (their words, not mine, and in summary: where Amazon resells past customer returns). I’ve regularly mentioned it in the past as a source of widgets for both my ongoing use and in teardowns, the latter often the result of my receiving something that didn’t work or was otherwise not-as-advertised, and Amazon refunding me what I paid and telling me not to bother returning it. Resale-sourced acquisitions don’t always pan out, but they do often enough (and the savings are significant enough) that I keep coming back.
Take the NEEWER Replacement Battery and Charger Set for Canon LP-E6 batteries, for example. It was already marked down from $36.49 to $26.63 by virtue of its inclusion in the Resale section, and the Prime Big Deal Days promotion knocked off an additional 25%, dropping the per-unit price to $19.97. So, I bought all three units that were available for sale, since LP-E6 batteries are compatible not only with my two Canon EOS 5D Mark IV DSLRs and my first-generation Blackmagic Design Pocket Cinema 6K video camera but also, courtesy of their ubiquity (along with that of the Sony-originated L-series, i.e., NP-F battery form factor) useful as portable power options for field monitors, flash and constant illumination sources, and the like.
From past experience with Warehouse-now-Resale-sourced acquisitions, I expected the packaging to be less-than-pristine compared to a brand-new alternative, and reality matched the lowered expectations. Here are the front and back panels of the first two devices’ outer boxes, in the first image accompanied by a 0.75″ (19.1 mm) diameter U.S. penny for size comparison purposes, which you’ll also see in other photos in this piece:




Flip up the top, however, and the insides were a) complete and b) in cosmetically acceptable and fully functional shape. Here are the contents of the first box shown earlier, for example:

The aforementioned USB-A to micro-USB adapter cable:

One of the two included batteries:




The device outsides:






And finally, its insides:




The third device, on the other hand…when I saw the clear plastic bag that it came in, I knew I was in for trouble:



Removing the box from the bag only made matters visually, at least, worse:



And when I flipped open the top…yikes (I’d already taken out the LP-E6 batteries, which ended up looking and working fine, from the box when I snapped the following shots):






From a charging-and-powering standpoint, the device still worked fine, believe it or not. But the inability to securely attach the lid to the base rendered it of low value at best (there are always, of course, thick rubber bands as an alternative lid-securing scheme, but they’d still leave a gap).
So, I got in touch with Amazon, who gave me a full refund and told me to keep the device to do with as I wished. I relocated the batteries to my Blackmagic camera case. And then I added the battery charger to my teardown pile. On that note, by the way, I’ve intentionally waited until now to show you the packaging underside:


Case underside:


And one of the slips of literature:

This was the only one of the three devices I bought that had the same warning in all three places. If I didn’t know better, I’d think they’d foreseen what I later had planned for it!
Difficulty in diving inTime to get inside:

As with my recent Amazon Smart Plug teardown, I had a heck of a time punching through the seemingly straightforward seam around the edges of the interior portion:

But finally, after some colorful language, along with collateral damage:

I wrenched my way inside, surmounting the seemingly ineffective glue above the PCB in the process. The design’s likely hardware modularity is perhaps obvious; the portion containing the battery bays is unique to a particular product proliferation, with the remainder common to all three variants.

Remove the three screws holding the PCB in place:

And it lifts right out:

That chunk out of one corner of the wire-wound inductor in the middle came courtesy of yours truly and his habit of blindly jabbing various tools inside the device during the ham-fisted disassembly process. The foam along the left edge precludes the underside LEDs (which you’ll see shortly) from shining upward, instead redirecting their outputs out the front.
IC conundrumsThe large IC to the right of the foam strip, marked as follows:
0X895D45
is an enigma; my research of both the topside marked text (via traditional Google search) and the image (via Google Lens) was fruitless. I’m guessing that it’s the power management controller, handling both battery charging and output sequencing functions; more precise information from knowledgeable readers would be appreciated in the comments.
The two identical ICs along the top edge, in eight-lead SOP packages, were unfortunately no easier to ID. They’re marked as follows:
PSD (company logo) AKJG
PAP8801
And along the right edge is another IC, also in an eight-lead SOP but this time with the leads connected to the package’s long edges, and top-side stamped thusly:
SPT (company logo) SP1081F
25CT03
This last one I’m more confident of. It appears to be the SP1081F synchronous buck regulator from Chinese semiconductor supplier Wuxi Silicon Power Microelectronics. And intermingled with all these ICs are various surface-mounted passives and such.
For additional perspective, next are some side-view shots:
And, last but not least, here’s the PCB underside, revealing the four aforementioned LEDs, a smattering of test points, and not much else (unless you’re into traces, that is):
There you have it! As always, please share your insights in the comments.
—Brian Dipert is the Principal at Sierra Media and a former technical editor at EDN Magazine, where he still regularly contributes as a freelancer.
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