One of them has a photo with a battery labeled 18650, that is a Li Ion battery, wrong voltage, will not work on a AAA NiMH battery. Do not buy it.
The Portapow (with a red cover), I tried to use google translate, could get get a good english version to read. Thus, have no opinion.
The small gray one that takes two batteries will work, I have some of them, they are very cheap. But, they are not "smart" chargers. A smart charger keeps charging until the battery is charged up, then it quits charging. Instead the gray ones are dumb chargers that charges very slowly so that when a battery is full, it continues to charge it at the same slow rate. The principle of these chargers is that they should have a small charge rate that is small enough to avoid damage from overcharging. Thus they can take over 10 hours to charge batteries.
The one labeled Camelion looks like it works very slowly, the data on charging rate suggests that it might also be one of those that is not a smart charger.
So, can't offer much on those ones you listed.
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A general comment on charging. If you have two batteries in series in the circuit, teh same amount of amperage goes through both batteries to charge them. if one battery was empty and the other half charged, then one will become overcharged and the other undercharged.
This is a very long piece on charging with solar, not with dynohubs. But, it still is very pertinent to keeping stuff charged on a trip, I learned a lot from reading it. (This was where I learned of the Pixo charger.)
https://www.crazyguyonabike.com/doc/page/?page_id=252905I took four pairs of AA batteries with me to Iceland, I used four different colors of tape to mark them and I only put batteries of the same color in the GPS, and charged those two together later. That was how I tried to make sure that I was not overcharging one and undercharging the other. My charger I think could put a different amount of amperage in each battery, but I was not 100 percent sure on that so that is why I kept them in dedicated pairings like I did.
I have a Pixo C-USB, will charge one or two AA or two AAA or Li Ion batteries. Much more expensive, but works well. I bought it on ebay, shipped to USA from Germany. I just did a search on Ebay and also a general google search, am coming up empty. Their website suggests that they might not be in business any more. So, these might not be available any more. I did not bring the Pixo on my last trip because it physically is bigger than my Eneloop chargers and the Lenmar Li Ion battery charger together, but I think the Pixo works better on a power source that has low power. Thus, I was a bit perturbed with myself for not bringing it. If the Pixo is no longer available, I will be a bit bummed because I like it.
http://www.pixo.de/For my Iceland trip, I brought two Eneloop chargers that are rated for AA but not AAA batteries. They are smart chargers, shut off the charge when the batteries are charged up. Do a search for
"kbc-e1as" usb AA charger to find it. I think I paid about $25 USD each, shipped from Japan (about 3 weeks), I do not recall if I got it from Ebay or Amazon. They seem to work well when you have a good powerful charging circuit, but they do not work well as I hoped if your power source is not very strong, when the voltage of the USB port drops, the charger has an odd blinking to the LED which makes me a bit nervous about them. I put AAA batteries into a AAA to AA converter sleeve to charge them in this charger. They kept my AA batteries charged on my Iceland trip, but I was never really sure if the AA batteries were fully charged or not. My GPS uses AA, not AAA, so most of my charging was of AA, not AAA batteries. My taillights use AAA batteries, so I was prepared to charge them too. I just looked at both Ebay and Amazon, they now cost twice what I paid for them.
On another forum, someone spoke highly of a Powerchimp 4. I ordered one two days ago, have not received it yet. I ordered it from this link:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/331836452987At only $20 USD which includes some batteries, my hopes are not very high because that is not a lot of money, but the listing sounds like it is a really good charger with sepearate circuits and can charge both AA and AAA. This link describes it better:
http://www.produktinfo.conrad.com/datenblaetter/550000-574999/556189-an-01-en-POWERTRAVELLER_POWERCHIMP_4A.pdfI will not have a chance to test this for at least three weeks, I leave for a week on a 10 day canoe trip, the charger even if it gets here a day or two before I leave, that is not enough time to really test it. MEC is a seller in Canada, their website has some reviews of it.
https://www.mec.ca/en/product/5036-009/PowerChimp-4A-Dual-Purpose-Charger#reviewsIt got both good and bad reviews, but the bad reviews sound like they tried to use it to charge a phone, teh good review used it to put power into the AA or AAA batteries. I plan to only put power into the AA or AAA batteries, not take power out of them so I am hopeful that it is better than the bad reviews.
Dan also has a lot of experience charging AA batteries from a USB source, he used an older Eneloop charger that is no longer available, but maybe he will think of something important that I missed.
Sometimes in Iceland if I had a power source available, I would put power into a pair of Li Ion powerbanks and then simultaneously use those to also charge AA batteries. If I had hours, I could come back later and find everything fully charged. An example of this is the attached photo where I plugged in at a campground. I left the cover on teh Eneloop chargers open to show the AA batteries, but normally I close the covers.
I commented before that I used a AXA Luxx 70 Plus headlamp that has a built in USB charger. But for my Iceland trip, I decided I wanted better waterproofing for my USB charger. Thus, bought a Sinewave Revolution for that trip, see second photo. This USB power source does not have a cache battery, but I am still quite happy with that charger.
I hope this helps some, but I recognize that I did not really answer your questions, sorry.