Got my self a GT Power A610 charger the specs as below :
The GT A6 is a very advanced charger, able to charge, balance and discharge Lion, LiPo, LiFe (A123), NiCd and NiMH batteries on a maximum output power of 200W.It can charge or discharge up to 18 cells of NiCd / NiMH and 6 series of lithium batteries with maximum current of 10A. It can accept three types of Lithium batteries (Lilo/Lipo/LiFe).
Features;
Microprocessor controlled
Delta-peak sensitivity
Individual cell balancing
Li-ion, LiPo and LiFe capable
Ni-Cd and NiMH capable
Large range of charge currents
Store function, allows safe storage current
Time limit function
Input voltage monitoring. (Protects car batteries at the field)
Data storage (Store up to 5 packs in memory)
Battery break in and cycling.
Spec.
Input Voltage: 10~18v
Circuit power: Max Charge: 200W / Max Discharge: 25W
Charge Current Range: .1~10.0A
Discharge current range: .1~5.0A
Ni-MH/NiCd cells: 1~18
Li-ion/Poly cells: 1~6
Pb battery voltage: 2~24v
Weight: 540g
Dimensions: 143x124x37mm
This charger has a JST-XH charge plug, any pack with a JST adapter.
It has a fast charging and auto cell count option which we tried and it worked wonderfully .
Bought one of these PC SMPS : Rs 450/- and did a bit of cutting and soldering under the able guidance of Saju :
http://is.gd/3bXz0Soldered 3 wires each of + and - from the 12 V out put connectors and soldered them to a female dean plug , I soldered the male dean's to the crocodile clips base to make a parallel connection from clips for the SMPS .
Followed the procedure strictly as mentioned and I had a power supply suitable for the 10 Amp 200 watt charger
Saju Please post the instructions page link I don't know how to do it any way using the PC SMPS was your Idea
Will post some photo's soon
Sai