Are you sure? Those battery packs you buy to charge your cell phone can be charged by the 5V 1-2A AC to USB plugs that you use to charge your cell phone.
Why would 5V blow them up? I was going to take a microusb to usb cable, cut off the usb end and solder a voltage regulator in a circuit between that end and some solar panels. I was thinking that as long as I could get 5V coming in and not more than a couple amps, it should be the same thing as plugging it into a wall and having the AC to DC transformer (or whatever it's called) convert it to 5V DC.
I'm new to this so please let me know if I'm making a huge error.
I was thinking of using 18650 Li-ion batteries...I think there are two types and the ones I am thinking of using are 3.7V and require 4.2V to charge. So if I were to directly charge it with 5V that would probably blow it up -- but I am running it through the circuit in the battery pack that takes a 5V microUSB DC input and does some kind of circuit magic that then charges the 18650 batteries.
I was thinking of using the 18650 battery because they seem plentiful, cheap and hold a lot of mAh. I read somewhere that they are the #1 battery type used in laptop battery packs and so on.
Here's an example of a cheap 18650 5V battery pack on Ebay that I might use.
https://www.ebay.ca/itm/Portable-Re...l_Phone_PDA_Chargers&var=&hash=item5d4ed16f49
https://www.ebay.ca/itm/5V-2A-Dual-..._Phone_PDA_Batteries&var=&hash=item1e94286944
Also, 5V is a magical amount of voltage. Not only is it compatible with every cell phone out there, but it also works for the raspberry pi. I was hoping to build a solar powered raspberry pi for weather/environment sensing.