The Shorai's make and impedance match their own prismatic cells. Others repackage A123 26650's into their own casings - which may or may not include balancing circuits. Witness the bms difference between EarthX (which does) and Antigravity (which doesn't).
I took a tip from the Antigravity folk who run with no bms, but use matched cells, and offerred up the Tecmate / Optimate TM-241 Lithium charger. It taught me that when a pack is under 12.8v rested ocv, then you don't want to apply a large amount of current until it reaches that point. If i had to do it manually, I'd do 0.1C until 12.8v was reached and continue on like normal - then again, I wouldn't discharge my cells down that far in the first place.
On the top end, since it isn't a true balance charger, it pulses the absorb between 14.0 and 14.4 somewhat slowly (enough for me to detect it with my Fluke) in an effort to burp the lower cells to life during that window of time before the cell with the highest voltage clamps down on current for the rest. It seems to work well, although I'm sure a dedicated bms could get things much more precise. For my application, I just don't need that kind of precision.
Of course, my wallet shed a tear when purchasing these things for study when a whole rack full of Trojan AGM's were just 3 feet away.

Took home a 2.5 year old Braille lifepo4 shelf-queen at a good price (made with A123 26650's internally) and it performs beautifully. With no way to do a balance charge individually, i just let the Optimate Lithium charger do it's thing. Full performance after the first charge.
Braille lithiums seems to offer up huge real ah capacity cells if you want them but of course these would be a poor $$ match for low-current applications (relatively), where high capacity CALB, Winston et al may be more appropriate.
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