expiredLovelyCheetah | Staff posted Dec 11, 2024 08:38 PM
Item 1 of 3
Item 1 of 3
expiredLovelyCheetah | Staff posted Dec 11, 2024 08:38 PM
Baseus 1200J Surge Power Strip w/ 20W PD, 3x USB & 3x AC Outlets
+ Free Shipping$15
$46
67% offAmazon
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Devices are all designed to draw power at at different rates. Many use a standard called Quick Charge. There are many others though, like Samsung's Super Fast Charging, and USB C Power Delivery (PD).
Most any phone will take the standard 5W or 10W charging that has been available for years and years. Most phones nowadays also utilize some kind of Quick Charge protocol for "fast" charging between 10W and 20W.
If you want the fastest and best charging that doesn't overheat your phone, you'll want to look up what kind of specific charging protocol your phone utilizes and find a charger to match. Good chargers will try to meet many standards.
Newer iPhones will utilize 20W and 27W Power Delivery.
Samsung phones utilize 25W and 45W PPS (aka Super Fast Charging).
Pixels use some form of charging at 27W and 37W.
Laptops will use anywhere from 20W to 100w+ (but you'll usually need a the voltage to be a minimum of 20V)
Smaller devices will use the standard 5W-10W.
The other trick here is that this charger has 40W total, and splits that between the output ports. As you said, they max out at 20W. Meaning you could probably get the fastest charge for an iPhone at 20W, but not a Samsung device since their standard is 25W PPS.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank coolcoder
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This one has 30w, i got it for $11.89 back in july and have used it on a few trips already. love it.
Definitely preferable to just have a physical on/off switch like most surge protectors.
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https://slickdeals.net/f/17977953-baseus-65w-usb-c-wall-charger-3-ports-foldable-gan-charger-15-99-free-shipping?p=1746
Larger devices like laptops use USB PD (Power Delivery). Some laptops will run on 20W but others may need as much as 45W to charge while running.
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Paid $36 for the 40w, I had hoped it would have wall mount holes on the back but doesn't so I glued it to a small board and screwed that to the wall. Just using it as a low profile power port for a game and monitor in a small, otherwise useless space. Chose it because I could hide this right under the wall mount game and have a short cable go straight into it. And it has a couple AC ports so I was able to plug the screen into it too for better cable management. And the regular USB will have plenty of power for a streaming stick if I decide to add one.
Realizing now that was a lot of words to say it's not wall mountable as is
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank hizzledizzle
Devices are all designed to draw power at at different rates. Many use a standard called Quick Charge. There are many others though, like Samsung's Super Fast Charging, and USB C Power Delivery (PD).
Most any phone will take the standard 5W or 10W charging that has been available for years and years. Most phones nowadays also utilize some kind of Quick Charge protocol for "fast" charging between 10W and 20W.
If you want the fastest and best charging that doesn't overheat your phone, you'll want to look up what kind of specific charging protocol your phone utilizes and find a charger to match. Good chargers will try to meet many standards.
Newer iPhones will utilize 20W and 27W Power Delivery.
Samsung phones utilize 25W and 45W PPS (aka Super Fast Charging).
Pixels use some form of charging at 27W and 37W.
Laptops will use anywhere from 20W to 100w+ (but you'll usually need a the voltage to be a minimum of 20V)
Smaller devices will use the standard 5W-10W.
The other trick here is that this charger has 40W total, and splits that between the output ports. As you said, they max out at 20W. Meaning you could probably get the fastest charge for an iPhone at 20W, but not a Samsung device since their standard is 25W PPS.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
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