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popular Posted by phoinix | Staff • 2d ago
May 7, 2025 7:20 PM
Item 1 of 4
Item 1 of 4
popular Posted by phoinix | Staff • 2d ago
May 7, 2025 7:20 PM
$29.99: 100W Anker Nano Foldable MacBook Charger w/ 6' USB-C Cable (White or Black) at Amazon
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Output USB-C: 5V⎓3A / 9V⎓3A / 15V⎓3A / 20V⎓5A
Output USB-C: 5V⎓3A / 9V⎓3A / 15V⎓3A / 20V⎓5A
I wonder how many people out there have no idea what the voltage/amperage numbers mean. I'm one of em.
I thought he was doing physics problems
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i owned a few anker Gan Charger, multiple 65 watt, 100 watt prime etc.
this one failed on me twice (anker RMA are great). it does charge up to 100 watt as advertise, it just stopped working, its really not worth the hassle having this with you if this is your only charger to travel with
i owned a few anker Gan Charger, multiple 65 watt, 100 watt prime etc.
this one failed on me twice (anker RMA are great). it does charge up to 100 watt as advertise, it just stopped working, its really not worth the hassle having this with you if this is your only charger to travel with
Reviews say it gets hot. Did you experience that?
One of the main things is the combination shows you wattage. Power = voltage x current
Watts = V x A (actually V x I symbol wise but I'm using the units shown)
So 5V/3A is 15W, 20V at 5A is 100W of power.
Not going into the difference between voltage and current here, but most electronic devices are limited by how much voltage it can handle at the input. For example most simple small devices can only handle up to 5V. If those devices can handle up to 3A then the max those will receive from this charger is 15W.
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Thanks! In that case I don't see this as suitable for a computer that needs to run at 100W. Sounds like it will keep dipping.