AnkerDirect via Amazon has Anker 6-Port up to 112W Max USB-A & USB-C Desktop Charging Station (White, A2154) on sale for $39.99 - $14 with promo code 0UN1CRCJ at checkout = $25.99. Shipping is free.
Thanks to Staff Member Red_Liz for sharing this deal.
About this Item:
6-in-1 Charger for All: Designed for modern needs, this charger can power your entire digital lineup, from laptops to smartphones, all at the same time. Note: 30W charging is limited to the USB-C1 port for MacBook Air.
Maximum Power, Minimum Time: Efficiently power your MacBook Air to 50% in just 1 hour 40 minutes or quickly boost your iPhone 16 Pro Max from 0 - 50% in 30 minutes with a single 30W max charging port.
112W Multi-Device Charger: Equipped with 3 USB-C and 3 USB-A ports, this charger offers a total output of 112W, making it powerful enough to charge a range of devices.
Tidy Desk, Tidy Mind: Say goodbye to tangled wires and cluttered desks. Included with the charger is a silicone cable organizer, ensuring your workspace remains orderly and stress-free.
What You Get: Anker Charger (112W, 6 Ports), cable organizer, welcome guide, 18-month warranty.
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AnkerDirect via Amazon has Anker 6-Port up to 112W Max USB-A & USB-C Desktop Charging Station (White, A2154) on sale for $39.99 - $14 with promo code 0UN1CRCJ at checkout = $25.99. Shipping is free.
Thanks to Staff Member Red_Liz for sharing this deal.
About this Item:
6-in-1 Charger for All: Designed for modern needs, this charger can power your entire digital lineup, from laptops to smartphones, all at the same time. Note: 30W charging is limited to the USB-C1 port for MacBook Air.
Maximum Power, Minimum Time: Efficiently power your MacBook Air to 50% in just 1 hour 40 minutes or quickly boost your iPhone 16 Pro Max from 0 - 50% in 30 minutes with a single 30W max charging port.
112W Multi-Device Charger: Equipped with 3 USB-C and 3 USB-A ports, this charger offers a total output of 112W, making it powerful enough to charge a range of devices.
Tidy Desk, Tidy Mind: Say goodbye to tangled wires and cluttered desks. Included with the charger is a silicone cable organizer, ensuring your workspace remains orderly and stress-free.
What You Get: Anker Charger (112W, 6 Ports), cable organizer, welcome guide, 18-month warranty.
Model: Anker Desktop Charger, Fast Charging USB C Charger, 112W Max 6-Port Charging Station, for iPhone, iPad, MacBook, Samsung and More (Cable Not Included)
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This charger hit the market at most 2 years ago, and hasn't been at a lower price since it was introduced. It typically goes on sale for ~$32, so for anyone that has been considering one, this is a good deal.
Secondly, what you interpret as a weakness is actually its strength, which most multi-port chargers lack, as well as a reputable brand name and legitimate safety marks.
Unlike many chargers, this one can supply full rated power to all of its ports simultaneously, and doesn't have to reboot itself to reallocate the power distribution when a new device is plugged into a port, which disrupts charging cycles and can confuse BMSes. They rob Peter to pay Paul.
Granted, the 30W maximum isn't particularly high, but it is a true 30W, at all times, and more than sufficient for most mobile devices, if not laptops.
This one doesn't have to hide any compromises in the funny math marketing that sells most chargers, like the 65W charger now on the front page that drops to 45W max if more than one of its three ports is utilized, and must split 15W between the other ports if they are put to use.
Total the full output for every port when in use and it totals 112W, with the 30W max clearly labeled on the port itself. There are no hidden compromises in the specs, if one bothers to actually read and understand what they say.
30 + 20 + 20 + 18 +12 + 12 = 112
Try doing that math with most other chargers, and they will fail that test, and woe to those who don't read the diagrams that are required to help users decipher their true output limits.
Seeing this charger through the deceptive marketing prism used for most others does it a disservice.
Advertised 112W power output is only if you are using all of the ports at the same time. Maximum speed is only 30W for the first USB-C port and 20W for the other 2 USB-C ports. USB-A ports are 12 watts. Modern tablets and laptops generally need more than 30W of power. Many smartphones can charge at faster than 30W as well. This charger was probably designed 5 or 10 years ago; now they are just trying to clear them out to make space for more modern devices.
Just tossing out a confirmation so others don't waste their time checking like I did... It is definitely only for the white. Does not work for the black even if purchased through anker direct.
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Just tossing out a confirmation so others don't waste their time checking like I did... It is definitely only for the white. Does not work for the black even if purchased through anker direct.
Love ones like this with lots of outlet ports. Perfect for lower draw items like Sonicare toothbrush, Roku remote & flashlights but also space and juice for IPhone $ IPad. Nice find. thanks!
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank q99
Advertised 112W power output is only if you are using all of the ports at the same time. Maximum speed is only 30W for the first USB-C port and 20W for the other 2 USB-C ports. USB-A ports are 12 watts. Modern tablets and laptops generally need more than 30W of power. Many smartphones can charge at faster than 30W as well. This charger was probably designed 5 or 10 years ago; now they are just trying to clear them out to make space for more modern devices.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank CrankyBastard
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from q99
:
Advertised 112W power output is only if you are using all of the ports at the same time. Maximum speed is only 30W for the first USB-C port and 20W for the other 2 USB-C ports. USB-A ports are 12 watts. Modern tablets and laptops generally need more than 30W of power. Many smartphones can charge at faster than 30W as well. This charger was probably designed 5 or 10 years ago; now they are just trying to clear them out to make space for more modern devices.
This charger hit the market at most 2 years ago, and hasn't been at a lower price since it was introduced. It typically goes on sale for ~$32, so for anyone that has been considering one, this is a good deal.
Secondly, what you interpret as a weakness is actually its strength, which most multi-port chargers lack, as well as a reputable brand name and legitimate safety marks.
Unlike many chargers, this one can supply full rated power to all of its ports simultaneously, and doesn't have to reboot itself to reallocate the power distribution when a new device is plugged into a port, which disrupts charging cycles and can confuse BMSes. They rob Peter to pay Paul.
Granted, the 30W maximum isn't particularly high, but it is a true 30W, at all times, and more than sufficient for most mobile devices, if not laptops.
This one doesn't have to hide any compromises in the funny math marketing that sells most chargers, like the 65W charger now on the front page that drops to 45W max if more than one of its three ports is utilized, and must split 15W between the other ports if they are put to use.
Total the full output for every port when in use and it totals 112W, with the 30W max clearly labeled on the port itself. There are no hidden compromises in the specs, if one bothers to actually read and understand what they say.
30 + 20 + 20 + 18 +12 + 12 = 112
Try doing that math with most other chargers, and they will fail that test, and woe to those who don't read the diagrams that are required to help users decipher their true output limits.
Seeing this charger through the deceptive marketing prism used for most others does it a disservice.
As always, right tool for the right job.
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Jun 05, 2025 12:05 AM
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I have a lot of devices plugged in my entertainment center (Switch 1/2/, Philips Hue Play (4 devices), Nvidia Shield, AFTV Stick, Synology NAS, TV, AV receiver, on and on) and I am running out of outlets with two 8-port outlets. This can save some space and I can connect at least three devices to it. I assume this can work continuously? Like 24/7/365?
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This one doesn't have to hide any compromises in the funny math marketing that sells most chargers, like the 65W charger now on the front page that drops to 45W max if more than one of its three ports is utilized, and must split 15W between the other ports if they are put to use.
Total the full output for every port when in use and it totals 112W, with the 30W max clearly labeled on the port itself. There are no hidden compromises in the specs, if one bothers to actually read and understand what they say.
30 + 20 + 20 + 18 +12 + 12 = 112
Try doing that math with most other chargers, and they will fail that test, and woe to those who don't read the diagrams that are required to help users decipher their true output limits.
Well said. I've seen some USB-C/A combo chargers where the combined output of the USB-A ports drop down to 10-15W shared when all the ports are in use which is pretty bad.
I have a $100 200W 6-port combo charger but if I use more than 2 ports (port 1 for laptop + the rest lower power devices), output drops to 65W on port 1 and my 90W laptop complains the charger is not delivering enough power.
This Anker doesn't deliver very high power but at least it delivers what it says on the label. I don't need to refer to a chart to see what the output is if I use a combination of ports. I do think it's overpriced at the $40 MSRP but at $26, that seems pretty fair given the power output and number of ports you get.
I purchased the black version of this unit in January and can confirm the max USB-C outlet outputs of 30w + 20w + 20w. I don't have enough devices that can measure the port outputs when all are in use but have verified that all ports output power when all are in use.
As far as power blips when plugging devices, I do experience the unit pausing charging to the plugged in devices when adding another device. I did not see what @CrankyBastard mentioned above:
"Unlike many chargers, this one can supply full rated power to all of its ports simultaneously, and doesn't have to reboot itself to reallocate the power distribution when a new device is plugged into a port, which disrupts charging cycles and can confuse BMSes."
in the description of the product and thought the power reboot blips were normal since all of my other multi-port charges do this. So far the blips haven't had any negative impacts on my devices that i can see.
Other than the power blips, this unit performs well and I wouldn't hesitate to purchase another one at this price if I needed it.
Anyone downvote has no brain. For a 30 buck charger that can't even charge a laptop, and cant even reach 45w charging speed for phones are nothing but waste of money. I am not sure what u need for
Anyone downvote has no brain. For a 30 buck charger that can't even charge a laptop, and cant even reach 45w charging speed for phones are nothing but waste of money. I am not sure what u need for
Well what charger do you recommend for ~$25 that has 5+ ports with at least 3 USB-C ports that can deliver 20W minimum simultaneously? Because the chargers I own with 5+ ports and capable of delivering 100+W to a single port costs $90+ on sale.
For our family, this one's perfect for the living room for charging multiple lower power devices at the same time: 1x 30W USB-C (for tablets, phones, Switch, etc) + 2x USB-C 20W for iPhone MagSafe + miscellaneous USB-A cables (Kindle, AppleWatch, wireless headphones, electric toothbrush, etc).
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Secondly, what you interpret as a weakness is actually its strength, which most multi-port chargers lack, as well as a reputable brand name and legitimate safety marks.
Unlike many chargers, this one can supply full rated power to all of its ports simultaneously, and doesn't have to reboot itself to reallocate the power distribution when a new device is plugged into a port, which disrupts charging cycles and can confuse BMSes. They rob Peter to pay Paul.
Granted, the 30W maximum isn't particularly high, but it is a true 30W, at all times, and more than sufficient for most mobile devices, if not laptops.
This one doesn't have to hide any compromises in the funny math marketing that sells most chargers, like the 65W charger now on the front page that drops to 45W max if more than one of its three ports is utilized, and must split 15W between the other ports if they are put to use.
Total the full output for every port when in use and it totals 112W, with the 30W max clearly labeled on the port itself. There are no hidden compromises in the specs, if one bothers to actually read and understand what they say.
30 + 20 + 20 + 18 +12 + 12 = 112
Try doing that math with most other chargers, and they will fail that test, and woe to those who don't read the diagrams that are required to help users decipher their true output limits.
Seeing this charger through the deceptive marketing prism used for most others does it a disservice.
As always, right tool for the right job.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank idiggplants
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank q99
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank CrankyBastard
Secondly, what you interpret as a weakness is actually its strength, which most multi-port chargers lack, as well as a reputable brand name and legitimate safety marks.
Unlike many chargers, this one can supply full rated power to all of its ports simultaneously, and doesn't have to reboot itself to reallocate the power distribution when a new device is plugged into a port, which disrupts charging cycles and can confuse BMSes. They rob Peter to pay Paul.
Granted, the 30W maximum isn't particularly high, but it is a true 30W, at all times, and more than sufficient for most mobile devices, if not laptops.
This one doesn't have to hide any compromises in the funny math marketing that sells most chargers, like the 65W charger now on the front page that drops to 45W max if more than one of its three ports is utilized, and must split 15W between the other ports if they are put to use.
Total the full output for every port when in use and it totals 112W, with the 30W max clearly labeled on the port itself. There are no hidden compromises in the specs, if one bothers to actually read and understand what they say.
30 + 20 + 20 + 18 +12 + 12 = 112
Try doing that math with most other chargers, and they will fail that test, and woe to those who don't read the diagrams that are required to help users decipher their true output limits.
Seeing this charger through the deceptive marketing prism used for most others does it a disservice.
As always, right tool for the right job.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Total the full output for every port when in use and it totals 112W, with the 30W max clearly labeled on the port itself. There are no hidden compromises in the specs, if one bothers to actually read and understand what they say.
30 + 20 + 20 + 18 +12 + 12 = 112
Try doing that math with most other chargers, and they will fail that test, and woe to those who don't read the diagrams that are required to help users decipher their true output limits.
I have a $100 200W 6-port combo charger but if I use more than 2 ports (port 1 for laptop + the rest lower power devices), output drops to 65W on port 1 and my 90W laptop complains the charger is not delivering enough power.
This Anker doesn't deliver very high power but at least it delivers what it says on the label. I don't need to refer to a chart to see what the output is if I use a combination of ports. I do think it's overpriced at the $40 MSRP but at $26, that seems pretty fair given the power output and number of ports you get.
As far as power blips when plugging devices, I do experience the unit pausing charging to the plugged in devices when adding another device. I did not see what @CrankyBastard mentioned above:
"Unlike many chargers, this one can supply full rated power to all of its ports simultaneously, and doesn't have to reboot itself to reallocate the power distribution when a new device is plugged into a port, which disrupts charging cycles and can confuse BMSes."
in the description of the product and thought the power reboot blips were normal since all of my other multi-port charges do this. So far the blips haven't had any negative impacts on my devices that i can see.
Other than the power blips, this unit performs well and I wouldn't hesitate to purchase another one at this price if I needed it.
For our family, this one's perfect for the living room for charging multiple lower power devices at the same time: 1x 30W USB-C (for tablets, phones, Switch, etc) + 2x USB-C 20W for iPhone MagSafe + miscellaneous USB-A cables (Kindle, AppleWatch, wireless headphones, electric toothbrush, etc).
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