Anker via Costco Next has for
Costco Members: Anker 4-Port up to 140W USB-C GaN Wall Charger w/ 5' 240W Cable (B2697, 2 Colors) on sale for
$59.99 when you
follow the steps below.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member
DntMessWitRohan for sharing this deal.
- Note: You must click-through the Costco Next page with a active Costco Membership Account in order to get this deal.
Steps:
- Go to the Costco Next Anker page.
- Ensure you are logged in with your Costco Account via the top-right of the page.
- After you are logged in, select the Visit Anker button on the page to proceed to the Anker Costco Next site.
- Note: This step is required in order for the following page to work.
- Go to the Anker 4-Port up to 140W USB-C GaN Wall Charger page.
- Select from the available colors and add to cart.
- Your total will be $59.99 with free shipping.
About this Item:
- Simultaneous Charging: Powers four devices at once using advanced GaN technology for optimal performance.
- Dual USB-C Ports: Each delivers up to 140W; charges 15-inch MacBook Air to 50% in 30 minutes.
- Enhanced Safety: ActiveShield 2.0 monitors temperature over 3 million times daily.
- Clear Monitoring: High-definition color display shows charging status, temperature, and port details.
- Package Includes: 140W 4-Port PD 3.1 charger, 5 ft 240W USB-C cable, user manual, 18-month warranty, and customer support.
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Top Comments
And if run at 152F most of the time, this charger is not going to last long since it's hotter than realistic for electrical components to last.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5u3CLi
27 Comments
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank diabeticderek21
While this is obviously 140W and I can't run my laptop at max performance with it (I'm required to have the 300W brick for that), 140W keeps it charging fast even while I'm using it for work with all other max settings.
I like it for the convenience and portability of not having to lug my large 300W brick around, since I travel for work a lot. I leave the brick at my house and have an additional one at my office, and keep this in my bag with me when I am elsewhere and need to charge. I saw someone's question, and I haven't had any issue with it falling out of the wall when plugged in.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank MozartA
And if run at 152F most of the time, this charger is not going to last long since it's hotter than realistic for electrical components to last.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5u3CLi
While this is obviously 140W and I can't run my laptop at max performance with it (I'm required to have the 300W brick for that), 140W keeps it charging fast even while I'm using it for work with all other max settings.
I like it for the convenience and portability of not having to lug my large 300W brick around, since I travel for work a lot. I leave the brick at my house and have an additional one at my office, and keep this in my bag with me when I am elsewhere and need to charge. I saw someone's question, and I haven't had any issue with it falling out of the wall when plugged in.
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The error is from edgesuite.net (Akamai)
And if run at 152F most of the time, this charger is not going to last long since it's hotter than realistic for electrical components to last.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5u3CLi
Modern computing is well under 100w unless you're booting up some GenAI or playing graphically intensive games, and PCs that support those features will throttle themselves and ask you to use the OEM brick. That leaves other uses cases to things like, idk, charging your LFP battery bank or something. Maybe don't buy this for that and expect 100w for hours. For smartphones and tablets none of them will need to run at 140w for more than 5-10 minutes.
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And if run at 152F most of the time, this charger is not going to last long since it's hotter than realistic for electrical components to last.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5u3CLi
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