frontpagepennysave posted Apr 05, 2026 10:59 AM
Item 1 of 10
Item 1 of 10
frontpagepennysave posted Apr 05, 2026 10:59 AM
6.6' Belkin 240W USB C to USB C Cable
$10
$13
23% offAmazon
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| Sold By | Sale Price |
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| $9.99 |
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Buy a reaplcement Dell USB-C OEM charger.
Use a standard USB-C charger and cable.
Conisder that, depending upon your laptop model, your particular laptop may never get even close to the 130W limit of the Dell adapter. As such, you may well have no problem using a lower power charging solution (100W, 60W, or even as low as 30W!) with perhaps the biggest inconvenience being a notification by the BIOS which can easily be disabled.
Option one is pretty easy, though be forewarned that the only item more plentiful than Dell chargers are their knockoffs.
However, option two is both plentiful and cost effective. You can pick your price point as low as $20 for a 90W-capable charger at your local Target. https://www.target.com/p/usb-c-10...A-94646270 If you're wiling and able to accept a slower/lower-power solution you can easily achieve a lower price point in the $10-20 range at IKEA, Five Below, etc. Skimming slickdeals should demonstrate that 65W-100W non-integrated solutions could be easily pieced together in the $20-30 range. https://slickdeals.net/f/19105858-amazon-basics-120w-3-port-gan-wall-charger-2x-usb-c-1x-usb-a-2-colors-17-65-more
Good luck!
Jon
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Transfer speed is USB 2.0 (very slow).
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 The_Love_Spud
If you can accept a 3A charging limit (typically labeled as "60W") then you might consider other options.
Good luck!
Jon
Would this be a good candidate to buy, cut open and splice/replace the USB C plug on my laptop power cord? I was thinking that the fact that this is 240w would mean it should have similar cable internals to my laptop power cable. I would just leave the data pins unconnected.
I could not find easily any cable with unconnected wires on the other end specifically to replace on power bricks that match my brick.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank The_Love_Spud
Would this be a good candidate to buy, cut open and splice/replace the USB C plug on my laptop power cord? I was thinking that the fact that this is 240w would mean it should have similar cable internals to my laptop power cable. I would just leave the data pins unconnected.
I could not find easily any cable with unconnected wires on the other end specifically to replace on power bricks that match my brick.
- Buy a reaplcement Dell USB-C OEM charger.
- Use a standard USB-C charger and cable.
Conisder that, depending upon your laptop model, your particular laptop may never get even close to the 130W limit of the Dell adapter. As such, you may well have no problem using a lower power charging solution (100W, 60W, or even as low as 30W!) with perhaps the biggest inconvenience being a notification by the BIOS which can easily be disabled.Option one is pretty easy, though be forewarned that the only item more plentiful than Dell chargers are their knockoffs.
However, option two is both plentiful and cost effective. You can pick your price point as low as $20 for a 90W-capable charger at your local Target. https://www.target.com/p/usb-c-10...A-94646270 If you're wiling and able to accept a slower/lower-power solution you can easily achieve a lower price point in the $10-20 range at IKEA, Five Below, etc. Skimming slickdeals should demonstrate that 65W-100W non-integrated solutions could be easily pieced together in the $20-30 range. https://slickdeals.net/f/19105858-amazon-basics-120w-3-port-gan-wall-charger-2x-usb-c-1x-usb-a-2-colors-17-65-more
Good luck!
Jon
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Nice
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