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frontpagepennysave posted Apr 05, 2026 10:59 AM
frontpagepennysave posted Apr 05, 2026 10:59 AM

6.6' Belkin 240W USB C to USB C Cable

$10

$13

23% off
Amazon
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Amazon has 6.6' Belkin 240W USB C to USB C Cable (White, BBD009fq2MWH) on sale for $9.99. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.

Thanks to Community Member pennysave for sharing this deal.

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Written by citan359 | Staff

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Written by pennysave
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About the Poster
Amazon has 6.6' Belkin 240W USB C to USB C Cable (White, BBD009fq2MWH) on sale for $9.99. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.

Thanks to Community Member pennysave for sharing this deal.

Editor's Notes

Written by citan359 | Staff

Original Post

Written by pennysave

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Model: Belkin USB C to USB C Cable, 6.6ft, 240W - Type C Charger, iPhone Charger Cord, Soft, Braided, Flexible for iPhone 16, Galaxy S25, Pixel 9, MacBook, Chromebook, iPad Pro, Switch Steam Deck – White

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Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 4/6/2026, 02:43 PM
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Amazon$9.99

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Top Comments

The_Love_Spud
5383 Posts
2036 Reputation
This Belkin cable contains an e-marker (basically an integrated chip) that restricts current to 5A when negotiating between the device and charger. Your Dell charger achieves the 130W rating by driving up to 6.5A of current in the 20V Power Delivery mode by using a proprietary (Dell) handshake between the charger and the laptop. Realistically your two most reasonable options if you find that the issue is indeed with your charger (and not the laptop's USB-C receptacle):

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
q99
644 Posts
137 Reputation
But the $10 price is the same as what Amazon charges for some 10Gbps USB-C data cables.

12 Comments

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Pro
Apr 05, 2026 04:18 PM
4,841 Posts
Joined Aug 2009
ghostfreckle
Pro
Apr 05, 2026 04:18 PM
4,841 Posts
Recommended for charging only.
Transfer speed is USB 2.0 (very slow).
2
Apr 05, 2026 04:31 PM
20 Posts
Joined Sep 2016
tony-1985Apr 05, 2026 04:31 PM
20 Posts
Quote from ghostfreckle :
Recommended for charging only. Transfer speed is USB 2.0 (very slow).
This is the typical data transfer for charging cables. People buying this cable should be mostly interested in using it for charging rather than data transferring.
1
4
Pro
Apr 05, 2026 06:07 PM
644 Posts
Joined Sep 2020
q99
Pro
Apr 05, 2026 06:07 PM
644 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank q99

Quote from tony-1985 :
This is the typical data transfer for charging cables. People buying this cable should be mostly interested in using it for charging rather than data transferring.
But the $10 price is the same as what Amazon charges for some 10Gbps USB-C data cables.
3
2
Apr 05, 2026 08:56 PM
5,383 Posts
Joined Jun 2019
The_Love_SpudApr 05, 2026 08:56 PM
5,383 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank The_Love_Spud

This is a high-current (up to 5A, often alternately labeled as "100W" or "240W") cable that would be ideal for fast-charging certain phones (such as the Samsung Super Fast Charging 2.0 devices) as well as laptops. The USB 2.0 data transfer rates for such a high-power cable are... predictable at this price point considering that this is a USB-IF certified cable from a reputable brand.

If you can accept a 3A charging limit (typically labeled as "60W") then you might consider other options.

Good luck!
Jon
Last edited by The_Love_Spud April 5, 2026 at 08:12 PM.
3
Yesterday 12:43 AM
64 Posts
Joined Aug 2013
ripnragsYesterday 12:43 AM
64 Posts
Noob question/recommendation request. I have a Dell 130w laptop power brick. The USB C cable end that plugs into my laptop only charges with fiddling with the cable right by the USB C plug. So the cable inside is damaged.

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.
2
Yesterday 03:45 AM
5,383 Posts
Joined Jun 2019
The_Love_SpudYesterday 03:45 AM
5,383 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank The_Love_Spud

Quote from ripnrags :
Noob question/recommendation request. I have a Dell 130w laptop power brick. The USB C cable end that plugs into my laptop only charges with fiddling with the cable right by the USB C plug. So the cable inside is damaged.

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.
This Belkin cable contains an e-marker (basically an integrated chip) that restricts current to 5A when negotiating between the device and charger. Your Dell charger achieves the 130W rating by driving up to 6.5A of current in the 20V Power Delivery mode by using a proprietary (Dell) handshake between the charger and the laptop. Realistically your two most reasonable options if you find that the issue is indeed with your charger (and not the laptop's USB-C receptacle):
  1. Buy a reaplcement Dell USB-C OEM charger.
  2. 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
Last edited by The_Love_Spud April 5, 2026 at 08:52 PM.
7
Yesterday 11:55 AM
346 Posts
Joined Dec 2003
jpudloYesterday 11:55 AM
346 Posts
Deal? Purchased a 3-pack of 10 ft cables with decent voltage & data specs cheaper in other previous deals.

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Yesterday 11:59 AM
82 Posts
Joined Jul 2019
Rocket_SniperYesterday 11:59 AM
82 Posts
And it's actually marked as 240w too, instead of just having to remember which cable is which

Nice
Yesterday 12:14 PM
465 Posts
Joined Nov 2009
SLICKBUYER4EVAYesterday 12:14 PM
465 Posts
What devices can you use these cables on where you will get 240W charging? I own several Anker charging stations and battery packs and I have never seen them charge higher than 140w
Yesterday 12:19 PM
465 Posts
Joined Nov 2009
SLICKBUYER4EVAYesterday 12:19 PM
465 Posts
A MacBook Pro M4 Max can take up to one hundred and forty watts, which is the max I am getting with these cables. The two hundred and forty watt cables are really designed for power delivery systems rather than single devices. You might see two hundred and forty watts in a dedicated power block that's powering multiple things at once—maybe a laptop dock or a charging station with multiple ports running simultaneously. But for an individual device? Honestly, I'm not aware of consumer stuff that actually pulls two hundred and forty watts from a single USB-C connection right now. It might be something coming down the pipeline, but it's not really a thing yet.
Pro
Yesterday 01:41 PM
4,841 Posts
Joined Aug 2009
ghostfreckle
Pro
Yesterday 01:41 PM
4,841 Posts
Quote from tony-1985 :
This is the typical data transfer for charging cables. People buying this cable should be mostly interested in using it for charging rather than data transferring.
You an I know that, but a lot of people don't... Just an FYI, not bashing it.
Today 06:25 AM
663 Posts
Joined Sep 2017
orramToday 06:25 AM
663 Posts
This cable has bad build quality.The plastic casing at the neck of the cable came off after about two weeks. I won't buy this again.

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