Best Buy has
20,000mAh UGREEN Nexode 3-Port up to 130W Power Bank (35524B) on sale for
$56.49.
Shipping is free.
Best Buy via eBay also has
20,000mAh UGREEN Nexode 3-Port up to 130W Power Bank (35524B) on sale for
$56.49.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Deal Hunter
ItsSoCheap for sharing this deal.
Details:
- 100W Fast Laptop Charging: USB-C1 port charges MacBook Pro 16" to 43% in 30 minutes
- 130W Total Output: Dual USB-C ports support simultaneous 100W + 30W charging
- 20,000mAh Massive Capacity: Charges MacBook Air 13" 1.3 times or iPhone 16 Pro 3.7 times
- Smart TFT Display: Shows real-time battery percentage, remaining charge time, voltage, and current
- 65W Fast Recharging: Fully recharges in 2 hours with 65W+ charger
- 3-in-1 Versatile Charging: 2 USB-C ports + 1 USB-A port for simultaneous laptop and phone charging
- Airline Approved & Travel-Ready: Compact column design fits easily in bags
- Pro-Grade Safety: Automotive-grade batteries with multi-protection against overheating, overcurrent, and short circuits
- Rated 4.8 out of 5 stars from customer reviews.
- At the time of this posting, our research indicates that this is $3.44 lower than the next best comparable online prices starting from $59.93.
Please
see the original post for additional details & refer to the comments below for discussion.
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23 Comments
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EDIT: Google says: "A standard 20,000mAh power bank typically contains 74 Watt-hours (Wh) of energy." Same question shows a 26,000mAh power bank is still just under 100 watt hours.
The watt-hour is the measure that's actually meaningful for portable batteries, which is why they use it. "Capacity" is kind of meaningless since voltage is a central part of the equation. Voltage of internal batteries x capacity (20000 x 3.7)/1000, but only for Li-Ion. LiFePO4 batteries would be 3.2V, so you could take a 30000 mAh on board. If they just restricted you based on mAh, they'd have to have different values based on the type of battery (e.g. NiMH is 1.2v)
PS Google is apparently assuming "standard" is Li-Ion
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However, the price being $57 so with tax that is about $63 or so. I paid more than $100 I believe for the Anker 737. So this is a good deal compared to the Anker? The thing is the 130W thing doesn't matter for my Dell XPS right since non-dell powerbanks seem to do max 90w anyway?
Doe this last long in terms of years? I had an Anker 737 and it stopped working and then I let Anker know about this and they sent me a replacement one. I didn't use the Anker more than probably 10 times total at most. So this ugreen even if it has no issues will stop having a charge after so and so uses? What if you have it for years but rarely use it? Is it eventually going to have issues? Now if you use it daily and get the battery to 20% or 0% almost every day, then it probably wouldn't last longer than a year at the most right? But if you only use it occasionally and say get it to 0% maybe a few times a month, how long would it last? What about using it several times a month where it gets to 20% and then you stop using it? I always heard you wear out laptop batteries if you get it to 0% or less than 20% or so many times. So this applies to these powerbanks? So retail price for this wouldn't be worth it right and Anker 737 is better?
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