small external battery with high output? - Xperia Z Accessories

I'm looking for a small external battery, like around 3000 mAh - lipstick size - but with high output around 3 ampere..
Does anyone know where I can find such a battery?

Ebay has a lot of them. Bought my own external battery there also. But 3A output is not to be found. Max output of any charger is usually 2.1A. Which is more than fast enough. I'll look up the link of the one i bought..
---------- Post added at 06:56 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:53 PM ----------
http://pages.ebay.com/link/?nav=item.view&id=391004950499&alt=web
Here's one

3A output for a 3,000mAh portable charger is impossible. The highest output amount in the market is 2.4A at present (mostly those capacity beyond 10000mAh). For 3000mAh ones, 1 A output is a common case. You can try power banks from RAVPower or Anker. They are leading brands in the market. RAVPower is a little cheaper. Anyway, you make the final say.

can't you buy one of those monotone prices with external battery charger as you can charge it at home then carry it to charge your phone without an outlet when you're out

Related

battery charging mA

hey guys i am having two chargers, one the stock one and another from htc hd2
when ever i charge my battery with stock charger., it takes 3 hours to get 100 pc and mA seen with my battery monitor widget is 570 mA
but if i use htc charger it charges in 1.45 hours and mA varies in 600 to 1200
should i use htc charger??
will it harm my phone or battery??
please reply fast
hemanbond said:
hey guys i am having two chargers, one the stock one and another from htc hd2
when ever i charge my battery with stock charger., it takes 3 hours to get 100 pc and mA seen with my battery monitor widget is 570 mA
but if i use htc charger it charges in 1.45 hours and mA varies in 600 to 1200
should i use htc charger??
will it harm my phone or battery??
please reply fast
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Probably not the best idea to bark orders like, "please reply fast", especially at this particular time in this forum.
Your mA should be somewhere in the neighborhood of 4350mA fully charged. What you've stated above doesn't make sense.
Sent from my Atari Falcon030
What you are seeing is the difference between a low amperage charger and higher amperage charge (or watts if you prefer)
The so called "rapid chargers" will push a higher milliAmp to charge devices quicker
i.e. the difference between an iPhone charger and an iPad charger iPhone = 5volts 1amp, iPad = 5volts 2+amp (technically is 2watts, but i'm not in the mood to convert to amps)
Now whether or not it may damage your phone I can not answer, however I have been using a 2watt iPad charger on my phone for quite some time with no ill effects... just charges a we bit quicker.
mA is per second ...have u ever seen battery monitor widget??
should i use htc charger or not?
I don't have to see battery monitor widget.
mA or milliamp or even milliampere is a measurement of electrical current through any given conductor (the amount of power something can push or pull at any given time)
Batteries are rated in milliamphour or mAh, which is the amount of current a battery can store and release in any given hour.
The HTC charger shouldn't cause any problems because the battery charging controller should be built into the phone and the batteries are protected to hinder overcharge or over-discharge.
However, I will not state that it cannot cause any issues because I'm not a Moto engineer, so I don't know for sure what the hardware can withstand.
But, as I said earlier, I charge my phone on an iPad charger consistantly, and have not had any ill effects as of yet, and I can almost guarantee that the iPad charger pushes more current than your HTC charger.
---------- Post added at 03:25 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:18 PM ----------
Which Battery Monitor Widget are you using? Made by 3c? or fsinib?
I'll check what my phone states while charging on the iPad charger.
nephillim said:
I don't have to see battery monitor widget.
mA or milliamp or even milliampere is a measurement of electrical current through any given conductor (the amount of power something can push or pull at any given time)
Batteries are rated in milliamphour or mAh, which is the amount of current a battery can store and release in any given hour.
The HTC charger shouldn't cause any problems because the battery charging controller should be built into the phone and the batteries are protected to hinder overcharge or over-discharge.
However, I will not state that it cannot cause any issues because I'm not a Moto engineer, so I don't know for sure what the hardware can withstand.
But, as I said earlier, I charge my phone on an iPad charger consistantly, and have not had any ill effects as of yet, and I can almost guarantee that the iPad charger pushes more current than your HTC charger.
---------- Post added at 03:25 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:18 PM ----------
Which Battery Monitor Widget are you using? Made by 3c? or fsinib?
I'll check what my phone states while charging on the iPad charger.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
it is battery monitor widget pro which has features like history update rate and history size
i dont know much about maker though.
but ur post was very helpflu
thankyou sir
Always glad and willing to help. I'll check out the Pro version and let you know what I find.
---------- Post added at 04:21 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:40 PM ----------
I've got the app installed, have to wait for a full charge cycle before it will start returning proper current... I'll let you know what I find A.S.A.P.
I've been using the 2 Amp HP Touchpad charger for almost 6 months without any ill effects.
Hey i was just curious whether more electricity flowing through my phone would damage it but as you all guys said it wont as the battery has some anti overcharging system and you guys have been using other then stock chargers ...then im also using ...thanx to all
Motorola has a Travel Charger that apparently supplies 8watts which converted at a fixed 5volts is 1.6Amps or 1600mA
Motorola states that it is compatible with our phone...... I think we'll all be just fine with whatever charger you want to use!
http://www.motorola.com/us/consumers/P833-Travel-Charger-For-Tablets-and-Phones/102614,en_US,pd.html
some info
hemanbond said:
hey guys i am having two chargers, one the stock one and another from htc hd2
when ever i charge my battery with stock charger., it takes 3 hours to get 100 pc and mA seen with my battery monitor widget is 570 mA
but if i use htc charger it charges in 1.45 hours and mA varies in 600 to 1200
should i use htc charger??
will it harm my phone or battery??
please reply fast
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i've been using battery monitor widget & system tuner (both free) for nearly 1.5 month
the current u r seeing "570mA" with stock charger is ur charging current +/- ur consumption current
another charging current "600-1200" is from htc charger
our stock charger has max o/p capacity of 850mA @ 5.1V .... similarly u can check htc's o/p capacity (i guess it is 1.2A @ 5V)
observe your consumption while heavy/moderate usage & standby it will vary
it is simply average current consumed in 10 min. timespan (pretty sure we can't change it)
m plannin to buy both after stable ICS release
tc njoy :highfive:

No Charger?

What charger should I use? It comes with the wire but no adapter. What voltage should the adapter be as I do not want to ruin the battery of the Moto G.
I have a Samsung Galaxy S2 and HTC One X charger.
Any USB charger will be fine, they're all 5v. The cheaper ones will have a low mAh though.
Both your Samsung and HTC ones are suitable.
No charger? thats a bummer..
it means that charging time would be varied depending of the source. Not a wise move here by Motorola since people might buy cheap charger and ruined the user experience. Especially when they're targeting 1st time smartphone consumer in less develop country
hmm..
It's going to get more and more common as the world is flooded with USB chargers.
Well not really true... Here in germany every shop adds the adapter to the package themselves. Most of them added a 1000mA one, because it doesnt ruin the battery that fast. You can see that in pretty much every unboxing video. But in fact we e.g already got like 5-6 chargers in our households, so what...
Sent from my LG-P760 using xda app-developers app
As it would be my first smartphone, I'm looking into the wall plugs. I've found one in my local shop for ~10 euros. It's from Philips, with 5V/10,5W/2,1A and has two USB sockets (that's why it's 2 amps).
My question is, as I've no experience with smartphones, how long would it take to charge from 0 to 100?
With that charger it would take roughly 2 hours to charge your device with 2075 mAh battery.
The Brazilian 16gb dual chip edition comes with a charger.
duhprest said:
What charger should I use? It comes with the wire but no adapter. What voltage should the adapter be as I do not want to ruin the battery of the Moto G.
I have a Samsung Galaxy S2 and HTC One X charger.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
LOL... I was surprised as well, when got the box (a tiny package similar to iPhone) and found only phone and USB cable inside.
But don't worry, any charger with 1A will do the job, so your chargers from S2/HOX will be OK.
---------- Post added at 04:47 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:41 PM ----------
N00BY0815 said:
Well not really true... Here in germany every shop adds the adapter to the package themselves. Most of them added a 1000mA one, because it doesnt ruin the battery that fast. You can see that in pretty much every unboxing video. But in fact we e.g already got like 5-6 chargers in our households, so what...
Sent from my LG-P760 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's nice attitude towards customers...
I am using the old HTC charger (1A),which came with HTC Diamond (has a nice glowing HTC logo ) and its OK. It charges battery fully within 100 minutes when phone is OFF.
Will try also 400mA (Alcatel) to see what's the difference.
I use only branded chargers, as had issues with some cheap aftermarket chargers in the past.
N00BY0815 said:
Most of them added a 1000mA one, because it doesnt ruin the battery that fast.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's just silly, PM chips actually limit your charging current. So 2000mA charger won't do you any harm and would come in handy while charging pads.
levizx said:
That's just silly, PM chips actually limit your charging current. So 2000mA charger won't do you any harm and would come handy while charging pads.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It may depends on phone make/model.
I've used few times 2A charger from Samsung Note 2 and phone/battery become hot and battery didn't lasted long... Also during charge it had hissing sound, so back to 1A chargers and all OK.
I think lower output does charge battery longer, but battery last longer as well...
Will get back when charge with 400mA charger (probably on Tuesday or Wednesday )
aspot72 said:
It may depends on phone make/model.
I've used few times 2A charger from Samsung Note 2 and phone/battery become hot and battery didn't lasted long... Also during charge it had hissing sound, so back to 1A chargers and all OK.
I think lower output does charge battery longer, but battery last longer as well...
Will get back when charge with 400mA charger (probably on Tuesday or Wednesday )
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I guess that could happen with bad pm chips. But I've never seen this behavier on any Moto phones so far.
levizx said:
I guess that could happen with bad pm chips. But I've never seen this behavier on any Moto phones so far.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I can't comment on this as my last Motorola was the StarTAC 130 some 15 years ago
aspot72 said:
I can't comment on this as my last Motorola was the StarTAC 130 some 15 years ago
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think with pretty much with every Snapdragon chip you get the bundled PM chip, and the last bad experience I had with a Snapdragon was with 8225/q and that was just inaccurate battery reading. I would think anything newer would handle 2a charger just fine.
Sent from my XT905 using Tapatalk
levizx said:
I think with pretty much with every Snapdragon chip you get the bundled PM chip, and the last bad experience I had with a Snapdragon was with 8225/q and that was just inaccurate battery reading. I would think anything newer would handle 2a charger just fine.
Sent from my XT905 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, thanks to MotoG's superb battery back up I don't mind what charger and how long does it takes.Now I need to charge only twice a week, unlike with my previous devices, as they needed every 2nd day. Sticking with my favorite HTC 1A charger
Long-term reduction in battery capacity using high amperage charger
levizx said:
That's just silly, PM chips actually limit your charging current. So 2000mA charger won't do you any harm and would come in handy while charging pads.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I only partly agree with you here. Although the Moto G will restrict charging to a maximum of 1500mA, so using a 2A charger will not cause any direct damage to the phone circuitry or immediate damage to the battery; using a higher amperage, fast 2A charger to charge at 1500mA over time will likely cause more reduction in battery capacity. See this XDA post for my logic in coming to this conclusion:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2564158
UPDATE and CORRECTION:
I have more authoritative information directly from Battery University that changes the conclusion I draw above based on my effort to extrapolate from the Battery University website article.
The extrapolation I did in the post listed above was based on the additional loss of battery capacity cited when going from a 1C to 2C charging rate. But according to direct communication from Battery University, when charging at a rate below .7C there should be no measurable improvement to capacity by using slower charging rates. Charging above .7C would still be expected to add more stress to Lithium Ion Polymer batteries and likely add to long-term reduction of capacity.
So, what this means for the Moto G and Nexus 5 is that there should be no measurable difference between charging with 2A, 1.2A, 1A, or 850mA chargers as far as effect on long-term battery capacity goes. Both the Moto G and Nexus 5 are supposed to automatically restrict the charge rate at 1500mA even when using a faster charger, which is just at or below .7C for both phones. So, as long as the charger dependably keeps to 5V, a higher amperage 2A charger will be faster but pose no problem to long-term capacity.

My Pixel XL experience with multiple chargers so far

I was a Note 7 refugee so I have the stock Samsung fast AC charger here. Model EP-TA20JWE rated at 9v @ 1.67A and 5v @ 2A. It's in my kitchen.
I have the original AC charger that came with the Pixel XL. Model TC G1000-US rated at 9v @ 2.0A and 5v @ 0.5A I have only used once to get this information.
I also have a mobile charger in my car. It is labeled as Qualcomm QC 3.0 certified which is why I bought it as the Note 7 was a QC 3.0 device. It is a Choetech Model C0051 rated at 9.1v~12v @ 1.5A Max, 5.6v~9v @ 2A Max, and 3.6v~5.5v @ 2.4A Max (the iFixit teardown has revealed a Qualcomm QC 3.0 IC in the Pixel)
Additionally I have a charger by the bed which is from my Nexus 6, Motorola "Turbo Charger" Model SSW-2680US rated at 5v @ 1.6A, 9v @ 1.6A, and 12v @ 1.2A.
All of the chargers are using their original CABLE (USBA to USBC except in the case of the Pixel which is USBC to USBC) included EXCEPT the Motorola Turbo Charger, which is using a 6 foot long braided USBA to Micro USB cable with the Micro USB to USBC adapter that came with the Note 7.
What I found so far was all three work well and all three are recognized by the phone as a rapid charger.
I also found that at 60% charge and plugging in each one long enough for the lock screen to give me the "rapid charging XX minutes until full" message, the Samsung EP-TA20JWE fast charger charges it faster than the Google TC G1000US or the Choetech C0051. The Google and Choetech appear to charge at the same rate based on time until full. The Motorola Turbo Charger charges at an extremely fast rate, like it took it from 58% to 77% in maybe 5-10 minutes and was saying 15 minutes to full at 77%.
My battery life is phenomenal for me at 5-6 hours SOT, I have no issues with any of these chargers, they all see charging time every day. Turbo charger overnight, Samsung Note 7 charger when in the kitchen where I am a lot, mobile charger when driving to work or classes... (except the actual Pixel charger which I haven't found a use for yet but will probably go to work with me.
*Based on my findings I am going to put the Samsung Note 7 charger in the kitchen and the slowest Pixel charger in the bedroom and take the fastest Turbo charger to work.
Sent from my Pixel XL using Tapatalk
I know my test method isn't to some people's satisfaction but the time to full calculation is based on how much the phone is charged now (which I kept within +/- 2% for each check) and how much current the device wants to draw from what's available. What's interesting is the device draws power much quicker than the Pixel charger supplies it when it is plugged into more capable chargers.
Sent from my Pixel XL using Tapatalk
Good information. It's nice to knows that all the accessories I got for my note won't go to waste lol.
Thank you.
Sent from my SM-G935V using XDA-Developers mobile app
I have been having varying experiences.
My Anker QC 3.0 type C wall charger seems to charge rapidly, although at the 5V/3A only, with a 6.6ft USB 2.0 i-orange cable. Using a 3.3ft USB 3.0 cable, it shows charging rapidly when I first plug it in, but a few minutes later only shows charging.. but seems to be charging rapidly? My Tronsmart type C w/ QC 3.0 car charger, using an Anker Powerline+ type C cable, shows charging rapidly, but said it had 1+ hour until full when at 70%... Ampere only showed 1.6A being sent to the phone too. I tried an iVoler charger with type C and QC 3.0 and got up to 2050mAh, but it was likely only 5V (which I would expect) but still didn't seem to be charging all that fast.
I think this whole USB-PD thing is going to really be dependent on proper chargers and cables. All of these chargers/cables worked perfect on my Nexus 6P - doesn't seem to be the case on the Pixel.
Thanks for the experience folks. I had purchased a qc 3.0 tronsmart on sale at amazon which I was going to return. I got usb c cables with pd from monoprice. I suppose even if it doesn't fast charge at 18w (9v X 2a), I'd be ok with 15 w charging if I don't have to go out and buy a new car charger.
I mean faster is nice but if it still charges at a good rate, the lower current might help the battery last longer too right?
testinguser said:
Thanks for the experience folks. I had purchased a qc 3.0 tronsmart on sale at amazon which I was going to return. I got usb c cables with pd from monoprice. I suppose even if it doesn't fast charge at 18w (9v X 2a), I'd be ok with 15 w charging if I don't have to go out and buy a new car charger.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have bad news for you. I have a Tronsmart QC 3.0 type C charger too - one from a year ago though, don't know if the design has changed - and it is NOT rapid charging my device. It worked perfect on my Nexus 6P. It will start out by saying "charging rapidly" on the Pixel XL, but after several minutes, goes down to "charging" and the charge time is 2+ hours, Ampere shows really low current, etc. It COULD be the Anker Powerline+ type C cable I am using... but I highly doubt it. I think the fact that the type C port has QC 3.0 is not playing nice with the USB-PD chip, and causing it to drop support for 5V/3A all together. I will test this more tonight with the stock cable and see if it works any better.
Did some testing: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=69309771&postcount=30
Man I totally forgot about my Motorola Turbo chargers I got from Groupon. I wish I could find my @zerolemon charger too.. Ill test them with my USB USB Doctor dongles.. When I find them... lol
psa; cables make a huge difference in my experience.
I also have a tronsmart qc2 1 + 3 fast port car charger Ill test and post results.
Perhaps not the right thread but I have just been sent these USB-C cables to review for free.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/B01EEACOVO/ref=ya_aw_od_pi?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Amazon says they are rated to 2.4A but will they damage by Pixel XL? I'm not expecting them to charge 'rapidly' but would be handy to be able to use them with an older 2A charger.
Do you think they are safe?
--
Why do so many people try to get a charger with as high a wattage rating as possible but ignore the fact that USB-C is limited to 3A and all you need to do is find a charger capable of delivering 3A.
What does wattage have to do with things?
Not trying to be a jerk, I'm just assuming I must be missing something here.
CZ Eddie said:
Why do so many people try to get a charger with as high a wattage rating as possible but ignore the fact that USB-C is limited to 3A and all you need to do is find a charger capable of delivering 3A.
What does wattage have to do with things?
Not trying to be a jerk, I'm just assuming I must be missing something here.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Because more watts = more power. USB-C may be limited to 3A, but it is not limited to 5V. Higher volts at the same amperage = more wattage = more power. If you want the fastest charging possible, you need a 9V/2A+ USB-PD charger.
Nitemare3219 said:
it is not limited to 5V.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I didn't realize it was OK to go with higher than 5v now.
Do you know if it's okay to hard wire directly into a 12V system for charging? Like in the car? I'm guessing "no it's not okay" but I'm still learning about USB-C.
---------- Post added at 09:27 AM ---------- Previous post was at 09:25 AM ----------
tap = hard wire/splice into. As in, no adapter. Just a USB-C at one end and then snip the connector off the other end and use the two power wires and two ground wires to splice directly into say, the back of a cigarette charger's 12V wiring.
CZ Eddie said:
I didn't realize it was OK to go with higher than 5v now.
Do you know if it's okay to hard wire directly into a 12V system for charging? Like in the car? I'm guessing "no it's not okay" but I'm still learning about USB-C.
---------- Post added at 09:27 AM ---------- Previous post was at 09:25 AM ----------
tap = hard wire/splice into. As in, no adapter. Just a USB-C at one end and then snip the connector off the other end and use the two power wires and two ground wires to splice directly into say, the back of a cigarette charger's 12V wiring.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There is no way that would work, nor would it be safe. There HAS to be an adapter to safely charge the phone by regulating voltage and current, as well as shutting off the charge once it hits 100%.
Nitemare3219 said:
There is no way that would work, nor would it be safe. There HAS to be an adapter to safely charge the phone by regulating voltage and current, as well as shutting off the charge once it hits 100%.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's my understanding that some/all of the regulating is done on-board some phones.
I know I never had any issues with my 3A 12v to 5v converter hard wired to S4 and Note 3 phones for charging in either my car or Motorcycle.
At least, I didn't notice any issues.
CZ Eddie said:
It's my understanding that some/all of the regulating is done on-board some phones.
I know I never had any issues with my 3A 12v to 5v converter hard wired to S4 and Note 3 phones for charging in either my car or Motorcycle.
At least, I didn't notice any issues.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well you're a brave soul. I wouldn't ever think to try something like that. Especially not with USB-C & Power Delivery now. The phone is responsible for some of the charging regulation, but the charger itself is just as important.
CZ Eddie said:
Why do so many people try to get a charger with as high a wattage rating as possible but ignore the fact that USB-C is limited to 3A and all you need to do is find a charger capable of delivering 3A.
What does wattage have to do with things?
Not trying to be a jerk, I'm just assuming I must be missing something here.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Because with USB PD the Pixel can charge at 18W by using 2A by 9V. So just looking for a 3A charger doesn't give you the fastest possible charging for the Pixel. Using a standard 3A charger will charge it at 3A by 5V for 15W. You multiply the voltage and amperage to determine wattage.
Sent from my Pixel XL using Tapatalk
I have an aukey car charger and my pixel phone rapid charges when I use the QC 3.0 port, but not the USB c port.
Anyone try the other Motorola turbo chargers 15, 25, 30? Id be curious to know if they work any better. They say the phone must support "turbo"..
---------- Post added at 03:19 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:08 PM ----------
CZ Eddie said:
I didn't realize it was OK to go with higher than 5v now.
Do you know if it's okay to hard wire directly into a 12V system for charging? Like in the car? I'm guessing "no it's not okay" but I'm still learning about USB-C.
---------- Post added at 09:27 AM ---------- Previous post was at 09:25 AM ----------
tap = hard wire/splice into. As in, no adapter. Just a USB-C at one end and then snip the connector off the other end and use the two power wires and two ground wires to splice directly into say, the back of a cigarette charger's 12V wiring.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No definitely not. Car Battery supplies too much wattage/amerpage and its missing the PD ic and other protections in most good charger (over volt, under volt, circuit protection, trickle, power cut off, ect). Thats why all this talk about chargers and cables that do not meet requirements burning equipment/phones up.
It will never know when to stop charging or if over charging and catch fire...
Thats why its not advisable to buy cheap no name unbranded batteries, cables and chargers.
Usb c isnt just a connector/ plug theres an ic (computer chip) in control as well on both sides.
The chip in your battery talks w the one in the phone that talks w the one in the charger..

Which battery pack do OnePlus users use?

I was about to buy a OnePlus6 and then I realised they use a different charging system to qualcomm so my battery pack is unlikely to work properly.
I play a mobile game quite a lot (Pokemon Go) so being able to charge my phone on the go is essential, any suggestions? Thanks in advance. :good:
any battery pack with PD is compatible with OP6
i use Cygnett TYPE-C 20,000 MAH battery pack for my 5T and use PD and it outputs 45w
Tronsmart 20000mAh QC 3.0 Portable Charger with 6A Output,USB Type C External Battery for Samsung Galaxy S8 S8+/Nexus 6p/ Huawei Mate 9/Pixel 2/2 XL
That's one of the two I have. Works great, has to USB ports. The green port charges pretty fast. Search that and you'll find it.
Thanks guys.
Edit: The Tronsmart isn't for sale anymore sadly and the Cygnett is about 4x the price of other battery packs.
virtyx said:
any battery pack with PD is compatible with OP6
i use Cygnett TYPE-C 20,000 MAH battery pack for my 5T and use PD and it outputs 45w
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oneplusb6 dont support PD. None of oneplus phones support it.
---------- Post added at 07:00 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:57 PM ----------
But for OP, you can use almost any powerbank. Only the output speed is difference. There isnt any powerbank which support dash charge so you wont get "fast charge" speeds. But you can get regular 2.4A speed. So no fast charge but yes regular charge.
zige said:
Oneplusb6 dont support PD. None of oneplus phones support it.
---------- Post added at 07:00 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:57 PM ----------
But for OP, you can use almost any powerbank. Only the output speed is difference. There isnt any powerbank which support dash charge so you wont get "fast charge" speeds. But you can get regular 2.4A speed. So no fast charge but yes regular charge.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Blimey, that's no good. I'll have to leave it connected constantly!
Ah well, it is what it is. Thanks for the reply.
zige said:
Oneplusb6 dont support PD. None of oneplus phones support it.
---------- Post added at 07:00 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:57 PM ----------
But for OP, you can use almost any powerbank. Only the output speed is difference. There isnt any powerbank which support dash charge so you wont get "fast charge" speeds. But you can get regular 2.4A speed. So no fast charge but yes regular charge.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
oh didnt know
but it can still pull 3A from it
I'm using the same that I used with my Xperia Z3 and with my Oneplus 3 too... Anker Powercore 20100mAh
I have bought this Dash Charge powerbank back when I had my oneplus 3t and it works fine one my oneplus 6 too !
Link: https://www.amazon.com/Sdoutech-10000-Portable-Charge-Oneplus/dp/B078K8TZQ1
This powerbank supports Oppo's VOOC charging which is basically the same as DashCharge and I am happy with it!
Downsides: you can't Dash charge the powerbank and you need to use the original OnePlus red charging cable to get Dash Charge working.
For users that can get that item shipped to their country like me (Germany) I contacted the seller by email and he shipped me one by Paypal Invoice; his email is [email protected] .

Car charger

Hello
can someone share what are the optimal specs that car charger for note 9 should have?
i am looking for chip and small car charger but that has optimal spec for charging fast.
thanks
QC 2.0 charger, Samsung's own adaptive fast charger or wireless. I'd recommend Anker if you can still find QC 2.0 chargers by them. Or their batteries with USB charging or wireless like the new Tesla charger.
Hello and thanks for the answer.
what is the difference between QC2 and samsung adaptative ? this means also that QC3 is usable? i have read somewhere that are chargers that "talk" to the phone to discover the best current to apply....
thanks
Note9 only supports QC 2.0 unless something changed. Some people complain but I don't like charging my phone fast unless I have to and 2.0 is plenty fast. It is less wear on the battery, which is sealed, and I don't want a bulging sealed phone and for it to last 2 years.
---------- Post added at 11:24 AM ---------- Previous post was at 11:23 AM ----------
Adapative charger should've came in the box. I also got a charger when I caught the DEX pad on sale @ Samsung for $37.50, $40 after tax.
for example EP-LN930B is the right car charger for note 9? i have searched but there are a plenty of them from samsung on the market..

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