hi,
i lost my original charger and would like to buy replacement. which can be not htc.
what are technical characteristics of the original charger?
mA, V?
i need with european plug.
thanks!
43 ones read the post and no one replyed. Cmon?! don't you have a charger near you? what are mA and V of the htc original 3part charger?
You can't expect people to reply within 7 minutes of posting a thread Give eBay a go, it'll be your best shot. I've got loads of extra chargers, but they have a US plug (not that hard to get a converter btw, super cheap).
Hope this helps http://cgi.ebay.com/EURO-AC-mini-US...ries?hash=item3ca4fc9c2b&_trksid=p3286.c0.m14
I've lost the orginal charger somewhere, and I was not able to find an original replacement. I successfully tried both following, but I use the second one:
1) Sony AC-U50A: Input Voltage 100 240 V 50/60 Hz, Rated Output Voltage: DC 5.0 V, Rated Output Current: 500 mA (http://www.sony.it/product/paa-ac-adaptors/ac-u50a)
2) Philips SCM2280/05: Voltage Required: AC 100-240 V, Voltage Provided: 5.6 V, Output Current: 500 mA (http://www.consumer.philips.com/c/power-solutions/universal-usb-charger-scm2280_05/prd/gb/)
regards
lontrapignola said:
I've lost the orginal charger somewhere, and I was not able to find an original replacement. I successfully tried both following, but I use the second one:
1) Sony AC-U50A: Input Voltage 100 240 V 50/60 Hz, Rated Output Voltage: DC 5.0 V, Rated Output Current: 500 mA (http://www.sony.it/product/paa-ac-adaptors/ac-u50a)
2) Philips SCM2280/05: Voltage Required: AC 100-240 V, Voltage Provided: 5.6 V, Output Current: 500 mA (http://www.consumer.philips.com/c/power-solutions/universal-usb-charger-scm2280_05/prd/gb/)
regards
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Be careful with other chargers, they can actually hurt your device. If i'm correct, original HD chargers charge at 1000 mA, not 500. There've been several complaints with Motorla and Nokia chargers that end up messing the battery and the device so just a heads up.
kareeem said:
You can't expect people to reply within 7 minutes of posting a thread Give eBay a go, it'll be your best shot. I've got loads of extra chargers, but they have a US plug (not that hard to get a converter btw, super cheap).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi,
I know how to search the ebay or dealextreme.com. If you read my first post it asks for electrical characteristics:
what are technical characteristics of the original charger?
mA, V?
And not "where to find or how to use ebay search".
Thanks for your response.
kareeem said:
Be careful with other chargers, they can actually hurt your device. If i'm correct, original HD chargers charge at 1000 mA, not 500. There've been several complaints with Motorla and Nokia chargers that end up messing the battery and the device so just a heads up.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Could you (or anybody else) confirm that original charger has a label 1000mA on the back?
Bulka..
Manau visi HTC pakrovejai yra 5V 1A. Turejau P3300 ten irgi buvo 5V/1A, dabar HD irgi tas pats...
I think all HTC chargers are rated 5V 1A. My previuos Artemis charger also was 5V/1A, same is for HD charger.
golfietis said:
Bulka..
Manau visi HTC pakrovejai yra 5V 1A. Turejau P3300 ten irgi buvo 5V/1A, dabar HD irgi tas pats...
I think all HTC chargers are rated 5V 1A. My previuos Artemis charger also was 5V/1A, same is for HD charger.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ačiū. Ieškosiu reiškia 1A pakrovėjo. Maniškis atrodė taip pat kaip nuotraukoje.
Big thanks goes to golfietis!!!
500mA isnt the cause of the charge issue on other phones.
500mA is what PC USB sockets give, and will mearly take twice as long to charge your battery than a 1000mA (1A) charger.
voltage is the dangerous value here, but anything using USB-type connector should be 5v.
if you want OE stuff, try http://www.htcaccessorystore.com/uk/p_htc_phone.aspx?i=173502
Related
Hello.
I'm looking for a Car charger, and i found this product.
It has a standard MiniUSB connector, and it has 1000mAH (out) and 5V (in).
Is this what i need? how can i know that it won't damage my device?
or any MiniUSB will do the job?
Thank you all.
help please?
EyeVein said:
It has a standard MiniUSB connector, and it has 1000mAH (out) and 5V (in).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It has to be 5v (out) not 5V (in). Car batteries are in 12v or 24v, that's your input. Any usb is in 5V, that's your output.
EyeVein said:
how can i know that it won't damage my device?
or any MiniUSB will do the job?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It won't damage your device, because the USB specification imply a voltage of 5v, so any USB-compatible device will charge with a 5v input, and any miniUSB will do the job.
Considering the 1000mAh (out), it's a bit underrated but won't be a problem. A higher power output would allow you to charge your battery slightly faster. Car chargers are usually rated at 1500mAh.
m3uch4 said:
It has to be 5v (out) not 5V (in). Car batteries are in 12v or 24v, that's your input. Any usb is in 5V, that's your output.
It won't damage your device, because the USB specification imply a voltage of 5v, so any USB-compatible device will charge with a 5v input, and any miniUSB will do the job.
Considering the 1000mAh (out), it's a bit underrated but won't be a problem. A higher power output would allow you to charge your battery slightly faster. Car chargers are usually rated at 1500mAh.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok, buying it!
Thanks alot mate
I have found out that BlackBerry Pearl car charger charges my Polaris succesfully, even when navigation is on...
Strange thing is that BB car charger is stated as 500 mAh output...
moto v3 works too...
The stock moto wall charger that comes with the phone has the following specs:
100-240v ~ 50/60Hrtz
0.2A
output 5.1V = 850 mA
I've been interchanging between the stock one and my old Galaxy-S one, which lists the following:
100-240v ~50/60Hrtz
0.15A
Output 5.0V = 0.7A
Does the slight undervoltage make a difference? I'm wondering if this is what has been causing my battery issues ? Anyone else use anything other than the official moto charger to charge their Atrix?
I didn't think it would make much of a difference since when you're using the car charger, you're not using exactly the same specs either ... ?
Any info appreciated, thanks!
crippenx said:
The stock moto wall charger that comes with the phone has the following specs:
100-240v ~ 50/60Hrtz
0.2A
output 5.1V = 850 mA
I've been interchanging between the stock one and my old Galaxy-S one, which lists the following:
100-240v ~50/60Hrtz
0.15A
Output 5.0V = 0.7A
Does the slight undervoltage make a difference? I'm wondering if this is what has been causing my battery issues ? Anyone else use anything other than the official moto charger to charge their Atrix?
I didn't think it would make much of a difference since when you're using the car charger, you're not using exactly the same specs either ... ?
Any info appreciated, thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Should not make a difference. USB is rated from 4.7v to 5.4v and 500 mAs the charging spec is 1 A on the phones (technically charging spec for USB is anything "safe"). USB is considered 5v so actually the Galaxy-S one is more "perfect" for the specs.
I have a 1A charger that will not charge my Atrix but it will charge my old Fuze.
Sent from my MB860 using XDA Premium App
Recon Freak said:
I have a 1A charger that will not charge my Atrix but it will charge my old Fuze.
Sent from my MB860 using XDA Premium App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I was readin last night after posting, looks like 850 mA is the charging max for Atrix, it says any higher and it will trickle charge for safty. I don't have the link because I am at work but I think it was on the support forums at motorola.com
I had a defy earlier and i have been using the motorola charger can i use the same charger for my s2..... if not how about these belikin\capdase chargers which have Output Voltage & Current: 5V 1A can those be used or should i use only a official Samsung charger....
bump!
Leshy1991 said:
I had a defy earlier and i have been using the motorola charger can i use the same charger for my s2..... if not how about these belikin\capdase chargers which have Output Voltage & Current: 5V 1A can those be used or should i use only a official Samsung charger....
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This has been answered before
The important part here is the voltage the car charger outputs. I believe the standard Galaxy S2 outputs 5V (at 700mA [0.7A]). If the mA is lower, it will take a longer time to charge. If its higher, it will only draw from it what it needs.
So, check the output voltage of the charger is not higher than 5V and you should be ok.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1586646
To calibrate a stock battery on my new GalaxyII, Battery Monitor Pro is asking to know this info? I cannot seem to read anything on my stock charger to be able to answer this Q. Dam that text is small.
Anyone know this off hand?
5V
700mA
0.7A
THNX tons
Next Question!!It seems my old EVO4G charger will fit my new GS2, but the EVO charger clearly says Output is 5V=1.0A
Are some of my many EVO chargers usable on the GS2?
stlfrosti said:
Next Question!!It seems my old EVO4G charger will fit my new GS2, but the EVO charger clearly says Output is 5V=1.0A
Are some of my many EVO chargers usable on the GS2?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, even though it says 1A your phone will limit it to the max it can receive. (they're usable).
Sent from my Nexus S using Tapatalk 2
It will charge at 650mA.
Sent from my GT-I9100
THNX again guys!!!
Insurance sent me a GS2 after my EVO replacement was a dog!! Dam thing was a refurbish that they didn't get right... so "for your troubles" they sent me the GS2 and so now I'm learning a few things over again.
I got tons of EVO batteries and accessories tho.
Wezi said:
5V
700mA
0.7A
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can i convert A (from charger) to mA (to app) by just multiplying A x 100? (0.7A x 100 = 700mA)?
Or charger's voltage matters/depends aswell? If it do so, what's the formula to get mA?
Look below to my charger's label - which A value should i use? This from output - 1.0 or this above - 0.16?
Full label:
Input: 100-240V~
50/60Hz 0.16A
Output: 4.8V - 1.0A
xStagGx said:
Can i convert A (from charger) to mA (to app) by just multiplying A x 100? (0.7A x 100 = 700mA)?
Or charger's voltage matters/depends aswell? If it do so, what's the formula to get mA?
Look below to my charger's label - which A value should i use? This from output - 1.0 or this above - 0.16?
Full label:
Input: 100-240V~
50/60Hz 0.16A
Output: 4.8V - 1.0A
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There are 1000mA in 1A.
I have a question of my own, my galaxy s2 charger broke. The standard rating for it is 5V @ 700mA. I bought a Samsung USB charger but it only has 4.4V and 400mA. I know it will charge slower because of the lower amp rating but will the lower voltage change anything?
xStagGx said:
Can i convert A (from charger) to mA (to app) by just multiplying A x 100? (0.7A x 100 = 700mA)?
Or charger's voltage matters/depends aswell? If it do so, what's the formula to get mA?
Look below to my charger's label - which A value should i use? This from output - 1.0 or this above - 0.16?
Full label:
Input: 100-240V~
50/60Hz 0.16A
Output: 4.8V - 1.0A
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh dear..
1st thing:
1A = 1000mA, so 0.7A = 700mA although how you got from 0.7 x 100 = 700 is beyond my understanding (its 70 in case you were wondering)
2nd thing:
no the voltage doesn't matter in this conversion.. it's basic math
3rd thing:
you should use the output value from your charger, so in your case 1.0A = 1000mA
4th and last thing:
I suggest to reread book of physics from school.. especially the part about electricity SI base units and metric prefixes
Jaisah said:
There are 1000mA in 1A.
I have a question of my own, my galaxy s2 charger broke. The standard rating for it is 5V @ 700mA. I bought a Samsung USB charger but it only has 4.4V and 400mA. I know it will charge slower because of the lower amp rating but will the lower voltage change anything?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Except slow charge probably no, but I would not use it. Is it even working?
Hi,
I've read some threads here about charging the S3, but not all is clear to me. I would appreciate some explanation:
1) I've read that the stock chargers output 1A. However, on the charger I got with my S3 it's written "output: 5V 0.7A". So do you think I somehow got a wrong charger?
2) I want to buy a car charger for the S3. There are many generic car chargers in ebay, some of then output 2A current. What is the maximum current allowed for the S3? I couldn't find this number in my S3 manual or on the phone itself. Will a charger of 2A cause harm to my phone? or to the battery? or to both?
Thanks in advance!
bump... does anyone know?
My charger output states .05v=1.0a.
As for what aftermarket charger to buy, I would stay away from chargers with more output than the official for 'peace of mind that my charger's specifications are the same as the official charger that came with the phone' reasons.
Cheers
Generally wall chargers output 1000mA (1A) and USB ports 500mA (0.5A)
You do not want to purchase anything that goes above 1000mA
Sent from my GT-I9300 using Tapatalk 2
I attach a picture of the adapter I got with my S3.
It says 0.7A on it, while it appears that other have one with 1A.
Did they con me with this adapter?
And regarding the maximum current allowed: do you think an adapter of 1.2A might harm the S3?
Do not know where your S3 come from but this charger is not made For S3 but for S2!
I just checked the model number:
S3 charger: ETAOU81EBE
S2 charger: ETAOU10EBE (like yours)
And there is no cable on the S3 charger, it use the USB cable
Thank you for this!
I don't get it. The charger was inside the S3 box and looked original. Damn!
I think the store I bought from import their S3 from Germany, since it came with Vodafone German stock ROM. Is it possible that this is the charger they sell on German vodafon? Or perhaps the store switched it for some reason?
Mine also come from my carrier: french vodafone
Was your S3 box sealed?
Those words, "teg listrik" and "frekuensi" is written in Indonesian
Sent from my GT-P1000 using xda app-developers app
Hi,
Background - I am an electronic engineer and have designed power supplies.
The Amp rating on a power supply is it's maximum capability to deliver power. The Voltage is the 'force' that it can push electrons through the device, this is the important one to have correct. So a 5V 300A Power supply will not charge your S3 any quicker than a 5V 1A power supply.
Get yourself a 1A car charger and you'll be fine. Depending on how the data pins on that charger are configured it'll be recognised as either a fast or slow charger but it will be fine in any case.
So, according to what you say, there should be not problem to use a 5V 2A charger on the S3?
The charger cannot accidentally push too much current to the device?
No. The phone limits the Amp the battery can get.
It simply won't go above 0.5 or 1Amp depending on what resistor is coded between the data pins (the 2 middle pins on the normal USB-plug)
(Note that this does not extend to all devices. E.g. cheap chinese toys and their batteries may not have any current limter, connecting them to "too powerful" chargers will result in damages or potential blow-up of the battery. The same applies to batteries without any electronic such as car batteries which can overheat and "cook")
I bought S3 in Germany 1.0A, there is a date on the charger:18.05.2012
Matching charger to phone
burmo said:
Hi,
Background - I am an electronic engineer and have designed power supplies.
The Amp rating on a power supply is it's maximum capability to deliver power. The Voltage is the 'force' that it can push electrons through the device, this is the important one to have correct. So a 5V 300A Power supply will not charge your S3 any quicker than a 5V 1A power supply.
Get yourself a 1A car charger and you'll be fine. Depending on how the data pins on that charger are configured it'll be recognised as either a fast or slow charger but it will be fine in any case.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi burmo,
An interesting concept. I have no clue in these things but what you say is not clear to me "all the way".
Charging my i93100 phone with 5.0V 3.1A will do no harm because it won't "push" more than 1A anyway?
And who is "responsible" for controlling this "push" the charger/battery/phone?
Does it work the same for Car chargers?
Thanks a lot,
Izik
multimeter check on .7amp charger
Animor said:
I attach a picture of the adapter I got with my S3.
It says 0.7A on it, while it appears that other have one with 1A.
Did they con me with this adapter?
And regarding the maximum current allowed: do you think an adapter of 1.2A might harm the S3?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
so i have been wondering about this as well because i am currently building a custom charger for my s3 that charges the battery without having to plug into the charging port. i have redirected wires from the wireless charging port to metal tabs i have place on the back of my phone. it is a "drop in charger".
Anyway i have tested the charger that came with my phone. I also have the samsung stock charger that say the output is .7amp but after testing it with mutimeter, i have found that the output is actually 1.2 amps. As for max charging amps, I am not sure. I have tested several chargers. The new S4 charger puts out 2.34amps and i have not found any problem charging my s3 with it.
TrollTollKarl said:
so i have been wondering about this as well because i am currently building a custom charger for my s3 that charges the battery without having to plug into the charging port. i have redirected wires from the wireless charging port to metal tabs i have place on the back of my phone. it is a "drop in charger".
Anyway i have tested the charger that came with my phone. I also have the samsung stock charger that say the output is .7amp but after testing it with mutimeter, i have found that the output is actually 1.2 amps. As for max charging amps, I am not sure. I have tested several chargers. The new S4 charger puts out 2.34amps and i have not found any problem charging my s3 with it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As far as I know the phone limits it so as you've found yes you will be fine
My original S3 charger is 5v 1.0amp
My original S3 charger is 5v 1.0amp. It was bought in Thailand with the phone.
I agree with burmo an advanced phone will have a current limiter as part of its circuit, however I prefer not to rely on it and not to exceed the manufacturer volt/amp recommendation.
The phone controls the current. In custom kernels (Boeffla and so on) you can change the target current. The phone has a protection built in, if the voltage is unstable (drops to much) it lowers the current untill the voltage is stable.
A HTC One charger I sometimes use (0,7A rated) only delivers 0,8A. A aftermarket charger I own (1,0A rated) is fine delivering 1,2A (modified target current, not stock). These charging currents can be read by various apps.
Get yourself a 1,0A rated charger and speed up your charging time.
Benjamin
burmo said:
Hi,
Background - I am an electronic engineer and have designed power supplies.
The Amp rating on a power supply is it's maximum capability to deliver power. The Voltage is the 'force' that it can push electrons through the device, this is the important one to have correct. So a 5V 300A Power supply will not charge your S3 any quicker than a 5V 1A power supply.
Get yourself a 1A car charger and you'll be fine. Depending on how the data pins on that charger are configured it'll be recognised as either a fast or slow charger but it will be fine in any case.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Seconded the post above being an electronic engineer as wel.
Voltage should be exactly the same as you need, but this will always be the case for a USB charger.
Current should just be enough or more.
The charging current is dictated my your phone and not - and I repeat - NOT by your charger!
mine rates at 1A