What other chargers? 5V USB and Samsung cable and 3 Amps possible? - Galaxy Tab 10.1 Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

Hi.
What other chargers can I use for charging the GTab?
Am I right all chargers providing 5 Volts and minimum 2 Amps with USB connector are suitable - using the original Samsung cable?
Can I use my CubieBoard Charger - 5 Volts, USB connector but 3 AMPS?

nobody?

Related

[Q] The AC - DC charger

The machine (US verion) came with a 100v-240v AC to DC USB charger. The label mentioned 5-15V
1) Does it mean it can charge the machine 15V AND any other 5V smartphone as well?
2) Is there any other way I can charge up my machine? is there any way I can get the 12v from my desktop USB socket?
Please help me if you know...
Geeka said:
The machine (US verion) came with a 100v-240v AC to DC USB charger. The label mentioned 5-15V
1) Does it mean it can charge the machine 15V AND any other 5V smartphone as well?
2) Is there any other way I can charge up my machine? is there any way I can get the 12v from my desktop USB socket?
Please help me if you know...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
#1 yes^a
#2 yes^b, no^c
Note a: DevCake posted a thread here showing the USB plug is actually USB 3.0 style (not standard) where pin 7 (USB 3 only) triggers switch from 5v to 15v for tablet only.
Note b: DevCake and many others have posted alternatives to the wall wort, where you plug in your ASUS proprietary 40 pin cable to female USB charging at 11v-15v. Warning, if you plug your iPad, iPhone, cellphone, etc., into 11v-15v you will KILL them.
Note c: USB sockets on laptop/pc only provide 5v, where USB 2 is 0.5 amp & USB 3 is 1.0 amp. Neither is up to 11v-15v required by the TF101 tablet & dock to activate the charging indicator.
PS: In my opinion, only idiots (or desperate) trickle charge their tablet with 5v, by turning off the tablet and waiting days for full charge.

Differences in charging speed with "old" cable/connector vs. new

Couldn't find an answer to this after searching, so here's my question.
If I use, say the micro usb cable from the Note 2 to charge my Note 3, will it be as fast as using the Note 3's cable.
The note 3's cable is USB 3.0 which I understand would make data transfer faster (assuming PC has USB 3) but there's conflicting info about whether this makes charging faster.
For the sake of above, assume the power source is the same (i.e., a wall charger).
Does anyone know or has tested?
Cheers
Mine charges just as fast using normal USB 2 cable add it does the 3. USB 3 is higher data throughput. Not amperage. That is off the charger itself. I never use the 3.0 cable. I use 6ft USB 2 cables and still charge in about two hours, little less usually . It's all about the output on your charger. 2A like the stock one or Verizon ones and you are fine. 500mAh charger would take forever to charge it though.
Sent from my GlaDos Baked Potato
I actually notice a difference or I'm not sure if it's in my mind but a hour and my battery is fully charged with supplied charger my old note 2 charger take 1.5 or so hours to charge.
Sent from my SM-N900T using Tapatalk
Now I'm not sure about subtle details on how usb charging works, but it seems the original wall adapter is not outfitted with a usb 3.0 port. If you look at usb 3.0 ports (female end) they have metal contacts on the front edge, which the samsung wall adapter doesn't have. Not sure if the extra contacts carry current, but my guess is if only the standard usb 2.0 contacts are being used then speeds would be equal regardless if a 3.0 or 2.0 cord is used.
I have USB 2.0 cables that charge just as fast as the supplied USB 3.0 one. I also have ones that don't.
Don't buy really cheap cables. cheap ones usually have thinner copper wires (the cable could still be thick, but that's down to thicker insulation). If there's not enough copper to allow the current to pass, the charge rate will be slower.
I believe the USB 3.0 cable only charges faster if plugged into a USB 3.0 port on a computer compared to a USB 2.0 cable. On a wall charger they are the same speed.
Wish there was an app like Galaxy Charging Current that would work on this device.
kudosmog said:
Wish there was an app like Galaxy Charging Current that would work on this device.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
USB 3.0 spec shows 900mA so I suspect that connecting to a USB 3.0 port on a computer isn't going to charge as fast as the 2A wall charger over either USB 2.0 or 3.0 cable. The big difference should be in data transfer. I never charge my Note 3 over USB 3.0 cable, always the 2.0 cables that I have all over the place. Strange thing is that it charges consistently faster than my Galaxy Nexus on the same cable/charger.
Rick
Galaxy charging current lite works fine for me. The cable makes no difference at all. Good quality cables should charge at 1800mA from the charger regardless of whether they are USB 2.0 or 3.0. This translates to a little over 2 hours charge time.
From a USB port either cable will only see 450mA unless you insert an inline adapter designed to make the note think it is connected to a Galaxy charger.
CraigAmey said:
Galaxy charging current lite works fine for me. The cable makes no difference at all. Good quality cables should charge at 1800mA from the charger regardless of whether they are USB 2.0 or 3.0. This translates to a little over 2 hours charge time.
From a USB port either cable will only see 450mA unless you insert an inline adapter designed to make the note think it is connected to a Galaxy charger.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just uninstalled and -reinstalled the app, now it's working. coo
How is the current for charging detected?
Differenc in charging time depends on a higher charging current.
The current of 500 mA for USB 2.0 and 900 mA USB 3.0 to my knowledge only for the Device = Note supplying power to external Devices like USB-Sticks (e.g. Memory or DVB-T), Hardrives and so on. It does not specify in regard to using a USB plug as charger nor the the current it charges the notes with. I am wondering how the current detection between the original Galaxy or Nexus charger and any other charger, USB-Hub or computer port is done.
When you compare µUSB-B 2.0 to 3.0 connection http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_2.0#2.0 and here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_3.0 youls find that the USB 2.0 µUSB-B has the same connection as the µUSB-B 2.0 (note http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_3.0identifies 11 Pins for µUSB-B which seems incorrect because Pin 5 has to be ground to be backwards compatible).
The additional 5 Pins are only for the 4 USB 3.0 Data-Lines and ground.
If you look into the USB-A connector in the charger you'll see also only 4 Pins like in any other female USB-A 2.0 connector, so using a µUSB-B 3.0 can't be the reason.
I'll edit this as I have more things to test. All using Galaxy Charging Current Lite app
Charging current:
OEM USB 3.0 cable + wall charger = 1200
OEM USB 3.0 cable on PC USB 2.0 port = 450
Monoprice USB 2.0 cable + OEM samsung wall charger = 1200
Monoprice USB 2.0 cable on PC USB 2.0 port = 450
Mine charges faster with the stock USB 3.0 cable. This is incredibly fast compared to the Note 2 charging cycle.
Sent from my SM-N9005 using xda app-developers app
OK here are myvalues Charging Current Lite app displayed charging current:
Samsung USB 3.0 cable with
Samsung wall charger = 1200
USB 3.0 10 port Hub-charging port = 1200
USB 3.0 10 port Hub = 450
USB 3.0 Elitebook 8560 = 450
USB 3.0 Cable with USB-A 3.0 to µUSB-B Adaper = 1200
So it's not the cable that makes the difference.
snn47 said:
OK here are myvalues Charging Current Lite app displayed charging current:
Samsung USB 3.0 cable with
Samsung wall charger = 1200
USB 3.0 10 port Hub-charging port = 1200
USB 3.0 10 port Hub = 450
USB 3.0 Elitebook 8560 = 450
USB 3.0 Cable with USB-A 3.0 to µUSB-B Adaper = 1200
So it's not the cable that makes the difference.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm getting similar results.
USB2.0 cables same as USB3.0 cables as far as charging goes.
Also regardless of plugging into USB3.0 port or USB 2.0 port on computer, still pulling only 450.
Using OEM samsung 3.0 cable, and amazon 3.0 cable.
OEM samsung 2.0 cable, monoprice 2.0 cable.
Oh, and it will charge at 1800 using both a USB 2.0 and 3.0 if the screen is off (turn screen off, plug charger in, turn screen on open galaxy charging current lite and it will display 1800 until refreshed).
I had the time to check the AC consumption of both the Note 2 and Note 3 PS, both are with the Note off ~11 W independent of cable used.
When the battery was fully charged at 100% and the power consumption was arround 6 W, I started the Current Lite app and it displayed a charging current of 1200 mAh even so the battery was charged? Something is wrong with the displayed value if the battery is fully charged, unless it's supposed to be only the current supplied to the Note. Then why does it not correlate to the AC-power meassured?
I looked at the voltage of the Note 3 PS and noted it's 5.3V while the Note 2 PS is the standard 5 V.
If I find time i will built an adapter and check if the voltage is true DC or if there is some other signal imposed.
Or do the Notes PS initiate some kind of data transfer to let the Notes know its the original charger that can supply higher current.
Any ideas or input.
Isn't snapdragon 800 on the note 3 suppose to have some sort of quick charging feature, that when used with the factory cables should increase charging speeds?
I could detect at best a few 100 Mw difference difference between charging with the OEM cable and any other USB 2.0 or 3.0 cable with µUSB adapter or when I used an adapter to µUSB.
Car Charger
Sorry, but I can't seem to find the right answer.
I need to charge my phone whilst being used in my aircraft.
Using a USB 2.0 cable on the Note 3 supplied charger, I only get 450mA.
Will it charge faster if I install a 2A car charger in my aircraft and use a USB 3.0 Note 3 cable?
Regards,
Erich
I use a 2 Amp charger in my spaceship and it can be used to monitor the ecu while still providing enough power for the phone to charge.
You just need to be sure that the charger actually deliver 2 Amp and not 500mah
Sent from my SM-N9005 using XDA Premium 4 mobile app

8.4 Chargers

I recently bought a scoche dual port 21W(dual USB with 2.1 amps per) charger that I thought could charge my 8.4 but it doesn't even seem to recognize it's plugged in. Is this because it needs that extra .3 volts from the stock charger? And are there any multiport chargers capable of charging this tablet?
I have 4-port charger from "Volmate" that I got from Amazon. Works fine. I don't see that same unit any more but they have a 5-port that looks similar:
http://www.amazon.com/5-port-Family...=UTF8&qid=1415848997&sr=8-16&keywords=volmate
The tablet doesn't need the .3 extra volts, it can use a variety of chargers as long as they are 5V 2A, it can even charge hooked to a PC , though the current from a computer would most like just be enough to power the device and not actually charge it.
Not sure why the tablet wouldn't recognize the charger you hooked up, does the battery icon have a X through it?
My Tab Pro can be used with many different chargers which sustain 2A or higher.
frentraken said:
I recently bought a scoche dual port 21W(dual USB with 2.1 amps per) charger that I thought could charge my 8.4 but it doesn't even seem to recognize it's plugged in. Is this because it needs that extra .3 volts from the stock charger? And are there any multiport chargers capable of charging this tablet?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It requires the D+ and D- pins shorted together with 1.2 V on them. Google "Charging your Smartphone from USB without fear" Sorry I can't post links.
I cracked open my car charger and changed out the resistors to 330k and 110k. It works now. The chargers that mention having a chip / IC like the Anker chargers with SMART IQ auto detects and works. The .3 V difference is to make up for the voltage drop of the cable, it isn't necessary but it lets it charge faster.
Fox9p3400 said:
It requires the D+ and D- pins shorted together with 1.2 V on them. Google "Charging your Smartphone from USB without fear" Sorry I can't post links.
I cracked open my car charger and changed out the resistors to 330k and 110k. It works now. The chargers that mention having a chip / IC like the Anker chargers with SMART IQ auto detects and works. The .3 V difference is to make up for the voltage drop of the cable, it isn't necessary but it lets it charge faster.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
They're 33K (to +) and 10K (to -) resistors.
I made few of them so I can charge old type Tab and Note with iPad-like plug.
I'm not sure what this is all about... To charge my 8.4 I mostly use my 1.5A HTC One charger or an older LG 1A. On my boat I'm using a bog standard cigarette lighter USB charger with two 2A outlets (not more than 3A combined). I've never had any problems with any of these.
Why would I need one with shortened D+/D- pins (or do all chargers have this implemented?)

Fastest charger other than warp charge

What's the fastest charger I can get other than the warp charger?
I checked and here are my options:
Anker PD charger with USB C to USB C cable
Anker PowerIQ with USB c to USB 3
Since Warp charge is achieved with 5V 6A, which is unique, no other charger I could find supports it. PD gives 5V 3A which gives 15W. One of those has 20V 1,5 A, but I dont know if that would initiate warp. mine AUKEY 56W USB-C Charger tops at 4V 2A.
Edited

Question Super fast charging 2.0 on Baseus charger

This is the 100W Baseus deskop charger and I have two issues with it:
1. When two USB C ports are used, the power division is C1=65W and C2=30W. So C1 should still be more than capable enough to handle SFC 2.0 45W charging. But as you can see in the video, SFC 2.0 is not working when two USB C ports are used.
2. When I charge at SFC 2.0 and SFC 1.0 with the same charger, they both cap at 33W. I thought SFC 1.0 is just 25W? When I use the official 25W Samsung SFC 1.0 charger, it just caps off at 24W as expected.
Baseus support sucks big time so I'm having a problem reporting this to them.
kevindd992002 said:
This is the 100W Baseus deskop charger and I have two issues with it:
1. When two USB C ports are used, the power division is C1=65W and C2=30W. So C1 should still be more than capable enough to handle SFC 2.0 45W charging. But as you can see in the video, SFC 2.0 is not working when two USB C ports are used.
2. When I charge at SFC 2.0 and SFC 1.0 with the same charger, they both cap at 33W. I thought SFC 1.0 is just 25W? When I use the official 25W Samsung SFC 1.0 charger, it just caps off at 24W as expected.
Baseus support sucks big time so I'm having a problem reporting this to them.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Baseus GaN5 Pro 65 watt can charge at 50watt peak.
after 60 percent,watt same as samsung 25 watt charger.
But your measurement is input power to the charger and not output power to the phone. There's a bit of a difference because of power adapter efficiency. I don't know what is the difference between the Gan5 Pro 65W and this 100W adapter really.
BUMP! Anyone please?
This is normal for such a charger. I have a PZOZ version - 65W GaN 2xUSB C + 1xUSB A. SFC 2.0 works only with 1 device plugged in, if you plug another (it might be a 5W one) - this breaks the SFC. I can assume that this is coming from the controller and the device is actually not capable to support such scenario, even though the power is declared as 100W.
Hmmm, that's interesting. I thought the issue was isolated to BaseUS. Their support is really non-existent. They reply but it's like you're talking to a stupid person that does not understand the issue.
Aside from this issue, do you have any other issues when using both ports? As for me, when I charge my phone while my laptop is plugged in, it sometimes drops the wattage on the laptop device to just 19w. If the laptop is plugged in by itself, it goes up to 59w. Not sure what's going on here.
Are there any usb c car chargers that support sfc 2.0?
kevindd992002 said:
Hmmm, that's interesting. I thought the issue was isolated to BaseUS. Their support is really non-existent. They reply but it's like you're talking to a stupid person that does not understand the issue.
Aside from this issue, do you have any other issues when using both ports? As for me, when I charge my phone while my laptop is plugged in, it sometimes drops the wattage on the laptop device to just 19w. If the laptop is plugged in by itself, it goes up to 59w. Not sure what's going on here.
Are there any usb c car chargers that support sfc 2.0?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

Satechi - USB / USB C car charger with 72W:
Simultaneous Charging: Has both a universal USB A port and a Type-C port
Quick Charge: Devices can be charged quickly on the go
Powerful and compact design: Type-C power 60W (max), Type-A power 12W (max), total 72W
Equipped with an LED indicator to check the charging status
With Power Delivery for particularly fast charging
Compatible with almost all USB devices and most USB Type-C devices
The Satechi USB C and USB A Car Charger is the perfect solution for charging your devices on the go. Never worry about how to charge your smartphone, tablet, computer or other device while on the go. Simply connect the charger to your car's cigarette lighter and connect the other end of the USB cable to the USB port of the desired device. You can already charge your device on the go. Satechi's Dual Car Charger allows you to simultaneously charge a 13" MacBook Pro (2016) via the USB-C port and an iPhone/tablet via the USB-A port. The output power for the USB-C port is 60 W (max) and 12 W for the USB-A port.
ATTENTION: The delivery does not include a USB cable!
Color: white/silver
Brand: Satechi
Model: ST-TCPDCCS
Weight: about 34g
Technical specifications:
Input: DC12V - 24V
USB-C output: 60W (max)
USB A output: 12W (max)
Total Power: 72W
Baseus aluminum 45W USB / USB C car charger:
Charges up to 4 times faster than conventional USB/USB C adapters
Extremely small and light (ideal for travelling)
With support for Power Delivery 3.0 / Quick Charge 4.0
45W output current power
With LED display on the charger
Charge your USB / USB C compatible devices such as smartphones, tablets or MP3 players, etc. in the car now. With the Baseus USB / USB C car charger, your devices are always fully charged while driving. The Baseus Car Charger Auto USB / USB C is ideal for people with active lifestyles who travel a lot. It simply plugs into your vehicle's power outlet (cigarette lighter) and charges while driving.
The power supply also supports the latest Power Delivery 3.0 and Quick Charge 4.0 technologies, with which you can charge your iPhone X up to 50% in just 30 minutes. The car charger always guarantees the maximum charging capacity to charge your electronic devices, with a current output line of up to 6 amps.
ATTENTION: USB/USB C cable not included (can be ordered in store).
The black color
Manufacturer: Baseus
Material: aluminum/plastic
Technical specifications:
Performance/power: 45 watts
Input: 12-24V
USB Output: 4.5V/5A; 5V/4.5A; 9V/3A; 12V/3A; 20V/2.25A
USB-C Output: 5V/3A; 9V/3A; 12V/3A; 15V/3A; 20V/2.25A
Output USB + USB C Total: 5V/6A max
Nmc_alves® said:

Satechi - USB / USB C car charger with 72W:
Simultaneous Charging: Has both a universal USB A port and a Type-C port
Quick Charge: Devices can be charged quickly on the go
Powerful and compact design: Type-C power 60W (max), Type-A power 12W (max), total 72W
Equipped with an LED indicator to check the charging status
With Power Delivery for particularly fast charging
Compatible with almost all USB devices and most USB Type-C devices
The Satechi USB C and USB A Car Charger is the perfect solution for charging your devices on the go. Never worry about how to charge your smartphone, tablet, computer or other device while on the go. Simply connect the charger to your car's cigarette lighter and connect the other end of the USB cable to the USB port of the desired device. You can already charge your device on the go. Satechi's Dual Car Charger allows you to simultaneously charge a 13" MacBook Pro (2016) via the USB-C port and an iPhone/tablet via the USB-A port. The output power for the USB-C port is 60 W (max) and 12 W for the USB-A port.
ATTENTION: The delivery does not include a USB cable!
Color: white/silver
Brand: Satechi
Model: ST-TCPDCCS
Weight: about 34g
Technical specifications:
Input: DC12V - 24V
USB-C output: 60W (max)
USB A output: 12W (max)
Total Power: 72W
Baseus aluminum 45W USB / USB C car charger:
Charges up to 4 times faster than conventional USB/USB C adapters
Extremely small and light (ideal for travelling)
With support for Power Delivery 3.0 / Quick Charge 4.0
45W output current power
With LED display on the charger
Charge your USB / USB C compatible devices such as smartphones, tablets or MP3 players, etc. in the car now. With the Baseus USB / USB C car charger, your devices are always fully charged while driving. The Baseus Car Charger Auto USB / USB C is ideal for people with active lifestyles who travel a lot. It simply plugs into your vehicle's power outlet (cigarette lighter) and charges while driving.
The power supply also supports the latest Power Delivery 3.0 and Quick Charge 4.0 technologies, with which you can charge your iPhone X up to 50% in just 30 minutes. The car charger always guarantees the maximum charging capacity to charge your electronic devices, with a current output line of up to 6 amps.
ATTENTION: USB/USB C cable not included (can be ordered in store).
The black color
Manufacturer: Baseus
Material: aluminum/plastic
Technical specifications:
Performance/power: 45 watts
Input: 12-24V
USB Output: 4.5V/5A; 5V/4.5A; 9V/3A; 12V/3A; 20V/2.25A
USB-C Output: 5V/3A; 9V/3A; 12V/3A; 15V/3A; 20V/2.25A
Output USB + USB C Total: 5V/6A max
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
But I bought the 65W charger and BaseUS said that it can only do PPS 18W.
S23 Ultra requires 10v 4.5 amp to achieve 45 w charging . Charger and Cable both should be capable of 5 amp current capacity and Charger should support PD 3.0 with PPS at 5 amp that is the basic requirement, Cable should have a e-marker chip to identify it as having 5 amp capacity to the charger. usually such cables have 5 amp written on the USB C port and are visibly thicker than the normal 3 amp cables .
ask77 said:
S23 Ultra requires 10v 4.5 amp to achieve 45 w charging . Charger and Cable both should be capable of 5 amp current capacity and Charger should support PD 3.0 with PPS at 5 amp that is the basic requirement, Cable should have a e-marker chip to identify it as having 5 amp capacity to the charger. usually such cables have 5 amp written on the USB C port and are visibly thicker than the normal 3 amp cables .
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Do you have any reference for that 10V 4.5A information? Some say it's 9V 5A but I never saw any official claims from Samsung regarding that too. I have no issues with cables. I'm using 100W BaseUS cables with e-marker chips on them. They don't have the 5A writing on them but they are obviously thicker than the included Samsung cable (which is only for 25W charging). Here are the specs of the 100W BaseUS desktop charger that I have:
As you can see, it does support PD3.0. Although PPS is not written there, it does support it as well as confirmed by BaseUS support and the video that I showed. I don't see 10V anywhere though so I'm not sure how it works with PPS or something. Does PPS adjust the voltage with fine adjustments or something? Also, that doesn't explain the issue I'm having where SFC 2.0 won't work when two USB ports are used. It only works when the phone is charged alone and this defeats the purpose of buying a multi-port charger in the first place.
Go to settings, about phone , and then status information the last entry there is Rated 10 V 4.5 Amp . Yes pps adjusts voltage with fine adjustment of 20mv . It can provide between 3.3 V to 21 V at upto 5 Amp . Your problem seems to be related to the charger itself which is unable to deliver the required power when two usb ports are used . BTW you can use an app called accubattery which should give you the exact charging data for your phone.
ask77 said:
Go to settings, about phone , and then status information the last entry there is Rated 10 V 4.5 Amp . Yes pps adjusts voltage with fine adjustment of 20mv . It can provide between 3.3 V to 21 V at upto 5 Amp . Your problem seems to be related to the charger itself which is unable to deliver the required power when two usb ports are used . BTW you can use an app called accubattery which should give you the exact charging data for your phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok, I see that now. Well, @Stenlius replied to this thread and says that this is normal. Any comments on that?
What's more weird though is that when it's charging at sfc 2.0, the cable only shows 33w. When I plug in another device in the charger, it renegotiates to sfc 1.0 but still at 33w!
When I use the official 25w samsung charger with the same cable, it goes down to 24w as expected.
SFC 2.0 - So far I have only seen with the Samsung official chargers. I've spent so much money on Belkin, Baseus, UGreen, Anker accessories and never been able to get peak speeds.
JazonX said:
SFC 2.0 - So far I have only seen with the Samsung official chargers. I've spent so much money on Belkin, Baseus, UGreen, Anker accessories and never been able to get peak speeds.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh wow, that's good to know. Were you getting around the same wattage as I do at 33W? I still have time to return these and is why I'm asking for help here to verify if I don't have an isolated issue or something.
kevindd992002 said:
Oh wow, that's good to know. Were you getting around the same wattage as I do at 33W? I still have time to return these and is why I'm asking for help here to verify if I don't have an isolated issue or something.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Never had the tools to measure the wattage output.
I just plug and wait for SFC 2.0 to show up, and if it doesn't - I just get rid of it.
I've tried 120W Xiaomi chargers as well.
Max anything other than samsung genuine chargers can go up to is "Fast Charging" or super charging 1.0.
JazonX said:
Never had the tools to measure the wattage output.
I just plug and wait for SFC 2.0 to show up, and if it doesn't - I just get rid of it.
I've tried 120W Xiaomi chargers as well.
Max anything other than samsung genuine chargers can go up to is "Fast Charging" or super charging 1.0.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well theh that's not the same case as mine. If you read my OP and watched the video, you'll see that I can do sfc 2.0 with this baseus charger but only maxes at 33 watts. I thought you had the same issue as mine.
kevindd992002 said:
Well theh that's not the same case as mine. If you read my OP and watched the video, you'll see that I can do sfc 2.0 with this baseus charger but only maxes at 33 watts. I thought you had the same issue as mine.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
peak charging only below 20 percent.
after that 3x watt.
after 60 percent 2x watt,same as 25 watt samsung original charger and cable from the box.(3A cable).
basesus gan 2 lite 65 watt and basesus gan 5 pro 65 watt support SFC 2.0.
tested with S23 Ultra.
this image is s23 ultra at 15 percent battery.
charging with samsung original 45 watt charger.
domperidane said:
peak charging only below 20 percent.
after that 3x watt.
after 60 percent 2x watt,same as 25 watt samsung original charger and cable from the box.(3A cable).
basesus gan 2 lite 65 watt and basesus gan 5 pro 65 watt support SFC 2.0.
tested with S23 Ultra.
this image is s23 ultra at 15 percent battery.
charging with samsung original 45 watt charger.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok, that makes sense. I'll try charging at 15% and see if it makes it to 48W.
Also, have you tried charging yout s23 ultra with more than one usb port plugged in your charger? That does not work as you see in my video.
kevindd992002 said:
Ok, that makes sense. I'll try charging at 15% and see if it makes it to 48W.
Also, have you tried charging yout s23 ultra with more than one usb port plugged in your charger? That does not work as you see in my video.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
may be there is a problem with your charger.
you can claim warranty.
domperidane said:
may be there is a problem with your charger.
you can claim warranty.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No there is none. I posted on reddit before buying this and one guy posted the same issue. Can you test with yours?

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