What fast charging technologies does the phone support? Heard on the Internet that he supports power delivery, but I couldn't get it to work. Maybe some kind of Magisk module is needed or the phone still only supports vooc?
Related
So it was announced not too long ago that fast charging wirelessly will be coming soon. (http://www.theverge.com/2015/6/25/8844719/wireless-quick-charging-qi)
My question is, does anyone know if S6 edge will be supported once wireless fast charge products come out?
I'm guess I will have to buy a wireless pad that can do fast charging
Nop my guess is every phone out there is only prepared for standard wireless charging so this fast one must operate in a different way, is like fast charging by cables not every phone support it, even if they are charged by cable
I am a little confused on what the factors are that make a phone be able to utilize Qualcomm's quick charge technology. The 801 chip in the phone supports quick charge 2.0, but the phone does not inherently have that capability. Does it have to do with something else or can it theoretically support it, but OnePlus stock kernel/ROM does not have that capability?
Since the Honor 5X uses a Qualcomm Snapgragon 616 which features Quick Charge 2.0, would it be possible to unlock this feature by software? The necessary hardware is already there...
maybe the custom kernels can do that.
I posted a similar question here. Looks like Huawei has disabled a subset of the SD616 features. Presumably this is to safe cost on this affordably priced handset. What we'd all really like to know is whether Huawei has saved cost on licenses, materials, or both. I hope it's licenses only so our devs can work their magic and unlock the goods for us.
if we can get our hands on a nandroid backup of the chinese market version then maybe our developers can port it over
I am a participant of Android 6.0 + EMUI 4.0 beta testing for Honor 5x and I have already asked Honor to implement this one in the release. I am not sure whether they would do it. I have also asked to enable OTG support with the update.
@pank.dhnd let's hope you get them to enable quick charge and OTG. thank you
Let's hope we get everything we have demanded so far
Can you enable OTG by changing the build prop line:
ro.config.support_otgstorage from "false" to "true"
and
ro.mmi.otg_test from "false" to "true"
I change the value of these 2 lines but I have yet to test with a USB drive with OTG connector.
Doesnt it support it already? My Phone doesnt charge faster with a 2-3amp charger it doesnt go over 1050ma with ampère app
http://www.androidbeat.com/2016/02/honor-5x-faq/
"Q) Does the Honor 5X support Quick Charging?
A) Yes, the Honor 5X supports Quick Charge 2.0, which means that you can charge the phone to nearly 50 percent when charged for only 30 minutes. However, do note that Huawei has not bundled a Quick Charge compatible charger with the Honor 5X, so you need to buy it separately."
According to this site it does. but I don't know for sure. I do know my phone charges exceptionally fast. The charger that comes with it is model#hw-050100u01. I'll have to measure the voltage/amp when I get home.
The Honor 5X doesn't support Quick Charge.
I have an Anker 18W Quick Charge adapter (2.5Amp) with an Anker Powerline. My phone charges much faster with that than stock charger (1Amp) and stock cable. It takes about 3 hours with the stock charger, and about 2 hours with the Anker charger.
Your USB charging cable makes a difference. Thicker 24AWG cables will charge your phone faster. I can't post links yet - but look up any micro USB Anker Powerline cables on Amazon, and a 2.5Amp Anker Charger.
https://www.qualcomm.com/news/snapdragon/2015/06/30/qualcomm-quick-charge-20-technology-explained
According to this article, we would beable to charge our phones at a maximum of 24 watts. I tested the watts on the stock charger(#hw-050100u01) and I was charging at 7 watts. 7 watts still being pretty fast, nothing compared to 24 watts. My stock charger charged at .9 amps.
So yes Quick Charge is definately disabled.
Can anyone confirm if these chargers are compatible with the rog 2? Planning on getting one.
https://youtu.be/tUVWV6pDShs
Ansticexvi said:
Can anyone confirm if these chargers are compatible with the rog 2? Planning on getting one.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It is interesting, but at the same time risky, if they are not compatible they can shorten the life over time, damage the battery indicating false reading on the phone, or the last thing burn you'r phone.
I would really like some hard info abou this topic!
pewpewze said:
It is interesting, but at the same time risky, if they are not compatible they can shorten the life over time, damage the battery indicating false reading on the phone, or the last thing burn you'r phone.
I would really like some hard info abou this topic!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thankfully due to USB standards, plugging your phone into a charger that is capable of outputting more power than the phone is designed to use, will not damage the phone as it is not the charger that decides the speed that the phone will charge at, it is negotiated between the two devices and charging will start at the fastest speed that both of the devices support.
Due to Oppo's VOOC 2.0 being a proprietary standard that is only supported by select Oppo devices, if you connect any other device to the charger, it will just charge at whatever the maximum speed that can be negotiated between the two devices, which is most likely going to be 5V 2A (10W).
willhemmens said:
Thankfully due to USB standards, plugging your phone into a charger that is capable of outputting more power than the phone is designed to use, will not damage the phone as it is not the charger that decides the speed that the phone will charge at, it is negotiated between the two devices and charging will start at the fastest speed that both of the devices support.
Due to Oppo's VOOC 2.0 being a proprietary standard that is only supported by select Oppo devices, if you connect any other device to the charger, it will just charge at whatever the maximum speed that can be negotiated between the two devices, which is most likely going to be 5V 2A (10W).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So since oppo owns realme it's probably using the same proprietary tech too. Bummer.
The question is whether you REALLY need those extra minutes shaved off of your charging time. Faster the charging, faster your battery deteriorates. Speaking of compatibility, I doubt you'll get anything above the 30W that Asus provides support for. I'd recommend you stick to the 18W/30W charger bundled inside, or a QC 4.0 charger.
Works fine with my old Huawei Superchargers (45W)
All Day On XDA said:
Works fine with my old Huawei Superchargers (45W)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How faster is it compared to the stock charger?
hello. (first of all I use Google translate ).
I would like to know please if there is a way to limit the power that a wireless charger can produce. Or that the phone only receives a certain wattage from the charger.
To better explain. I have a Xiaomi mi 11. Which is compatible with wireless charging up to 50watt. I bought a wireless charger (the Mi 20W Stand)... I use an official Xiaomi 27watt charger. Which provides me with the maximum power of the wireless charger ( 20watt )
But the phone heats up quickly. I tried using an 18watt charger to got a maximum of 10watt charge from the wireless charger. But. The charger is limited to 7.5watt and the charge is slow.
So I would like to know if there is a way or an application to limit the phone to only receive 10watt from the wireless charger?
I don't thiink this is possible for any smartphone. Wireless charging produces heat just because of how it works. It'll always generate heat. Lots of energy is wated throught heat, which is why wireless chargers generally put out less power than wired.
I know on my S22 Ultra, there's a setting to turn off fast wireless charging. Not sure if the Xiaomi devices have something similar?
the_scotsman said:
I don't thiink this is possible for any smartphone. Wireless charging produces heat just because of how it works. It'll always generate heat. Lots of energy is wated throught heat, which is why wireless chargers generally put out less power than wired.
I know on my S22 Ultra, there's a setting to turn off fast wireless charging. Not sure if the Xiaomi devices have something similar?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you for your answer. I know Samsung has this option.but on Xiaomi no. I looked but nothing. and that's why I asked if there was a way to limit the charging reception on the smartphone. since it is the CPU that manages the battery charging