charger 5V and .7A - Captivate Accessories

When looking for a charger do I need to make sure it delivers 5 Volts and 0.7 Amps? I was looking for an Igo tip for my portable Igo charger http://www.igo.com/tips/icat/tips/ Does it matter about the tip or just the charger http://www.igo.com/accessories/powerxtender-charger/invt/ps002640004/ The portable charger says 4.26 VDC so I guess thats safe right?
Does it matter about the volts and amps or just the volts?
If the charger is under the recommended numbers it charges slow and thats OK right?
I know if the charger is over the device or battery specs then it charges to fast, gets hot and reduces the life of the battery right? Heres the battery charger I bought http://www.fommy.com/view-full-page...sung+Captivate+i897&cat=Batteries&skuno=88959

The charger just needs to be 5 volts, you can get a charger with higher amperage, the phone will draw what it needs.
Not sure if 4.26 volts would be okay.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I897 using XDA App

mesasone said:
The charger just needs to be 5 volts, you can get a charger with higher amperage, the phone will draw what it needs.
Not sure if 4.26 volts would be okay.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I897 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The standard calls for 4.4 to 5.25 V.
Most devices operate in the "low power" state which is 4.4V ... in the USB3 standard the same "low power" mode drops to 4V. If a device is capable, it can operate in "high power mode", which is 4.75 - 5.25V and the mode shift is controlled through software on the device itself.
I know that the tolerance for high power mode is 5V (+/- 5%) which would be 4.75-5.25V
If the same holds true for low power then you're looking at 4.4V (+/- 5%) or 4.18-4.62V and your 4.26V is within spec.

Awesome! Thanks a ton for the replies.

Related

[Q] Wall charger question

So i just sold my old blackberry curve and along with it the wall charger i used for my MT4g
so i looked around my house for another corded wall charger as the plug-usb cable combo just doesnt work for me as the cord is way too short for my needs
well i found an older Moto wall charge PN# SPN5334A...it has the same basic specs are the mytouch plug part with the Input: 100-240~200mA 50-60Hz...but the output is 5v 550mA instead of the mytouch plug being 5v 1A
so the question is...will the different of almost a half an amp cause any serious issues other than maybe a slower charge? any potential for damage to the battery or phone or even the charger?
well any help would be great...thanks
No it wont hurt the phone, only way to damage it is to over amp, as in say it was 2.5 amps but however it will slow the charge down I recommened going to a a store that sells computer stuff and picking up a usb extension cord I got a 3 foot on mine and dont see any draw backs as I do with a under amped charger
f1vel66a said:
No it wont hurt the phone, only way to damage it is to over amp, as in say it was 2.5 amps but however it will slow the charge down I recommened going to a a store that sells computer stuff and picking up a usb extension cord I got a 3 foot on mine and dont see any draw backs as I do with a under amped charger
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yeah i never really considered extending the usb cable...i actually have a 6 ft extension cable sitting in my drawer
but i appreciate the info
No problem hope it helped
Sent from my HTC Glacier using XDA App
f1vel66a said:
No it wont hurt the phone, only way to damage it is to over amp, as in say it was 2.5 amps but however it will slow the charge down I recommened going to a a store that sells computer stuff and picking up a usb extension cord I got a 3 foot on mine and dont see any draw backs as I do with a under amped charger
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What's over amp? If the voltage is correct, the higher the amperage the more efficient it(charger) is, as the phone will draw as much as it needs to charge, in this case around 1amp according the factory charger.
Matching voltage is the important part. Too low of amperage will result in slower charge or no charge when using and plugged in at the same time.
[via XDA premium]
sleepyfu said:
What's over amp? If the voltage is correct, the higher the amperage the more efficient it(charger) is, as the phone will draw as much as it needs to charge, in this case around 1amp according the factory charger.
Matching voltage is the important part. Too low of amperage will result in slower charge or no charge when using and plugged in at the same time.
[via XDA premium]
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
All voltage is the force pushing the amps through. Amps is the actual energy. Resistance is a factor too. Check the Watts to see that they match. But don't over amp it as well
Sent from my HTC Glacier using XDA Premium App
I meant there is no such thing as over amp. Amprage rating is for how stout the power supply is. A 5v/2amp supply can charge 2 of these phone with out issues. 500mA will charge but slow. Think of car batteries they are all 12v and the "long lasting" or "performance " ones will have better amp ratings.
Wattage is simply volt x amp, in this case here, volt is the constant.
[via XDA premium]
sleepyfu said:
I meant there is no such thing as over amp. Amprage rating is for how stout the power supply is. A 5v/2amp supply can charge 2 of these phone with out issues. 500mA will charge but slow. Think of car batteries they are all 12v and the "long lasting" or "performance " ones will have better amp ratings.
Wattage is simply volt x amp, in this case here, volt is the constant.
[via XDA premium]
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If by over amp, you mean over charge? Too much amperage causes a lot of problems, just like too much voltage can cause a lot of priblems
Sent from my HTC Glacier using XDA Premium App
sleepyfu said:
I meant there is no such thing as over amp. Amprage rating is for how stout the power supply is. A 5v/2amp supply can charge 2 of these phone with out issues. 500mA will charge but slow. Think of car batteries they are all 12v and the "long lasting" or "performance " ones will have better amp ratings.
Wattage is simply volt x amp, in this case here, volt is the constant.
[via XDA premium]
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've seen phone batterys blow from to much amps... You can go + .5 amps max on a cell phone before things start to go wrong. And that isnt recommended for to long unless you want battery issues
Sent from my HTC Glacier
So did it happen with a 5volt output charger or something higher? I have seen 8v mini usb charger from Motorola around, that will blow out your HTC battery.
Also can happen if there is a problem with the phones charging circuit, not from a 5v charger with a high amperage rating. Now with a higher amp rating, and your phone has issues, the more amps is available, the bigger "battery blow" you can achieve.
Do I recommend more than 5v/1amp? not really, but can you use a 5v/2amp charger or a 5v/4amp charger if it exists? Yes. Is 1amp safer? kinda.
How do I know this? it was an amperage question I answered wrong at my every 1st job interview 11 years ago.
These guys put it in better words than I do.
sivankls said:
DOESN'T MATTER ..if u know the basic Ohms Law..its the max capacity of the charger.(or any source) the current regulating circuits will take care of the real charging current fed to the battery
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
tkteun said:
I charge my phone on my computers USB connection all the time, all computers have a maximum of 500mA USB current.
Amps are pulled from the charger, not pushed to the phone.
Voltages are pushed to the phone, not pulled from the charger.
If the phone draws too much current from the charger, the voltage drops to a point where the maximum power (P (Watt) = U (Voltage) * I (Amps)) of the charger isn't exceeded.
According to the USB specification you need at least 200mA with 500mA recommended +5VDC.
More is never a problem, you could even use a 50A power supply without breaking your phone. Practically spoken: I wouldn't do that.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

Highest output car charger

Is this the highest?
http://www.seidioonline.com/product-p/pmc.htm
Post links if you know of higher ones, thank you.
Sent from my ADR6400L using XDA App
There are 2.1A usb adapters, but I don't think microUSB can take advantage of it. The one you linked is a 1A, which is the same as the wall charger HTC gave with the phone. I'm currently using a 1A usb adapter in my truck.
Ok that's probably what I'm looking for then. Are there wall chargers greater than what came with the phone that I can take advantage of?
Your best bet would be to try the USB adapters made for iPads. The Apple products can utilize the 2.1A chargers with their sync cables, but I'm not sure if a microUSB cable can though. I have some 2.1A wallchargers from some of my Apple products, I'll test them later and let you know what I find out.
http://www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/...ryDetails&archetypeId=12299&accessoryId=46370
I just got an Enercell from Radio Shack with dual usbs. Max output is 2.5A divided between the two ports.
http://www.radioshack.com/product/index.jsp?productId=11329448
on sale now for only $14.99. Seems to be of good quality.
The Motorola rapid chargers rock.
Guys, unless you mod the usb adapter 5V spec, you aren't doing squat with a "high power" adapter. The device has an input impedence that will draw a certain amount of current at 5v., and that's it.
Standard battery: 1400 mAh
Time to charge: 4 hrs (according to manual)
That's 1400/4 = 350 mA.
Most adapters on the market spec more than that, they're usually 500 mA or above. And again, unless you boost the volts, you're not going to be able to push more than 350 mA or so.
So don't waste you're money.
On the other hand, if your going to share a car outlet with another device like mp3 or ipod, then yeah, you'll need a higher output, two port, adapter.
Edit: It just occurred to me that if you're using the phone heavily while charging, then yeah you may need more than 500 mA. My currrent widget shows the phone can draw another 250 mA or so during use. That plus the charge totals to around 600 mA. But depending upon design, the phone may not be able to pull in all 600 mA. A test with a current meter would be real interesting.
The charger shipped with the Thunderbolt is a 1 Amp charger.
If I use a 500 mA charger the Current Widget shows a +450mA charge current. However if I use the 1A charger, I get a charge current of about +850mA.
Given that the google navigation gobbles over 400mA when running, you need a car charger with greater than 500mA capacity of you want the phone to charge at the same time.
Sent from my ADR6400L using XDA App
boingboingbilly said:
The Motorola rapid chargers rock.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good to hear, I ordered one today for $11 on ebay. I had heard other people say they liked that one too.
Ecomaniac said:
Guys, unless you mod the usb adapter 5V spec, you aren't doing squat with a "high power" adapter. The device has an input impedence that will draw a certain amount of current at 5v., and that's it.
Standard battery: 1400 mAh
Time to charge: 4 hrs (according to manual)
That's 1400/4 = 350 mA.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You're making the incorrect assumptions that the charging rate is constant, and charging is 100% efficient. Li-ion batteries can be charged at up to a 1C rate (i.e. 1.4A for a 1400 mA cell). Add the power drawn by the phone itself, and a 1.8 Amp charger might not be unreasonable (1.8 A is the specified limit for micro USB connectors). Whether the phone will actually do a maximum rate charge, I don't know.
This, from a TI Application Note (Google for SLAA287, board won't let me post links):
A Li-Ion battery charging process consists of three stages:
· Slow Charge: Pre-charging stage using current of 0.1C
· Fast Charge: Constant current charging stage using current of 1C
· Constant voltage charging stage
During the slow charge stage, the battery is charged with a constant low charge current of 0.1C, if the battery voltage is below 2.5V. The slow charge stage is rarely used during the charging process of a Li-Ion battery.
The fast charge (constant current) and constant voltage charging are the most important stages during a recharge process. Most Li-Ion batteries have a fully charged voltage of 4.1 or 4.2V.
The battery is first charged with a constant current of 1C until a battery voltage reaches 4.1 or 4.2V. The firmware continuously checks the charging current by sensing the voltage at the current sense resistor (Rsense) and
adjusts the duty cycle of PWM output from the MCU. The battery's voltage is checked frequently.
Whenever found the battery's voltage reaches 4.1 or 4.2V, the charger will switch to constant voltage charging mode. The battery is then charged with a constant voltage source at a fixed battery voltage of 4.1 or 4.2 V...When the charging current falls below 0.1C, the charging process must stop.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Monoprice has Cig to USB(1A) chargers and the USB to Micro cables in multiple lengths(I ordered 6' ones) for far cheaper than you will find anywhere else
mike.s said:
You're making the incorrect assumptions that the charging rate is constant, and charging is 100% efficient. Li-ion batteries can be charged at up to a 1C rate (i.e. 1.4A for a 1400 mA cell). Add the power drawn by the phone itself, and a 1.8 Amp charger might not be unreasonable (1.8 A is the specified limit for micro USB connectors). Whether the phone will actually do a maximum rate charge, I don't know.
This, from a TI Application Note (Google for SLAA287, board won't let me post links):
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
very useful, thanks!
walbuls said:
Monoprice has Cig to USB(1A) chargers and the USB to Micro cables in multiple lengths(I ordered 6' ones) for far cheaper than you will find anywhere else
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I second monoprice.
I tried bunch of cig to usb car charger and none matched advertised output... They all showed Charging (USB). I now use AC inverter and it charges just like a wall charger.
eccenpix said:
I tried bunch of cig to usb car charger and none matched advertised output... They all showed Charging (USB). I now use AC inverter and it charges just like a wall charger.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I suspect you need to find one which properly follows the USB Battery Charging Specification. That link is to the most recent version, which came out on 7Dec2010 (remember Pearl Harbor!). Version 1.1 is easier - a Dedicated Charging Port is indicated by shorting together the data lines (the two middle conductors on a full sized USB connector. By doing so, it indicates the device may try to draw up to 1.8 A of current (although a dedicated charging port is allowed to limit the current to less than that, it must provide at least 1.5 A).
I bought a cheap USB hub with 5 ports, used an exacto knife to cut the traces going to the data lines (the middle two) on all the ports, and then shorted them together on each port. It's now no longer a USB hub, but a USB charger with 5 ports I can used to charge stuff (phone and Bluetooth, quite often). The AC adapter which it came with does 2 Amps. My Thunderbolt says "Charging (AC)" when plugged into it.
So, if you can open up one of your adapters, just solder a jumper between the middle two contacts (make sure they're not connected to anything else).
Just got the Rocketfish premium microUSB at Best Buy and it has a captive coiled cord and a USB port. TBolt says "AC plugged" and reads +670 mA.
Good choice on the Motorola Rapid Charge - I've burned through 3 other cheap car chargers trying to keep my phone alive while using Google Nav and this is the first one to work!
i have the rapid motorola one on amazon
lippstuh said:
i have the rapid motorola one on amazon
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
+1 Works great! Battery widget usually shows about +800mA while only charging. Real close to the wall charger

[Q] Can I charge my arc with 1A?

Hi,
I've lost my charger, and I don't know if I can charge it with a charger with 5v - 1A or not, what I do know is that charging with USB is 5v - 500mA.
What's the power of the SE Arc original charger?
On the charger it says output 5V 1A
Is that what your looking for
It's Exactelly what I'm looking for thank you very much
The original SE charger for the arc is the GreenHeart charger EP800. It has got an output of 5V; 850mA.
As far as I know, there's no SE charger with an output of 1A. I've seen chargers with 500mA, 700mA and the 850mA.
My charger got fried during a power surge while holidaying in India so after asking around on the forum, I bought a Nokia AC-10N charger with an output of 5V, 1200mA. I've been using it without any problems. Pretty happy with it. Charges the phone much faster.
Thank you, that helps very much, but I heared charging the phone with higher voltage or higher Amperage can charge it faster, but it lowers the battery life on the long terme, it's appreciated to charge it with lower power in order to preserve battery life
MehdiArc said:
Thank you, that helps very much, but I heared charging the phone with higher voltage or higher Amperage can charge it faster, but it lowers the battery life on the long terme, it's appreciated to charge it with lower power in order to preserve battery life
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Totally true on all counts. You can really use ANY usb charger to charge your Arc, but the higher the mA the faster it will charge. And the higher the mA, the less overall life your battery will have. If it's normally supposed to be good for 5000 recharges, it might drop to 4000 recharges (just numbers pulled out of thin air).
The "Normal" standard for USB power is 0.5A (or 500mA). The iPad for example uses 1.0A, or twice as much as standard. Now in the iPad's case, it refuses to charge with anything less. I don't know if that's true for the Arc or not...if so, and the SE charger is rated at 850mA, then that's probably as low as you'd want to go just to be on the safe side.
Personally, I'm willing to use the iPad's charger and charge a bit faster for a bit lower useful battery lifetime. A new battery I can buy....time spent waiting for my phone to be charged I can't get back
The amperage rating on a charger defines the maximum current the charger is capable of supplying. A 1A charger doesnt force 1A down the throat of whatever's connected to it, if you connect something can only manage to pull a maximum of 500mA then it will only get 500mA.
Consumer power supplies are generally constant voltage. E.g. a 5V charger will supply 5V to anything connected to it. The amount of current that the device will draw at 5V is the amount it was designed to draw, up to the limit that the charger can supply. If the charger cant supply enough, generally you just get slower charging (though some poorly designed devices will just refuse to charge at all). What *will* tend to destroy your device quickly is a voltage mismatch, e.g. connecting a 5V phone to a 12V charger.
You can get constant current power supplies. These ramp up the voltage in order to force the required current out regardless of what's attached to it (even if that's a human being). They are scary.
daveybaby said:
The amperage rating on a charger defines the maximum current the charger is capable of supplying. A 1A charger doesnt force 1A down the throat of whatever's connected to it, if you connect something can only manage to pull a maximum of 500mA then it will only get 500mA.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Exactelly what I was thinking, thanks.
Now I think I can charge my Arc with 1A without any problem, since it's gonna take only 850 mA from it

Solar charger

Any recommendations for sloar portable charger for NOTE-2 ?
I bought already one and instead of charging it is draining down the battery! Probably because it uncomon 11pins USB. This happens when I connect to solar panel. When I connect to battery power bank everything works fine, but my main puprose was to use the solar panels.
Arthur
What is the power output of the solar panel your using?
I think its 0.5 W
Sent from my SGH-T889 using xda app-developers app
Someone chime in here if im wrong. But based on output power of .5 watts, and voltage being 5 volts. I see that as having a current output of 100mAh.
Home computers have a usb output of 500mAh and the standard home charger that comes with it is 1000mAh or 1Ah charger.
Based on that, unless my math is wrong, which it could be as i suck at match, LOL, your not putting enough power into your phone. This is why its draining.
5 watts would give you 1000mAh output, which is whats recomended for the unit. I would say anything less then 3 or 3.5 watts would be breaking even.
IAmSixNine said:
Someone chime in here if im wrong. But based on output power of .5 watts, and voltage being 5 volts. I see that as having a current output of 100mAh.
Home computers have a usb output of 500mAh and the standard home charger that comes with it is 1000mAh or 1Ah charger.
Based on that, unless my math is wrong, which it could be as i suck at match, LOL, your not putting enough power into your phone. This is why its draining.
5 watts would give you 1000mAh output, which is whats recomended for the unit. I would say anything less then 3 or 3.5 watts would be breaking even.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
correct. Minimum you'll need to charge is 5W or 1 amp. 500 mA will just slow discharge. The charger that came with the phone is 2 A or 10W, this is why it charges faster. He'll probally need to charge the battery pack on the solar charger, then use the battery pack to charge your phone.
Sent from my SGH-T889 using Tapatalk 2
Thanks for pointing that out _Dennis_ I have been using a 1 amp charger for mine, charging at night while im asleep. I was not aware that it came with a stock 2 amp charger. Ive got other 1 amp chargers set up from previous phones so i never used the stock one.
So my math above is off by 50% since i was basing it off 1 amp charging, and the stock is 2 amp.
Ok, so if I go towards phone/notebook solar charger, what would be recommended ? My Samsunf tablet comes with 19v 2A adapter so itlooks like if I have charger to supply this same amount of power it should work for Slate and Note2 as well. Right ?
Sent from my SGH-T889 using xda app-developers app
Is 19V the output? If so then NO. The Note 2 requires 5V 2A..

QI Charger in car. With data & GPS ?

No
Can a qi charger charge the nexus 5 when data and GPS is being used ?
Will it charge or will the battery drain?
Sent from my Nexus 7 (2013) KitKat 4.4.2
Power consumption during data and GPS use varies depending on what apps are used, signal strength ect... so there is no definite answer. In general, I notice slight battery drain when using navigation when on wireless charging. Google's nav app uses more power than the 500 mah the Qi charger provides but the drain is much slower than on battery alone..
rikudo said:
Power consumption during data and GPS use varies depending on what apps are used, signal strength ect... so there is no definite answer. In general, I notice slight battery drain when using navigation when on wireless charging. Google's nav app uses more power than the 500 mah the Qi charger provides but the drain is much slower than on battery alone..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry, but what Qi charger are you using that only provides 500mA?
Even my $15 generic ebay Qi charger gets 751mA.
mmmmBACON said:
Sorry, but what Qi charger are you using that only provides 500mA?
Even my $15 generic ebay Qi charger gets 751mA.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
500 mA was an estimate, individual results vary. Take into account wireless charging has an efficiency of 70-80%, so a charger with a 751mA output would effectively charge at 600-526mA. Add a phone case and/or imperfect alignment charging efficiency drops even lower. In real world use my 750 mA qi charger charges at about the same rate as a 500 mA USB port.
rikudo said:
500 mA was an estimate, individual results vary. Take into account wireless charging has an efficiency of 70-80%, so a charger with a 751mA output would effectively charge at 600-526mA. Add a phone case and/or imperfect alignment charging efficiency drops even lower. In real world use my 750 mA qi charger charges at about the same rate as a 500 mA USB port.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh yeah, I took that into consideration already, which is why I gave such an exact number. I got 751mA from a 5V/1A output rated Qi charger.
I've done a bunch of tests of charge rates with stock, higher amp chargers, and my generic Qi charger.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=48856141&postcount=18
As long as the Qi charger you buy is rated as 5V/1A output (which is almost all of them out there, including the official nexus wireless charger, tylt vu, etc.), you should get around the charge rate I mentioned if it's maxed out fully. So people buying the expensive Qi chargers, are not getting any speed improvement over the cheap one I bought. Might look a little nicer sure, but I'll gladly keep the $20 - $50 in my pocket instead. If you want to read my whole post, I linked it.
Here's just the data portion.
Stock 1.2A LG wall adapter: 1053mA
2A USB wall adapter: 1053mA
Built in USB input on power bar: 1053mA
USB 3.0 port (desktop computer): 446mA (surprised it was so low for a USB 3.0 charge port)
USB 2.0 port (desktop computer): 334mA
Generic Qi charger (2A input/1A output)/Built in USB input on power bar: 751mA
Generic Qi charger/Stock LG adapter: 751mA
Generic Qi charger/2A USB adapter: 751mA
Generic Qi charger/USB 3.0 port: 696mA (interesting compared to directly plugging into USB 3.0)
Generic Qi charger/USB 2.0 port: 502mA (low, but again higher than direct cable)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's why I was just wondering what Qi charger you had and why you were saying 500mA because that is less than half the charge rate of the stock wall charger.
mmmmBACON said:
Oh yeah, I took that into consideration already, which is why I gave such an exact number. I got 751mA from a 5V/1A output rated Qi charger.
I've done a bunch of tests of charge rates with stock, higher amp chargers, and my generic Qi charger.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=48856141&postcount=18
As long as the Qi charger you buy is rated as 5V/1A output (which is almost all of them out there, including the official nexus wireless charger, tylt vu, etc.), you should get around the charge rate I mentioned if it's maxed out fully. So people buying the expensive Qi chargers, are not getting any speed improvement over the cheap one I bought. Might look a little nicer sure, but I'll gladly keep the $20 - $50 in my pocket instead. If you want to read my whole post, I linked it.
Here's just the data portion.
That's why I was just wondering what Qi charger you had and why you were saying 500mA because that is less than half the charge rate of the stock wall charger.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is strange, I used the "Current Widget" app as well. . I'm currently using an Anker Powerbank, it's a 6000 mAh battery with a built in Qi charger which shows an average 500 mA charge rate. I also have an official Nexus 5 Qi charger that also shows about 500 mA charge rate. When connected directly to the Nexus qi charger wall adaptor I get a 1560 mA charge rate. Thanks for your data, this makes me wonder how accurate "Current Widget" app actually is since our results differ so much.
rikudo said:
This is strange, I used the "Current Widget" app as well. . I'm currently using an Anker Powerbank, it's a 6000 mAh battery with a built in Qi charger which shows an average 500 mA charge rate. I also have an official Nexus 5 Qi charger that also shows about 500 mA charge rate. When connected directly to the Nexus qi charger wall adaptor I get a 1560 mA charge rate. Thanks for your data, this makes me wonder how accurate "Current Widget" app actually is since our results differ so much.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, I used CurrentWidget as well, it's a pretty close estimate, but it won't be 100% accurate. I just didn't want to tear things apart and use a multimeter to take readings. Make sure your CurrentWidget update interval is set to 1 so it gives you live updates. Then you just have to give it a few minutes to stabilize (it will always fluctuate though) and watch for the consistent highest reading over a period of 5 to 10 minutes to be as accurate as you can. For my readings, 751mA kept popping up over and over again but never higher, so it was reasonable to say that was the max my Qi charger was capable as long as it was receiving ample power itself.
The charge rate will also vary depending on where in the battery charge cycle you are recording. At the beginning and end of the charge cycle, it will not charge at full speed and will slow down the charge. This is to protect the phone and the battery. For best range of recording, try to take your readings when your battery is charging around the 25 - 65% full mark, that way you can be pretty confident that your phone/battery is allowing the charger to charge at full speed.
What is your Anker Powerbank output rated as?
Also, was that 1560mA a consistent reading, or just a spike?
Most likely it'll go down if the screen is on, if the screen is off, it may stay or go up extremely slow.
Thanks for the replies.
If the charge will go down when screen, data and GPS are on.. Then it's not really a suitable for a sat naval replacement.
Looks like I'll need to go with a cable.
Sent from my Nexus 7 (2013) KitKat 4.4.2
Look at those car cable mods, they'll meet your needs and will give you an idea on how to hide the cables
Sent from my SM-N9005 using Tapatalk
The qi chargers I tried in the car slowly drain the battery with navigation and streaming music. Do I went back to the cord in the car.
Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk 2
Don't forget with GPS and other things on your temperature will go pretty high and could reach 45C where wireless charging practically turns off and your charger will only try and maintain the current battery percent. At least this happens to me monitoring it using battery widget.
Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk
I haven't gone so far as to install current widget, out even better battery stats, but I have taken some long trips with navigation and music streaming, screen on the whole time, and with the cheap Chinese 'c1' car mount, I always arrive with more charge than I left with. Maybe this is because I live in a cold climate, and the charger does not stop because of excessive heat.
Sent from my Nexus 5 using Tapatalk
mmmmBACON said:
Yeah, I used CurrentWidget as well, it's a pretty close estimate, but it won't be 100% accurate. I just didn't want to tear things apart and use a multimeter to take readings. Make sure your CurrentWidget update interval is set to 1 so it gives you live updates. Then you just have to give it a few minutes to stabilize (it will always fluctuate though) and watch for the consistent highest reading over a period of 5 to 10 minutes to be as accurate as you can. For my readings, 751mA kept popping up over and over again but never higher, so it was reasonable to say that was the max my Qi charger was capable as long as it was receiving ample power itself.
The charge rate will also vary depending on where in the battery charge cycle you are recording. At the beginning and end of the charge cycle, it will not charge at full speed and will slow down the charge. This is to protect the phone and the battery. For best range of recording, try to take your readings when your battery is charging around the 25 - 65% full mark, that way you can be pretty confident that your phone/battery is allowing the charger to charge at full speed.
What is your Anker Powerbank output rated as?
Also, was that 1560mA a consistent reading, or just a spike?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The Powerbank Qi output is rated at 500 mA. The 1.8A wall adaptor gives a fairly consistent reading above 1500 mA.
I set faster update interval and found the following averages. (Battery @ 50%)
Nexus Qi 1.8A wall adapter: 1500-1605 mA
Nexus 5 stock wall adapter: 900-1000 mA
Nexus Qi charger plate: 450-740 mA
Qi Powerbank 500 mA: 300-476 mA
PC 2A USB port: 550-750 mA
It seems the Current Widget rates the summarized magnitude of draw from the battery. For example having the screen on and higher brightness will subtract from the measured charge. To negate this I placed the phone in airplane mode, screen off and set sampling to 5 s. Then after 10 s turned the phone on to view the last sample taken with the screen off.
Looks like you were right, a 750 mA rated charger factors in transmission losses. The Official Nexus Qi plate puts out 750 mA max. The Powerbank puts out 500 mA as labeled. The 1.8A wall adapter was surprising though. Anand's article stated the max charge rate was 1.2A but the 1.8A adapter clearly exceeds this rate.
rikudo said:
The Powerbank Qi output is rated at 500 mA. The 1.8A wall adaptor gives a fairly consistent reading above 1500 mA.
I set faster update interval and found the following averages. (Battery @ 50%)
Nexus Qi 1.8A wall adapter: 1500-1605 mA
Nexus 5 stock wall adapter: 900-1000 mA
Nexus Qi charger plate: 450-740 mA
Qi Powerbank 500 mA: 300-476 mA
PC 2A USB port: 550-750 mA
It seems the Current Widget rates the summarized magnitude of draw from the battery. For example having the screen on and higher brightness will subtract from the measured charge. To negate this I placed the phone in airplane mode, screen off and set sampling to 5 s. Then after 10 s turned the phone on to view the last sample taken with the screen off.
Looks like you were right, a 750 mA rated charger factors in transmission losses. The Official Nexus Qi plate puts out 750 mA max. The Powerbank puts out 500 mA as labeled. The 1.8A wall adapter was surprising though. Anand's article stated the max charge rate was 1.2A but the 1.8A adapter clearly exceeds this rate.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is interesting. My finding mirrored that of Anandtech. I used both the 1.2A stock adapter, and a 2A adapter and I was not able to increase my charging speed at all. It stayed at 1053.
Can you check the plug to see the voltage of the Nexus 5 Qi adapter. Is it 5V?

Categories

Resources