Hey man, I didn't fully understand your explanation on the multiple-phone charging. If it's an overall 100W, that means that if you connect say, a phone and a tablet that are both capable of charging at 40W each, in theory this charger should charge both of them at full 40W. Am I understanding it right?
Hi there. Yes, you are right. These are the specs for the ports from HyperJuice: USB-C1: 100W Power Delivery 3.0, 5~15V/3A, 20V/5A USB-C2: 100W Power Delivery 3.0, 5~15V/3A, 20V/5A USB-A1: 18W QC 3.0, 5V/3A, 9V/2A, 12V/1.5A 5/10/12W USB-A2: 18W QC 3.0, 5V/3A, 9V/2A, 12V/1.5A 5/10/12W As long as the two devices are connected with the two USB-C ports and can utilize the Power Delivery specs above they both can get up to 50 watts.
Even if the charger is small for a 100w charger it sticks out too much, some brands make regular ones (silicon based semi-conductors) with a razor plug so it doesn't stay in the way. I had a charger like that and with the EU adapter (that came in the box) it broke after 2 times being hit, not very strong ! Else yeah it's so cool being able to charge almost everything with a single charger
Yes you can. But it is probably overkill for the new MacBook Air. It will just draw the max 30W it needs via Power Delivery. Nothing more. So you will have plenty of headroom for the other three ports.
I had a Dell XPS 2 in 1 that also had a 130W charger. It was possible to charge the device with a slower 100w power delivery power supply via the thunderbolt ports but you get a warning that it’s not the original charger and it takes longer. So I think it should be working and for the very most scenarios the load from the XPS shouldn’t exceed 100W power draw.
@@TheIdeaofTechnology ok so i have a razer blade stealth late 2019 which has a 100w usb type c charger and a s10e would it charge them both at the full speed?
@@star43able Not at full speed. They would split the 100w for these two devices. But most of the time your notebook will not request the full 100w and will be fine with 85w leaving the rest for other devices. It should be totally fine at the end.
@@star43able If you really need the 100w single for the razerblade then you should look for a more powerful GaN charger like the ThunderGo 130W or 200w. I use the 130w version for myself and this way you can fully charge with 100w while having the rest for all your other devices. www.indiegogo.com/projects/thundergo-most-compact-powerful-200w-gan-charger#/
The charger is on as soon it is pluged into the power outlet and when you connect a device it will negotiate the right power with the connected device and starts charging. At least thats the behavior I got with my model.
Would you get a third party charger for your notebook?
Hey man, I didn't fully understand your explanation on the multiple-phone charging. If it's an overall 100W, that means that if you connect say, a phone and a tablet that are both capable of charging at 40W each, in theory this charger should charge both of them at full 40W. Am I understanding it right?
Hi there. Yes, you are right. These are the specs for the ports from HyperJuice:
USB-C1: 100W Power Delivery 3.0, 5~15V/3A, 20V/5A
USB-C2: 100W Power Delivery 3.0, 5~15V/3A, 20V/5A
USB-A1: 18W QC 3.0, 5V/3A, 9V/2A, 12V/1.5A 5/10/12W
USB-A2: 18W QC 3.0, 5V/3A, 9V/2A, 12V/1.5A 5/10/12W
As long as the two devices are connected with the two USB-C ports and can utilize the Power Delivery specs above they both can get up to 50 watts.
@@TheIdeaofTechnology It's a nice charger, but quite expensive. Aukey makes a 100W charger for half the price, and in black. Thanks for your reply.
You are welcome.
Even if the charger is small for a 100w charger it sticks out too much, some brands make regular ones (silicon based semi-conductors) with a razor plug so it doesn't stay in the way.
I had a charger like that and with the EU adapter (that came in the box) it broke after 2 times being hit, not very strong ! Else yeah it's so cool being able to charge almost everything with a single charger
so its PD? thought of getting one for my msi gs66 stealth charge it through thunderbolt 3
Yes it is.
Can you use this charger for a new macbook air? The new macbook air uses 30w - will this charger charge it at that pace? It says UP TO 100watts.
Yes you can. But it is probably overkill for the new MacBook Air. It will just draw the max 30W it needs via Power Delivery. Nothing more. So you will have plenty of headroom for the other three ports.
Wondering if this will charge 2 phones at 65w each ❓
Hows it holding out after months of use good or...
Still going strong. But you are limited to 100w total and the standard power delivery rails.
@@TheIdeaofTechnology
Thxs
Its able to charge a dell xps 15 9550?
I had a Dell XPS 2 in 1 that also had a 130W charger. It was possible to charge the device with a slower 100w power delivery power supply via the thunderbolt ports but you get a warning that it’s not the original charger and it takes longer. So I think it should be working and for the very most scenarios the load from the XPS shouldn’t exceed 100W power draw.
is it 100w per usb c port and 18w for the usb port? or 100w in total
It's both. 100w per USB c port and 100w total. It's simply depends what devices are connected and how much energy they are needing.
@@TheIdeaofTechnology ok so i have a razer blade stealth late 2019 which has a 100w usb type c charger and a s10e would it charge them both at the full speed?
@@star43able Not at full speed. They would split the 100w for these two devices. But most of the time your notebook will not request the full 100w and will be fine with 85w leaving the rest for other devices. It should be totally fine at the end.
@@TheIdeaofTechnology for whatever reason the razerblade wants the full 100w as when i game on it the battery will drain even on 90w
@@star43able If you really need the 100w single for the razerblade then you should look for a more powerful GaN charger like the ThunderGo 130W or 200w. I use the 130w version for myself and this way you can fully charge with 100w while having the rest for all your other devices. www.indiegogo.com/projects/thundergo-most-compact-powerful-200w-gan-charger#/
can this charge 2 phones at 45w each ?
Does Every time a device is connected or removed, the charger will On and Off once?
The charger is on as soon it is pluged into the power outlet and when you connect a device it will negotiate the right power with the connected device and starts charging. At least thats the behavior I got with my model.
HJ is very reliable. Trust their projects without looking.
choetech is way smaller
This is just an advertisemwnt
first