@@roninr8199 Yes and no, if you continuously power a 65W laptop from this for hours it heats up slightly but nothing alarming or to worry about. It's perfectly normal and this is well built and will last for ages doing what it's supposed to do.
@@ratkutti i have hp aero 13 5600u laptop which I hope has pd charging also which takes around 1.30 hours to fully charge. So I can expect belkin charger also to be plugged in for 1.5 hours minimum. I also checked samsung 65w pd charger. I can also use for samsung phones when I upgrade in future.
This model can offer a 65W output on either of the two ports if the other is not in use. However, if both ports are in use, one will provide a maximum of 45W and the other 20W.
I've been using this charger for a while and am very impressed with it from the outside. Thanks for showing us the inside. The components are of Apple-level quality (which has Rubicon capacitors for example), but at least it's properly designed and well built!
It seems ok to me. No premium components, but that's not what your average customer is looking for anyway. I would have liked to see the internal structure of the transformer, because this is where the output side gets closest to mains side. The only thing that actually separates you (with your phone or anything) and the mains voltage is just 2 layers of enamel coating on the wire and a few layers of insulating tape between the coils. No fun if that is done badly.
I currently own this charger now, assuming this charger will deliver its maximum wattage when the device is in demand, (65w) I measured an input of 70.2W from the AC outlet. it seems like the charger has an overall efficiency of 92%, which is really good. It is also 2 % more efficient than Belkin's previous generation of Gan 6xWatt chargers. I wish that ChargerLAB could do a review of this product in detail, testing its efficiency and the differences in the waveform of its output current. Thx :)
I know I asked this before but I haven't seen the request carried out: Would it be possible to also test whether the multiport chargers include dynamic load distribution between the different ports, please? In my opinion the behaviour of the "cheap" devices to temporarily disconnect all ports (in a few cases even multiple times!) whenever a connected or disconnected makes them completely unusable. I do have a BlitzWolf BW-S25 with 6 ports and this crazy behaviour (and some other design faults, like automatically shutting off a used port after some time) make it completely unusable.
@@RoyalFizzbin I'm aware, I have around 10 of them but I stopped buying them since most of them are shit. With most setups (having a MCU to monitor all ports chips) it would be trivial to handle this in a halfway sane way but shit Chinese MCU firmware seems to be the way to go.
Hello friend, can you tell me if Belkin 65w can simultaneously charge iPhone 14 pro max and iPad Pro 12.9 at their maximum calculated charge, which is 27w for iPhone and 33w for iPad.
This charger has relatively high ripple. When I use it to charge my ThinkPad X1, the touchpad sensitivity decreases. When I use a different charger, I don't experience this issue.
I noticed this too with my HP ProBook 430 G8, it makes the trackpad go fucking nuts - ended up taking it back since it was so shit, and I now use a dual port 67W Xiaomi adaptor which doesn't have this problem
@@LoganT547 Few people have responded to this issue. I have tested the Belkin 65W, Anker 100W 3-port charger, and the Anker 45W single-port charger, all of which had this problem. Lenovo's 65W original charger works fine, and Apple's 20W, 70W, and 140W chargers don't have any issues either. So now I'm using the Apple 70W charger.
@@LoganT547 Few people have responded to this issue. I have tested the Belkin 65W, Anker 100W 3-port charger, and the Anker 45W single-port charger, all of which had this problem. Lenovo's original charger works fine, and Apple's 20W, 70W, and 140W chargers don't have any issues either. So now I'm using the Apple 70W charger.
Few people have responded to this issue. I have tested the Belkin 65W, Anker 100W 3-port charger, and the Anker 45W single-port charger, all of which had this problem. Lenovo's original charger works fine, and Apple's 20W, 70W, and 140W chargers don't have any issues either. So now I'm using the Apple 70W charger.
@@f78fkI would love to use an Apple adaptor with my laptop due to the swappable plug ends and extension cord compatibility, but unfortunately they don't support PPS or Mi Turbo Charge which my Xiaomi device requires for max charging speed.
I own this and am excited to see it's inners without having to sacrifice mine, this charger is amazing.
Wait this has QC5 🤯
Does it heat up if we charge 65w laptop?
@@roninr8199 Yes and no, if you continuously power a 65W laptop from this for hours it heats up slightly but nothing alarming or to worry about. It's perfectly normal and this is well built and will last for ages doing what it's supposed to do.
@@ratkutti i have hp aero 13 5600u laptop which I hope has pd charging also which takes around 1.30 hours to fully charge. So I can expect belkin charger also to be plugged in for 1.5 hours minimum.
I also checked samsung 65w pd charger. I can also use for samsung phones when I upgrade in future.
did you end up buying the belkin? how does it perform for you? @@roninr8199
This model can offer a 65W output on either of the two ports if the other is not in use. However, if both ports are in use, one will provide a maximum of 45W and the other 20W.
I've been using this charger for a while and am very impressed with it from the outside. Thanks for showing us the inside. The components are of Apple-level quality (which has Rubicon capacitors for example), but at least it's properly designed and well built!
Are the internals high quality? It is a well made charger?
It seems ok to me. No premium components, but that's not what your average customer is looking for anyway. I would have liked to see the internal structure of the transformer, because this is where the output side gets closest to mains side. The only thing that actually separates you (with your phone or anything) and the mains voltage is just 2 layers of enamel coating on the wire and a few layers of insulating tape between the coils. No fun if that is done badly.
I currently own this charger now, assuming this charger will deliver its maximum wattage when the device is in demand, (65w) I measured an input of 70.2W from the AC outlet. it seems like the charger has an overall efficiency of 92%, which is really good. It is also 2 % more efficient than Belkin's previous generation of Gan 6xWatt chargers. I wish that ChargerLAB could do a review of this product in detail, testing its efficiency and the differences in the waveform of its output current. Thx :)
hi! @AllThingsOnePlace did some tests on this charger
could you provide a link? Thanks! @@befringe
I know I asked this before but I haven't seen the request carried out: Would it be possible to also test whether the multiport chargers include dynamic load distribution between the different ports, please? In my opinion the behaviour of the "cheap" devices to temporarily disconnect all ports (in a few cases even multiple times!) whenever a connected or disconnected makes them completely unusable. I do have a BlitzWolf BW-S25 with 6 ports and this crazy behaviour (and some other design faults, like automatically shutting off a used port after some time) make it completely unusable.
There are very few multi-port current-gen GaN chargers that DON’T do some renegotiation on plug/unplug/addition.
@@RoyalFizzbin I'm aware, I have around 10 of them but I stopped buying them since most of them are shit. With most setups (having a MCU to monitor all ports chips) it would be trivial to handle this in a halfway sane way but shit Chinese MCU firmware seems to be the way to go.
Nice was waiting for this
I can't understand why they always choose the bad capacitor brand for AC source . There are so many better brand such as Nichicon, Elna, Capxon....
Hello friend, can you tell me if Belkin 65w can simultaneously charge iPhone 14 pro max and iPad Pro 12.9 at their maximum calculated charge, which is 27w for iPhone and 33w for iPad.
No
No, one port will be max 20w and the other 45w
Does it is capable to dji air 3??
bought this to charge my friends Samsung phones and my iPad Air + iPhone 13 Pro 👍🏻got it for €40 including 25% VAT.
Soporta la carga super rapida 2.0 de samsung los 45w?
Zendure c4 please
Does this PFC?
Very rare for adaptors under 100W
One plus dual port supervooc charger test as well...thank you
Very small, very compact
If it doesn’t output 9V@2.22A then the 20W marking is false advertising 🤔
it can output a maximum of 9v 3A which means it support outputing in 9V 2.22A.
It has PPS so can adjust
Thankyou
This charger has relatively high ripple. When I use it to charge my ThinkPad X1, the touchpad sensitivity decreases. When I use a different charger, I don't experience this issue.
I noticed this too with my HP ProBook 430 G8, it makes the trackpad go fucking nuts - ended up taking it back since it was so shit, and I now use a dual port 67W Xiaomi adaptor which doesn't have this problem
@@LoganT547 Few people have responded to this issue. I have tested the Belkin 65W, Anker 100W 3-port charger, and the Anker 45W single-port charger, all of which had this problem. Lenovo's 65W original charger works fine, and Apple's 20W, 70W, and 140W chargers don't have any issues either. So now I'm using the Apple 70W charger.
@@LoganT547 Few people have responded to this issue. I have tested the Belkin 65W, Anker 100W 3-port charger, and the Anker 45W single-port charger, all of which had this problem. Lenovo's original charger works fine, and Apple's 20W, 70W, and 140W chargers don't have any issues either. So now I'm using the Apple 70W charger.
Few people have responded to this issue. I have tested the Belkin 65W, Anker 100W 3-port charger, and the Anker 45W single-port charger, all of which had this problem. Lenovo's original charger works fine, and Apple's 20W, 70W, and 140W chargers don't have any issues either. So now I'm using the Apple 70W charger.
@@f78fkI would love to use an Apple adaptor with my laptop due to the swappable plug ends and extension cord compatibility, but unfortunately they don't support PPS or Mi Turbo Charge which my Xiaomi device requires for max charging speed.
well
Nice