Charging Compatibility Test of Apple iPad Air 5 (20-100W)
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- Опубликовано: 10 июл 2024
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Introduction
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Hi, guys. Welcome back to today's video.
Today, we'll try 40 chargers to charge the brand new iPad Air (the fifth generation) to check its charging compatibility.
Chapter
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0:00 Intro
0:36 20W Charger Test
1:34 30W Charger Test
2:32 60W Charger Test
3:29 100W Charger Test
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Good one! Just the video i was looking for.
Hi and thanks for uploading this interesting charging of iPad Air 5 with various chargers. As normal, APPLE is restricting the charging wattage of all its devices from iPad to iPhone to their Mac line of notebooks and Mac desktops, perhaps to avoid damages related to power charging.
Buy any of the reputable brands will be okay, except for the 3 brands that failed to charge according to specs. Even 100W chargers can only charge up to around 30+ Watts so don’t waste money buying high wattage chargers for APPLE devices as it’s designed NOT to be overcharged.
APPLE 20W or the 30W would be the ideal charger for both the IPads and iPhones.
Thanks again ChargerLab for this informative video
I will just use original APPLE recommended chargers and other APPLE accessories for my APPLE devices as they are of high quality at a reasonable price with durability, reliability, longevity and guaranteed to work within the specifications.
It's clear that iPad Air 5 has a maximum power input of ~30W. For some reason Apple doesn't advertise the charging capacity of iPads but they do for the iPhones.
cuz they take agesssssss
Hello!! This was so helpful man ! I got ipad air 5 last week and it's awesome but the charger that came with it look the same as the regular iPhone charger.. but i have seen others get different one .. is that a problem??
Very interesting data. Guess I should get a new brick for that extra 10w
Mad you've made a whole video on this lol, and more ridiculous I watched it (I wasn't turned on, more hypnotic)
great video thank you
please make more like this
Amazing result, and Apple only bundle their 20W charger even though the iPad can do 30W
Please include Belkin in the future, thank you.
Interesting. On the back of my iPad the print says this:
A2589 5V 3A / 9V 2,22A
Suggesting it can pull 15W or 20W of power from the charger. And yet this one in the video pulled up to 33W. I guess the print refers to the power pulled from the included charger and is therefore misleading.
What is samsung 45 and 65w charger?
Can someone please explain the g raph and results to me? Thank you.
Nice 30w cap but that’s still fast you should do I’m new to your chapel but not iPad and home watts charging test along w discharge and 0-100% recharge time not many do all one this test ik I’ll take time but apple doesn’t say this only throws the charges only on iPad no longer on iPhone hahah
Extremely helpful, but the last chart can't be seen entirely because of the next video suggestion and the channel logo overlayed. Is there another place to see those charts? Thanks.
Thank you for the feedback. I've already adjusted the position of the widgets in this video's ending. It was an early mistake, and it has been rectified in recent videos.
@@ChargerLAB it is perfect!!! Thank you so much. Love your channel 👍
Amazing result and testing. I do think that beyond 33 Watt can be damaging to the battery because of how hot the iPad is. My iPad q2 inch take about 36th watt on 12th inch screen and I saw battery drainage problem happening alr.
battery drain because of charger?
You see with the Zendure charger that it actually only charges for a brief moment at the full speed and then throttles down again.
but 30-33 Watts seem to be realistic.
I would expect the internal charging control of the iPad to include temperature and such into the charge power it uses.
Can you also test the amount of sparking when plugging in and if there is coil whine (high pitched sounds) when charging or when using a wireless charger?
I had a problem with large sparks with a Ravpower 65w charger and coil whine with an Anker 18w charger when connected to a wireless charger. I would love to know about these issues before buying a charger but there is no place to find this information.
If you look at the charger reviews, a good input filter will prevent large sparks, it will have an NTC that limits the initial inrush current to prevent sparks.
@@DooMMasteR Thanks :) Is there an obvious way to tell a good input filter from a bad one?
Is there any way to tell if it has coil whine?
@@joedhoe not really, technically all switched power supplies suffer from coil whine, but in some it is better mitigated so it is less of an issue or no issue at all.
In 90% of the cases coil whine is a result of the switching frequency or one of it's harmonics resonating in the inductor windings/core.
Manufacturers choose and change their switching in such a matter that as little as possible resonance occurs and also dampen the physical movement of the components as best as possible, but even that can sometimes not eliminate it.
There is no general rule that can be applied with which you could simply determine: this will whine and this won't.
@@DooMMasteR The switching is probably why I heard the whine more when connecting a wireless charger that oscillates to induct power to the receiving device. I can't hear any coil whine with any of the apple chargers I've tried, even with wireless chargers. I guess you just have to listen for it. Since they are testing chargers anyway, I would love for this to be one of their tests.
@@joedhoe impedant loads are even worse to handle, yeah... You might have coil whine which that adapter, and not with anything else.
It is sadly a part of switched power supplies, especially if built to save space.
I just found this out recently while doing tests at home: iPad Air 5 only properly charges with a USB-C charger! It does NOT support Apple 2.1A (10W) or Apple 2.4A (12W) charging profiles anymore, which are available on their USB-A chargers. It will still charge, but painfully slow (at only 7.5W). I'm not sure if all Apple's USB-C iPads stopped supporting their old charging standards or just this new iPad Air 5. Lightning iPads and iPhones still seem to support it and can charge at 12W from USB-A chargers.
All new iPad that supports the USB-C port cannot support Apple 2.4A anymore.
TL;DR: The Zendure 65W charger is the best @ 36.12W
It was 26 but chart showed 36
It seems to be "not easy" to max the charge speed out, but ~30 Watts seems possible.
Yout purple looks more purple than mine does
You should test the 65w Samsung charger.
Also I would like to see a test of the small 30w Baseus car charger.
so iPad supports 30W, google said 20w max lol
It never reached 36W . Usb showed 26W and chart showed 36W for the same charger. Highest is 33W
Sorry about the inconvenience.
Please refer to the value on the tester.
@@ChargerLAB its ok . Just add a pin comments of yours clarifying else everyone will be in confusion 😅
Why not make the correction???
And this means a 30 W Charger is enough.
Yep