Other youtubers need to learn a lot form you, this is called actual review. Everyone are unboxing and making content just nonsense. Whatever comes in package nobody need to show it because almost all manufacturor list the contents whats in the package. Excellent content regarding power adapters.
Just wanted to share that Zendure released an updated Passport III line that goes to 65W now (not sure if they improved on any of the split charging capabilities from the prev model). Was contemplating getting that but its steep at 69.99USD. It was going for 39USD on their kickstarter. Perhaps worth a taking a look in the future also - there's really no one technical who has reviewed that yet.
I saw that afterwards. It looks like it changes the USB lineup a little, improves the power distribution, more USB C, less USB A, and adds more PPS modes although I don't see a 5A 11V mode so still 25W for most Samsung devices (which is plenty) so really welcome changes. I will have to check it out eventually.
Another great video!! 🙂 Do you have a recommendation for any Univerals Travel Adaptor that has USB-C for laptop charging? Any opinion on Heymix GaN Universal Travel Adaptor in 65w, 75w or 100w? I need to be able to plug in a hair-styling tool and charging electronics. Any recommendation would be highly appreciated. Thank you 🙂
Yeah, I need to get another version of this video out. I have slowly been collecting adapters to make a new video. Hopefully will be out in early 2024.
I can't wait for the Apple 96W and 67W adapter tests :) Judging by how the 60ish adapters are performing, I don't have much hope for the 67W but a comparison with the 96W will be interesting.
@@AllThingsOnePlace It would be interesting to compare all 3. It could be in 1 video or you can do a separate video for the 140W if you want to get into more detail on the 140W and PD 3.1, but also talk about the 67W and 96W and how they compare to the 140W. How ever you decide to do it I will be watching :)
That plug is the Europlug (CEE 7/16 Alternative II). It is designed to work in all continental Europe but it is limited to 2.5. That is why it should not be used with for example hair dryers. Assume any travel adapter using it to be dubious. Also it does not support grounding yet many of these adapters accept grounded plugs That makes them illegal for example in Finland.
Yeah, it was a heavily requested video, notice I haven't made another one. haha I want to gather some better options for international travel adapters but actually found finding good ones very difficult. Also, these things are so bulky I would never take one with me. I bring a small country adapter or a proper mains cable for the adapter I bring with me.
One travel adapter that I love is the MOGICS Donut Power Strip. The integrated USB charges are really useful but boy do they get hot. Also they are don't have the best retention.
Is there an outlet adapter that you would recommend just to convert the plug type? I'm using the Satechi 165W power adapter, like we talked about before, but I need something to convert the foreign plug type into a US one. It would be nice to not have to bring multiple adapters just for this purpose. Does just any outlet adapter work? I guess it would be nice to have a resetable fuse.
I strongly recommend agaist these type of adapters and instead use specific adapters for your needs. You seldom tavel to both Europe and Australia for your trips. There is one decent multi country adapter by Skross but it's a double piece one. In Europe the pieces are sold separately as you would need only one depending on your need.
@@AllThingsOnePlace There isn't such a thing as a "German socket". In Germany they sell extension cords with the big round, earthed sockets as well as small, unearthed sockets. Wall outlets typically have the former because you need to be able to fit all kinds of devices in, including class-1 (single insulated) devices that are earthed. Plugging such a device into an outlet that does not have an earth contact is a potential safety hazard, so the inability to do so is by design. Class 2 devices typically aren't earthed since they have better insulation (the cabinet will typically be plastic instead of metal as well).
No, schuko is specifically designed to be used in unearthed outlets (CEE 7/1) though of course only in environments where earth potential is not available. You can never break the earth where availabile. Unearthed CEE 7/2 plugs cannot be used on earthed sockets for safety reasons. They have not been used for decades though so unless you collect for example old radios it is not an issue.
I have several similar to these. But recently found they are too big to use in Malaysai, especially the wall power points in KLIA. The big blocks would partially cover the power point switches and turn them off when I push them fully in to get a connection with the pins.
8:45 just wondering have you gotten around to doing the tear down for usb adapter safety for these? In particular the Zendure since I just ordered one from Amazon(it's on sale) for my upcoming trip to HK/China.
I'm guessing it's not possible for a travel adaptor to be much smaller than these. We don't need to plug in ac plugs into the adaptor, we just need a USB hub that can plug into a any wall socket, and these seem quite large while not supplying much power. Good to see the resettable fuse though.
Yeah, I like the adapters that come with a few plug adapters like the Minix ones and are only USB adapters. Those ones weren't the best power quality wise (there are tons of rebrands of them also) but for travel probably the smallest high power USB adapter you can get.
Hi, wondering if you have any recommendations for plug adapters instead of travel power adapters which seem inefficient from your reviews. I am looking at Ceptics World Travel All-in-one, but am leaning towards World Set w/pouch.
Thanks for all your great reviews. So far, I'm now considering the Satechi 165W GaN Charger based on your review as a travel option for a trip to Europe with my family. Regarding these travel adapters, do you have any recommendations for simpler ones that would be US 120v input only (rather than those multi-input models) to Type C European plug (for Germany, Italy, Prague)? Ideally, they would have the US 120v input + a couple USB-C and maybe a USB-A inputs. Thank you.
I have been putting off the next round of travel adapter video in hopes that something better will appear. For now I'd bring a country specific cable (or two) and bring the big adapter with me.
@@AllThingsOnePlace Thanks. Assume you are suggesting a country-specific power cable for i.e. the Satechi. What did you mean by "bring the big adapter?"
@@AllThingsOnePlace I do see a few new travel adapter ones with 3 or 4 usb ports even. Even though they are sketchy, I never lose the adapter parts like Minix style ones, and I do find them reliable for travel. I would love to see and updated version. Right now I am looking for one of those multi-port ones 3 minimum USB C, don't need A anymore. And then my plan will plug in an Anker 150w into that with USA plug. That should give me enough ports for everything. I would be willing to donate/give small "bounty" to help encourage a new review process if possible!
Any way you could do a test of voltage converters for traveling? I'm just looking for a small one to use my grooming gear overseas, and none of them seem very good.
mmhmm, yeah there are probably a lot of bad ones out there. I haven't looked at any really small ones, I have a few larger wattage ones but that also doesn't help. Even for a 50 watt transformer it'll end up being rather bulky and heavy.
That's not an Italian style plug, that's called a "Europlug" and it's limited to 2.5A and works in most of Europe (UK/Ireland excluded) due to its peculiar design. The official name is CEE 7/16 Alternative II plug.
Yeah, it's a weird hybrid thing, it mostly closely resembles the Italian plug but I should've put more emphasis on the 'it is like'. The Italian plug has the middle ground pin also. Thank you for the plug name though, useful info! Certainly not limited to 2.5A in these adapters, 6 amp fuses, oops!
@@AllThingsOnePlace actually, it's closer to the Swiss plug or the IEC 60906-1 standard, just minus the ground in this case. It's not weird at all, it's been used in Europe since the 1970's.
@@LGNilsson The standard I am sure is good. I was referring to these travel adapters and a 2.5 amp limit. Is that socket limited or do the plugs have 2.5A fuses? In either case these are not compliant. These things seem like they probably don't comply with any of the standards instead of fully complying with one. It sounds like the best action would be to have a proper plug for the job, or if you have to use an adapter get one that does one thing correctly and doesn't try to be all the adapters... in one place... I like the ones with the bag of slide on plugs and only one socket type.
@@AllThingsOnePlace the plugs obviously don't have fuses, only the UK does that... But yes, the travel adapters don't tend to comply with the Europlug standard, so if used in Europe, or any other country with a socket where it would fit, it would not be meeting the standard if a higher amperage device was plugged in. Fully agree with you on the second point.
Wanted to add a comment very much like this but then found this discussion. The power plugs in Europe are a mixed bag and differ in a lot of aspects. The "Europlug" or CEE 7/16 basically is the common denominator between those and compatible with most outlets found in Europe. What you called the German plug is a CEE 7/7, in Germany referred to as a "Schuko", abbr. for Schutzkontakt, meaning it has a protective earth contact. CEE 7/7 will fit Type E and Type F Sockets used in Belgium, France, Netherlands, Germany and others. In regards to safety CEE 7/7 should never fit in a travel adapter. This boils down to: - no protective earth being provided by the travel adapter, but required for CEE 7/7 compatible outlets - as you pointed out too, vastly different current allowance between in this case Europlug and CEE 7/7 (2.5A vs 16A). In most situations these will work fine and be "safe enough". But when misused they can become a fire and safety hazard. As everything electric I guess. Just some trivia for you. Keep up the indepth reviews!
Yep, had a few people ask about that one. I put it on the list. I expect the USB to behave a bit differently as they modernized that. I expect the plug bits to be exactly the same.
Have you come across the "OneAdaptr OneWorld MacPro"? It's been appearing in ads for me and seems to make some massive claims. I don't know if it's possible to do some of the stuff it's claiming in that form factor but would love to see a breakdown of it
I haven't seen that one yet. Certainly has a lot of 'press' coverage claims on their website. It looks like the USB power adapter is going to be very standard and that part very likely does not have a safety listing but it looks like it meets a grounding specification? I wonder if the USB side has a path to earth.
@@AllThingsOnePlace From what I can see there are two models. Theres: - "OneWorld PD" - 3x usb-a @ 5V2.4a, 1x usbc pd max 18w. (This one seemingly IS grounded) - "OneWorld 65" - 2x usb-a + 1x usb-c @ 5V3a, 2x usbc pd 65W max, (This one seemingly is NOT grounded) The 65 one is in a bundle with some "macmate" wireless pad thing that also splits one of the usbc ports to, in total, "Power and charge up to 8 devices at the same time thru the wireless charger, USB-C PD, smart USB-C & USB-A ports and the universal AC outlet." sounds... ambitious. Who knows. maybe their design team are just on fire.
Do I really need these or can I just get Baseus 100W PD GaN3 Fast Wall Charger Block with an adapter (non power conversion) for PHILIPPINES? I am from usa so yeah.. going to ph soon. Trying to figure out the best way without carrying so many things but still having fast charging.
Yes, I would get a dedicated adapter. These travel contraptions are okay but I'd rather have something that does one job well rather than two jobs okay.
@@AllThingsOnePlace is there a specific adapter I should get for a USA plug baesus for traveling to Europe? Or will the cheap two prong to eu adapter work?
@@vincentrowold1104 Yeah, a basic adapter will work. I would check for one with the proper pin layout (sheathed pins, small angle to one of the pins if the 2.5 amp plug version). If UK obviously, have to get an adapter with their big plug. Big thing for those is they have to be fused in the plug.
Will you also try the Baseus 3 Port 65w charger? I'm really torn between that one and the Anker Nano II 65w for travel but I can't find any detailed review, or at least I can't find any as good as yours (you're doing an amazing job, btw). After watching some of your videos also I see that the 65w range is kind of a mixed bag, but I'm still looking for the right 65w charger since to me it's the perfect balance between size and power for portability (or at least it should be).
The Baseus 3 port is not as good as the Anker Nano II 65W in terms of power efficiency. I know the Baseus has multiple ports but it doesn't offer much else it is significantly larger than the nano II. I want to do an overall 65W round of adapters.
@@AllThingsOnePlace Thanks for the answer and for the tip, I appreciate that. At this point i think I'll go with the Nano as you suggested since it really looks like the one to buy. Btw, I'm really looking forward to the video about the 65w chargers. Keep it up, man! 😉
@@RapManCZ I'll have a look at that, thanks 😉The fact is that I'm looking for a good replacement to the Apple 67w charger that came with my MacBook Pro cause it's too bulky for my liking and I was looking at all these GaN chargers. Unfortunately the 65w range is like the sweet spot for both size and power, especially if you need to charge a laptop. Eventually I got the Anker Nano II, as suggested above, for a good price (27€). It seems to work very well for now, doesn't heat up at all and it's super compact. But I'll be testing more accurately it in the next weeks and if it turns out to be not that great I'll be sending it back to Amazon.
Thanks for an other great video. When answering the question what power adaptor do you wanna get? The real answer is to build your own Power adaptor that perfectly reduces harmonic distortion, has power factor correction and keeps cool.
Also, infinite watts and probably a power bank too? Yeah, the data is out there if someone wants to see what everyone is doing in the space. Who knows if anyone will make something better.
Also wanted to ask - my country uses UK type G plug, most of the other plugs you reviewed and recommend on the channel seem to be type A plugs (China & US). Would you recommend using a travel adapter and getting one of the well reviewed type A plug chargers like the Baseus? I am somewhat on the fence and am not technical enough to know which is more optimum as a lean setup for travel and local remote use.
You can buy travel adaptors which don’t plug directly into the wall but instead have a C7 (figure of 8) mains socket. You can then buy short country-specific mains leads (cheap on Amazon). Personally I think this is a better approach.
I agree with this approach! Some of the adapters reviewed support this and some don't. I also like the approach of MINIX, INVZI, insert about 30 other companies that use the same design, a clip on country specific plug. Baseus is a tough one as they seem to not really be into the UK market much yet. I am slowly working on expanding my international testing abilities though.
@@albedo0point39 Is this possible with the much recommended baseus 100W 4 port GAN charger? For example for someone who often travels between the EU and Japan/SEA?
Yeah, it looks like the product is gone, Amazon will often redirect if the product doesn't exist anymore. I don't spend any time going back over these links either so in time they will fail.
Other youtubers need to learn a lot form you, this is called actual review. Everyone are unboxing and making content just nonsense. Whatever comes in package nobody need to show it because almost all manufacturor list the contents whats in the package. Excellent content regarding power adapters.
Thanks! I need to get some more travel adapters on.
Just found your channel and I love your occasional dry sense of humor. Adds a real charm to your videos!
Thanks!
Just wanted to share that Zendure released an updated Passport III line that goes to 65W now (not sure if they improved on any of the split charging capabilities from the prev model). Was contemplating getting that but its steep at 69.99USD. It was going for 39USD on their kickstarter. Perhaps worth a taking a look in the future also - there's really no one technical who has reviewed that yet.
I saw that afterwards. It looks like it changes the USB lineup a little, improves the power distribution, more USB C, less USB A, and adds more PPS modes although I don't see a 5A 11V mode so still 25W for most Samsung devices (which is plenty) so really welcome changes. I will have to check it out eventually.
does it convert as well?
Another great video!! 🙂 Do you have a recommendation for any Univerals Travel Adaptor that has USB-C for laptop charging? Any opinion on Heymix GaN Universal Travel Adaptor in 65w, 75w or 100w?
I need to be able to plug in a hair-styling tool and charging electronics. Any recommendation would be highly appreciated. Thank you 🙂
Yeah, I need to get another version of this video out. I have slowly been collecting adapters to make a new video. Hopefully will be out in early 2024.
I can't wait for the Apple 96W and 67W adapter tests :) Judging by how the 60ish adapters are performing, I don't have much hope for the 67W but a comparison with the 96W will be interesting.
Should I do an apple only video with the 67, 96 and 140w or keep the 140W stuff for a different video since it is PD 3.1?
@@AllThingsOnePlace It would be interesting to compare all 3. It could be in 1 video or you can do a separate video for the 140W if you want to get into more detail on the 140W and PD 3.1, but also talk about the 67W and 96W and how they compare to the 140W. How ever you decide to do it I will be watching :)
That plug is the Europlug (CEE 7/16 Alternative II). It is designed to work in all continental Europe but it is limited to 2.5. That is why it should not be used with for example hair dryers. Assume any travel adapter using it to be dubious. Also it does not support grounding yet many of these adapters accept grounded plugs That makes them illegal for example in Finland.
Yeah, it was a heavily requested video, notice I haven't made another one. haha I want to gather some better options for international travel adapters but actually found finding good ones very difficult. Also, these things are so bulky I would never take one with me. I bring a small country adapter or a proper mains cable for the adapter I bring with me.
One travel adapter that I love is the MOGICS Donut Power Strip. The integrated USB charges are really useful but boy do they get hot. Also they are don't have the best retention.
Thanks for the suggestion, I will have to check that out.
Is there an outlet adapter that you would recommend just to convert the plug type? I'm using the Satechi 165W power adapter, like we talked about before, but I need something to convert the foreign plug type into a US one. It would be nice to not have to bring multiple adapters just for this purpose. Does just any outlet adapter work? I guess it would be nice to have a resetable fuse.
I strongly recommend agaist these type of adapters and instead use specific adapters for your needs. You seldom tavel to both Europe and Australia for your trips. There is one decent multi country adapter by Skross but it's a double piece one. In Europe the pieces are sold separately as you would need only one depending on your need.
Thanks for the suggestion of a good option. There are so many deathdapters on the market it's difficult to find good ones.
Just a small note: The same socket the German type plug goes in also fits the Italian plug.
Yeah, a 2 pin Italian plug will fit in a German socket. The other way is hit or miss. Trains I noticed has wider pin holes so they both fit.
@@AllThingsOnePlace There isn't such a thing as a "German socket". In Germany they sell extension cords with the big round, earthed sockets as well as small, unearthed sockets. Wall outlets typically have the former because you need to be able to fit all kinds of devices in, including class-1 (single insulated) devices that are earthed. Plugging such a device into an outlet that does not have an earth contact is a potential safety hazard, so the inability to do so is by design. Class 2 devices typically aren't earthed since they have better insulation (the cabinet will typically be plastic instead of metal as well).
No, schuko is specifically designed to be used in unearthed outlets (CEE 7/1) though of course only in environments where earth potential is not available. You can never break the earth where availabile.
Unearthed CEE 7/2 plugs cannot be used on earthed sockets for safety reasons. They have not been used for decades though so unless you collect for example old radios it is not an issue.
I have several similar to these.
But recently found they are too big to use in Malaysai, especially the wall power points in KLIA.
The big blocks would partially cover the power point switches and turn them off when I push them fully in to get a connection with the pins.
Ah, yeah, good insight. Thanks!
8:45 just wondering have you gotten around to doing the tear down for usb adapter safety for these? In particular the Zendure since I just ordered one from Amazon(it's on sale) for my upcoming trip to HK/China.
I have not.
I'm guessing it's not possible for a travel adaptor to be much smaller than these. We don't need to plug in ac plugs into the adaptor, we just need a USB hub that can plug into a any wall socket, and these seem quite large while not supplying much power. Good to see the resettable fuse though.
Yeah, I like the adapters that come with a few plug adapters like the Minix ones and are only USB adapters. Those ones weren't the best power quality wise (there are tons of rebrands of them also) but for travel probably the smallest high power USB adapter you can get.
Hi, wondering if you have any recommendations for plug adapters instead of travel power adapters which seem inefficient from your reviews.
I am looking at Ceptics World Travel All-in-one, but am leaning towards World Set w/pouch.
Yeah, I will have another travel video out at some point. I haven't looked at that particular set yet but I'll add it to the list.
Two yers ago now, is there any newer chargers out with USB C now?
Yes, there are a few newer ones like this. Still lots of these or clones of these though.
Thanks for all your great reviews. So far, I'm now considering the Satechi 165W GaN Charger based on your review as a travel option for a trip to Europe with my family. Regarding these travel adapters, do you have any recommendations for simpler ones that would be US 120v input only (rather than those multi-input models) to Type C European plug (for Germany, Italy, Prague)? Ideally, they would have the US 120v input + a couple USB-C and maybe a USB-A inputs. Thank you.
I have been putting off the next round of travel adapter video in hopes that something better will appear. For now I'd bring a country specific cable (or two) and bring the big adapter with me.
@@AllThingsOnePlace Thanks. Assume you are suggesting a country-specific power cable for i.e. the Satechi. What did you mean by "bring the big adapter?"
@@RobHollander I mean the 165W adapter, and yes, cable for country.
@@AllThingsOnePlace I do see a few new travel adapter ones with 3 or 4 usb ports even. Even though they are sketchy, I never lose the adapter parts like Minix style ones, and I do find them reliable for travel. I would love to see and updated version. Right now I am looking for one of those multi-port ones 3 minimum USB C, don't need A anymore. And then my plan will plug in an Anker 150w into that with USA plug. That should give me enough ports for everything. I would be willing to donate/give small "bounty" to help encourage a new review process if possible!
Any way you could do a test of voltage converters for traveling? I'm just looking for a small one to use my grooming gear overseas, and none of them seem very good.
mmhmm, yeah there are probably a lot of bad ones out there. I haven't looked at any really small ones, I have a few larger wattage ones but that also doesn't help. Even for a 50 watt transformer it'll end up being rather bulky and heavy.
That's not an Italian style plug, that's called a "Europlug" and it's limited to 2.5A and works in most of Europe (UK/Ireland excluded) due to its peculiar design. The official name is CEE 7/16 Alternative II plug.
Yeah, it's a weird hybrid thing, it mostly closely resembles the Italian plug but I should've put more emphasis on the 'it is like'. The Italian plug has the middle ground pin also. Thank you for the plug name though, useful info! Certainly not limited to 2.5A in these adapters, 6 amp fuses, oops!
@@AllThingsOnePlace actually, it's closer to the Swiss plug or the IEC 60906-1 standard, just minus the ground in this case. It's not weird at all, it's been used in Europe since the 1970's.
@@LGNilsson The standard I am sure is good. I was referring to these travel adapters and a 2.5 amp limit. Is that socket limited or do the plugs have 2.5A fuses? In either case these are not compliant. These things seem like they probably don't comply with any of the standards instead of fully complying with one. It sounds like the best action would be to have a proper plug for the job, or if you have to use an adapter get one that does one thing correctly and doesn't try to be all the adapters... in one place... I like the ones with the bag of slide on plugs and only one socket type.
@@AllThingsOnePlace the plugs obviously don't have fuses, only the UK does that...
But yes, the travel adapters don't tend to comply with the Europlug standard, so if used in Europe, or any other country with a socket where it would fit, it would not be meeting the standard if a higher amperage device was plugged in. Fully agree with you on the second point.
Wanted to add a comment very much like this but then found this discussion. The power plugs in Europe are a mixed bag and differ in a lot of aspects. The "Europlug" or CEE 7/16 basically is the common denominator between those and compatible with most outlets found in Europe. What you called the German plug is a CEE 7/7, in Germany referred to as a "Schuko", abbr. for Schutzkontakt, meaning it has a protective earth contact.
CEE 7/7 will fit Type E and Type F Sockets used in Belgium, France, Netherlands, Germany and others.
In regards to safety CEE 7/7 should never fit in a travel adapter. This boils down to:
- no protective earth being provided by the travel adapter, but required for CEE 7/7 compatible outlets
- as you pointed out too, vastly different current allowance between in this case Europlug and CEE 7/7 (2.5A vs 16A).
In most situations these will work fine and be "safe enough". But when misused they can become a fire and safety hazard. As everything electric I guess.
Just some trivia for you. Keep up the indepth reviews!
Thanks for a great video .... Can you check and test Zendure Passport III ? That would be greatly appreciated !
Yep, had a few people ask about that one. I put it on the list. I expect the USB to behave a bit differently as they modernized that. I expect the plug bits to be exactly the same.
Have you come across the "OneAdaptr OneWorld MacPro"? It's been appearing in ads for me and seems to make some massive claims. I don't know if it's possible to do some of the stuff it's claiming in that form factor but would love to see a breakdown of it
I haven't seen that one yet. Certainly has a lot of 'press' coverage claims on their website. It looks like the USB power adapter is going to be very standard and that part very likely does not have a safety listing but it looks like it meets a grounding specification? I wonder if the USB side has a path to earth.
@@AllThingsOnePlace From what I can see there are two models. Theres:
- "OneWorld PD" - 3x usb-a @ 5V2.4a, 1x usbc pd max 18w. (This one seemingly IS grounded)
- "OneWorld 65" - 2x usb-a + 1x usb-c @ 5V3a, 2x usbc pd 65W max, (This one seemingly is NOT grounded)
The 65 one is in a bundle with some "macmate" wireless pad thing that also splits one of the usbc ports to, in total, "Power and charge up to 8 devices at the same time thru the wireless charger, USB-C PD, smart USB-C & USB-A ports and the universal AC outlet." sounds... ambitious. Who knows. maybe their design team are just on fire.
Do I really need these or can I just get Baseus 100W PD GaN3 Fast Wall Charger Block with an adapter (non power conversion) for PHILIPPINES? I am from usa so yeah.. going to ph soon. Trying to figure out the best way without carrying so many things but still having fast charging.
Yes, I would get a dedicated adapter. These travel contraptions are okay but I'd rather have something that does one job well rather than two jobs okay.
@@AllThingsOnePlace is there a specific adapter I should get for a USA plug baesus for traveling to Europe? Or will the cheap two prong to eu adapter work?
@@vincentrowold1104 Yeah, a basic adapter will work. I would check for one with the proper pin layout (sheathed pins, small angle to one of the pins if the 2.5 amp plug version). If UK obviously, have to get an adapter with their big plug. Big thing for those is they have to be fused in the plug.
Will you also try the Baseus 3 Port 65w charger? I'm really torn between that one and the Anker Nano II 65w for travel but I can't find any detailed review, or at least I can't find any as good as yours (you're doing an amazing job, btw). After watching some of your videos also I see that the 65w range is kind of a mixed bag, but I'm still looking for the right 65w charger since to me it's the perfect balance between size and power for portability (or at least it should be).
The Baseus 3 port is not as good as the Anker Nano II 65W in terms of power efficiency. I know the Baseus has multiple ports but it doesn't offer much else it is significantly larger than the nano II. I want to do an overall 65W round of adapters.
@@AllThingsOnePlace Thanks for the answer and for the tip, I appreciate that. At this point i think I'll go with the Nano as you suggested since it really looks like the one to buy. Btw, I'm really looking forward to the video about the 65w chargers. Keep it up, man! 😉
@@redelbluredelmai2750 if you have a look on more his videos, he does not recommand 64W at all, because of missing power factor correction.
@@RapManCZ I'll have a look at that, thanks 😉The fact is that I'm looking for a good replacement to the Apple 67w charger that came with my MacBook Pro cause it's too bulky for my liking and I was looking at all these GaN chargers. Unfortunately the 65w range is like the sweet spot for both size and power, especially if you need to charge a laptop. Eventually I got the Anker Nano II, as suggested above, for a good price (27€). It seems to work very well for now, doesn't heat up at all and it's super compact. But I'll be testing more accurately it in the next weeks and if it turns out to be not that great I'll be sending it back to Amazon.
can you do on the epicka? for my self more interested in the 70w and 75w
I added it to the list. There's a big backlog.
sorry for the OT question, for the same price is better Anker Nano II 30W or Belkin BOOST 30w?
Belkin is slightly more power efficient.
Thanks for an other great video. When answering the question what power adaptor do you wanna get? The real answer is to build your own Power adaptor that perfectly reduces harmonic distortion, has power factor correction and keeps cool.
Also, infinite watts and probably a power bank too? Yeah, the data is out there if someone wants to see what everyone is doing in the space. Who knows if anyone will make something better.
Also wanted to ask - my country uses UK type G plug, most of the other plugs you reviewed and recommend on the channel seem to be type A plugs (China & US). Would you recommend using a travel adapter and getting one of the well reviewed type A plug chargers like the Baseus?
I am somewhat on the fence and am not technical enough to know which is more optimum as a lean setup for travel and local remote use.
You can buy travel adaptors which don’t plug directly into the wall but instead have a C7 (figure of 8) mains socket. You can then buy short country-specific mains leads (cheap on Amazon). Personally I think this is a better approach.
I agree with this approach! Some of the adapters reviewed support this and some don't. I also like the approach of MINIX, INVZI, insert about 30 other companies that use the same design, a clip on country specific plug. Baseus is a tough one as they seem to not really be into the UK market much yet. I am slowly working on expanding my international testing abilities though.
@@albedo0point39 Is this possible with the much recommended baseus 100W 4 port GAN charger? For example for someone who often travels between the EU and Japan/SEA?
@@TheQuangBang I don’t see why not. If it covers all the relevant voltages then yes, it would be a good solution (I haven’t tried it personally).
Do these types have 220v 110v/110v function?
No, strictly shape converters with a few USB sockets.
@@AllThingsOnePlace Thanks once again for the quick response, i was kinda hoping they had it so i could save money on another purchase but whelp.
Does the Zendure have New Zealand and Australia plug wall socket?
It does, the pins rotate.
If possible to test power bank for small to large device for laptop. Thanks
Yes, I am slowly getting into those as well. So far only the 100w output baseus power bank video.
Suwer is tempting, but doesn't seem to exist. Even your Amazon link goes to something completely different now!
Yeah, that means the ASIN number was reassigned or it isn't available anymore. I have been wanted to do round two of this video for awhile too.
Yeah, it looks like the product is gone, Amazon will often redirect if the product doesn't exist anymore. I don't spend any time going back over these links either so in time they will fail.
Suwer hmmm too close to Sewer.
haha true.