TLRD: Get the 100W. Also the Ugreen is cheaper, and performs the same they just spend less on marketing I use their 100w charger and it performs admirably
ugreen 65w chargers either whistles or make another sounds when loaded on 45w - not even at 65w (max). it's not loud, but if one's focused - they'll hear it. i've had 2 ugreen cd244 chargers and both are the same won't recommend ugreen for buying
@@MoreThanHater I have the same model, the Nexode (non pro) 65 watt and it doesn't make a sound charging either my cell at ~12-15w or my laptop and battery pack at ~60-65w. Put my ear right up to it to make sure, nada. I would return it if I was in your position and get an Anker instead, can't be trusting these sketch chargers on our laptops. A Lintyle 65 watt charger I bought before this one made electrical arc sounds every time I would plug it in and again when plugging in a usb cable. It would also heat up to the point of burning your fingers, I had to put heatsinks on it ffs.
@@thenocturnalfoodie3176That's a HUGE exaggeration if not an outright lie. Ugreen has the 2nd best reputation after Anker. That wouldn't be the case if what you said were even close to true.
Which will be safe for the battery of a laptop, i am looking for a replacement of lenovo 65w typeC charger and Samsung-25w, i want to use it to charge my laptop+mobile daily usage long term
@@ys-50989 These and the ugreen competitor I have just get warm (I have the nexode 65w), they don't burn at all like cheaper brands such as Lintyle, those things burn like crazy. I would assume the 100w would be even better off since my Lenovo LOQ 16APH8 usb c port maxes out at 60w for charging (tested with 140w battery pack to confirm). Let's just say your laptop heats up more during normal use than these chargers do, nothing to worry about.
The 67W will get hotter and not last as long if used for your 65w labtop. There is an electronic componet there has a lifetime. And it shortens if it always runs max output. @ToolsElectroDIY
So no matter which charger it will only charge the iPad at 30W max? I’m debating on which one to get since I will be only using it to charge my iPad Pro and my iPhone, and if what I stated earlier to be true wouldn’t it make more sense to save my money and just buy the 67w charger since I wouldn’t get the maximum outage with the 100W charger?
It truly depends on ur usage. The M1 MBP averages between 18-50 watt draw (can use 96W if fast charging from 10% or less battery power). For light to medium use (ie surfing web, etc) that doesn’t involve any graphic heavy apps then ur most likely looking at btwn 18-28W. U don’t mention which model phone but my 14 Pro Max only uses 23W during non-fast charging.
A really helpfull video but i need your help please, im planing to get this charger to charge 3 devices, around 45W (Type C) 25W (Type C) and 15W (Type A). Do you think the 100W charger is worth it? Or should i buy another one? Ty
This was not a very useful video for me. You plugged devices in to confirm total output, which isn't very important. What I wanted to see was the power distribution. I have 2 monitors that require 24W (via barrel to USB-C converter), and an HDMI splitter that requires 2W which would plug into the USB-A port. I wanted to see if the 67W charger could support this, or if USB-C 2 would drop to below 24W when all 3 ports are used. Many of the 65-67W GaN chargers on the market only support 12W-18W out of USB-C 2 if all 3 ports are used, and that's no good. Please test using devices that DON'T HAVE A BATTERY and require a certain wattage to operate otherwise they shut off. That's more important.
That’s why this device is called BATTERY CHARGER BRICK mister JOLLIBEE , nabobo ka na kaka Chicken joy. Find yourself a POWER ADAPTER for your Equipments CHARGERS ARE FOR THOSE BATTERIES.
Could you get any more than 20W from port 2 of the 67W chager when port 1 is in use? According to marketing it should be possible if port1 only has a phone and not a macbook due to poweriq4 power allocation (unlike earlier models with fixed allocation). However, in practice, port 1 seems to be allocated 65/67W or 45W and never any less. This makes it a bad option for charging two 25W phones as one will only charge at 20W. What did you see, does this work for you?
@@ToolsElectroDIY No, doesn't work. Also Anker now confimed via email that second port is limited to 20W with this charger. The previous version of this product (A2668) had dynamic power allocation and it likely did work with this, but the latest model (A2669) has fixed power allocation of 45/20W when both ports are in use. If you test it and see any difference do let me know though.
Yeah. I have 2 22" monitors that require 24W and need to know if the 67W charger will actually work, or if I need to go up to the 100W charger. On Anker's site, it states that the 100W charger supports 46W+30W+22W for 3-port output. However, for the 67W charger, it only cryptically says "64.5W max". I don't want to damage my monitors because they can't get enough power from the 67W charger, so I need to be sure.
Hey guys! I’m just wondering if any you were experiencing the charging brick falling off the outlet? I’ve had my 735 for a while now and one of its ports is already loose so I’m thinking of buying this 67w as a replacement but I’m somehow in doubt because I’ve always had issue of 735 my brick falling on most outlets and I don't want to spend for this charger if it will just have the same issue. Any help would be greatly appreciated!
@@ToolsElectroDIY That's the thing. It falls off on most outlets I've tested so it's probably a design issue. How is it holding up on you end? Have you experienced any falling off issues so far?
@@thenocturnalfoodie3176 I would recommend having the outlets changed to new ones as it's just a couple of dollars and the charger will hold firm. Of course my suggestion is bias because I have only tested mine in less than 5 year old modern outlets, but I know for a fact every single outlet that was in my apartment when I moved in couldn't hold this charger, not even if it was half the weight. Those things were so old even the thin, light tv cable would droop down a bit.
Anker used to ship these longer charges with a removable rubber part that would go around the brick and help it not fall or droop, it seem to have been removed them for most bricks now.
Thank you very much. I have a question, please. I have a speaker that requires only 5 watts, and I have that charger that is 67 watts. Should I plug it into a Type C or USB A port, or is there no difference?
Bạn cho mình hỏi là cục anker 67w gan prime này khi cắm 3 cổng thì có sạc nhanh cả 3 cổng không nếu 3 thiet bị cùng ở mức công suất tương đương tầm 20w , ví dụ 1 iphone 13 + 1 iphone 12 + 1 samsung S 20 fe = C 1 + C 2 ( sạc cho 2 iphone ) + usb A ( sạc cho samsung ) . Bởi vì trước đây tất cả các cục sạc 65w khác đều tập trung điện cho C 1 ( 40w hoặc 45w ) , C 2 + usb A share 15w . Thanks very much❤❤❤
@ToolsElectroDIY I guess my real question is will I cause damage to my laptop if I don't use the supplied charger and use the Anker 100watt instead? Either to the laptop battery or possibly bricking the laptop?
Do you recommend using a high watts charger for an iphone that requires 27 watts Like 120 watt adapter and only vharger your iphone with it which requires 27 watts
The 67watt charger. when you charge 3 Devices at a time and you disconnect one device or connect one device the other stops to charge for one secondo. this only happens when usb a is connect. is this normal?
Macbook should have been plugged into the other Type-C port, as the slip of paper says. Otherwise it won't recieve right power when multiple devices are plugged in.
You may have answered this question but I would like to only charge my iPad pro 12.9 and iPhone 15 pro max so need an output 30w per port will that be the case with the 67w charger or do I need to get the 100w
The EU mandated USB type-C to save the environment from charger and charging cord waste by having us reuse the chargers and cords we already have even with new devices but the industry was clever and now we update chargers and cords to get the latest greatest - 45w, 65w, 100w, 140w, and on and on. You can't just update the charger either, you have to get the latest USB-C cord that can do the extra watts otherwise your charger won't put out those extra watts. So much for reusing our old chargers to keep them out of landfills.
Can the 67w do 30w(usb c1) + 27w (usb c2) + 7,5w (usb A) ? Because i want to use it on ipad, iphone and airpods. I have 2 30w charger and 1 20w charger rn and not really travel friendly, but i dont want to reduce my charging speed if anker cant do that
Anker told me by email a while back that their GaN chargers over 65 watts were not "fully" GaN devices do you know if this still holds true? I have stayed with the 65w versions because of this.
This makes no sense. Either they are Si or they are GaN. It's not a continuum. Are you sure you didn't mistake them referring to the difference between GaN and GaNPrime? Only Prime has real time temp monitoring.
This doesn't make sense. It's either Si or GaN. To my knowledge, there is no Si/GaN hybrid or "partial" GaN. Are you sure you didn't misunderstand and they were referring to the difference between GaN and GaNPrime? That would make way more sense.
@@RationallySkeptical Of course I cannot find it now, but when Anker first came out with the GaN tech charger in 2018 I had to have one, and read about this on the product web page, I even emailed Anker support to ask and they verified this, but I see no reference to it now so perhaps they have overcome the limitations of the original product.
@@ToolsElectroDIY how do you plug your USB C - USB C into USB A without an additional converter? bringing another type of cable to use the port is plain silly. it defeat the whole purpose of having a USB C-C universal cable.
Anker Prime 67W amzn.to/47kp9fr
Anker Prime 100W amzn.to/3SRCO9c (affiliate links)
I've held off on the 100w because i read reviews that said it gets hot. I was hoping to see a comment about whether or not it actually does get hot.
Warm, not hot. And depends on your room temperature and load too.
@ToolsElectroDIY Thank you so much!
TLRD: Get the 100W.
Also the Ugreen is cheaper, and performs the same they just spend less on marketing
I use their 100w charger and it performs admirably
Thanks for sharing your experience . I don’t have ugreen
ugreen 65w chargers either whistles or make another sounds when loaded on 45w - not even at 65w (max). it's not loud, but if one's focused - they'll hear it.
i've had 2 ugreen cd244 chargers and both are the same
won't recommend ugreen for buying
@@MoreThanHaterme too. UGreen is a complete trash. 😂
@@MoreThanHater I have the same model, the Nexode (non pro) 65 watt and it doesn't make a sound charging either my cell at ~12-15w or my laptop and battery pack at ~60-65w.
Put my ear right up to it to make sure, nada. I would return it if I was in your position and get an Anker instead, can't be trusting these sketch chargers on our laptops.
A Lintyle 65 watt charger I bought before this one made electrical arc sounds every time I would plug it in and again when plugging in a usb cable. It would also heat up to the point of burning your fingers, I had to put heatsinks on it ffs.
@@thenocturnalfoodie3176That's a HUGE exaggeration if not an outright lie. Ugreen has the 2nd best reputation after Anker. That wouldn't be the case if what you said were even close to true.
Which will be safe for the battery of a laptop, i am looking for a replacement of lenovo 65w typeC charger and Samsung-25w, i want to use it to charge my laptop+mobile daily usage long term
both are fine for laptops. Just a matter of charging speed.
@@ToolsElectroDIY and about heating ? Do they hear above average ? Or they are safe in heating terms also
@@ys-50989 These and the ugreen competitor I have just get warm (I have the nexode 65w), they don't burn at all like cheaper brands such as Lintyle, those things burn like crazy.
I would assume the 100w would be even better off since my Lenovo LOQ 16APH8 usb c port maxes out at 60w for charging (tested with 140w battery pack to confirm).
Let's just say your laptop heats up more during normal use than these chargers do, nothing to worry about.
The 67W will get hotter and not last as long if used for your 65w labtop. There is an electronic componet there has a lifetime. And it shortens if it always runs max output. @ToolsElectroDIY
Seriously 😮@@IceZag
Does it heat above normal temperature if we use all three ports together? Are these genuinely safe for daily regular long hours usage?
You should contact Anker for those questions. I cannot vouch for the safety of their products
Been using Anker for 7 years and haven’t had any issues with them even when I’m charging overnight.
That's the whole point of GaNPrime. Not only do they run colder than Si, they have real time temp monitoring with throttle capabilities.
Thank you. Your info. is extremely useful.
Glad it was helpful!
So no matter which charger it will only charge the iPad at 30W max? I’m debating on which one to get since I will be only using it to charge my iPad Pro and my iPhone, and if what I stated earlier to be true wouldn’t it make more sense to save my money and just buy the 67w charger since I wouldn’t get the maximum outage with the 100W charger?
Get the smaller 67W if you only need it for iPhone / iPad.
In my opinion is better the 67w because the 100w one. Is only “100”sh for one device. Then I becomes the same as the 67w
@@bladmoreno The difference is the 100w one can also charge Macbook Pro.
Which would you recommend for a 13” M1 MacBook Pro that will also be charging a phone on times
100W version
@@ToolsElectroDIY67 wouldn’t work?
@@ek8652 It will, just not optimally. M1 already requires 60W on its own. A phone is another 30W so 100W makes sense.
It truly depends on ur usage. The M1 MBP averages between 18-50 watt draw (can use 96W if fast charging from 10% or less battery power).
For light to medium use (ie surfing web, etc) that doesn’t involve any graphic heavy apps then ur most likely looking at btwn 18-28W.
U don’t mention which model phone but my 14 Pro Max only uses 23W during non-fast charging.
A really helpfull video but i need your help please, im planing to get this charger to charge 3 devices, around 45W (Type C) 25W (Type C) and 15W (Type A). Do you think the 100W charger is worth it? Or should i buy another one? Ty
Yes. I don’t know any more compact alternative for you at the moment
@@ToolsElectroDIY Man you are the best thanks for the fast asnwer
This was not a very useful video for me. You plugged devices in to confirm total output, which isn't very important. What I wanted to see was the power distribution. I have 2 monitors that require 24W (via barrel to USB-C converter), and an HDMI splitter that requires 2W which would plug into the USB-A port. I wanted to see if the 67W charger could support this, or if USB-C 2 would drop to below 24W when all 3 ports are used. Many of the 65-67W GaN chargers on the market only support 12W-18W out of USB-C 2 if all 3 ports are used, and that's no good. Please test using devices that DON'T HAVE A BATTERY and require a certain wattage to operate otherwise they shut off. That's more important.
Thanks for your feedback
That’s why this device is called BATTERY CHARGER BRICK mister JOLLIBEE , nabobo ka na kaka Chicken joy. Find yourself a POWER ADAPTER for your Equipments CHARGERS ARE FOR THOSE BATTERIES.
K
@@guygary1668 I want this charger to replace 3 heavy power bricks because it's for travel. Jolly spaghetti and pineapple quencher 4 LIFE
@@guygary1668hahaha
Abker is very good brand. I am using anker power post 2 & power port speeds 2 since last 6 year's
yes
Could you get any more than 20W from port 2 of the 67W chager when port 1 is in use? According to marketing it should be possible if port1 only has a phone and not a macbook due to poweriq4 power allocation (unlike earlier models with fixed allocation). However, in practice, port 1 seems to be allocated 65/67W or 45W and never any less. This makes it a bad option for charging two 25W phones as one will only charge at 20W. What did you see, does this work for you?
It should work.
@@ToolsElectroDIY No, doesn't work. Also Anker now confimed via email that second port is limited to 20W with this charger. The previous version of this product (A2668) had dynamic power allocation and it likely did work with this, but the latest model (A2669) has fixed power allocation of 45/20W when both ports are in use. If you test it and see any difference do let me know though.
Yeah. I have 2 22" monitors that require 24W and need to know if the 67W charger will actually work, or if I need to go up to the 100W charger. On Anker's site, it states that the 100W charger supports 46W+30W+22W for 3-port output. However, for the 67W charger, it only cryptically says "64.5W max". I don't want to damage my monitors because they can't get enough power from the 67W charger, so I need to be sure.
Hey guys! I’m just wondering if any you were experiencing the charging brick falling off the outlet? I’ve had my 735 for a while now and one of its ports is already loose so I’m thinking of buying this 67w as a replacement but I’m somehow in doubt because I’ve always had issue of 735 my brick falling on most outlets and I don't want to spend for this charger if it will just have the same issue.
Any help would be greatly appreciated!
try another AC outlet / power strip?
@@ToolsElectroDIY That's the thing. It falls off on most outlets I've tested so it's probably a design issue. How is it holding up on you end? Have you experienced any falling off issues so far?
@@thenocturnalfoodie3176 I would recommend having the outlets changed to new ones as it's just a couple of dollars and the charger will hold firm.
Of course my suggestion is bias because I have only tested mine in less than 5 year old modern outlets, but I know for a fact every single outlet that was in my apartment when I moved in couldn't hold this charger, not even if it was half the weight. Those things were so old even the thin, light tv cable would droop down a bit.
Anker used to ship these longer charges with a removable rubber part that would go around the brick and help it not fall or droop, it seem to have been removed them for most bricks now.
A really nice Review. 67 W charger is ok for macbook pro 14 2021?
Yes
hi! is it compatible with huawei mate d14 laptop? @toolselectrodiy
Is this 100w better then belkin gam chargers ? Are they capable to charge all devices ? Samsung redmi vivo apple etc ?
I don’t have belkin wall charger.
Yes.
Yes.
Thank you very much. I have a question, please. I have a speaker that requires only 5 watts, and I have that charger that is 67 watts. Should I plug it into a Type C or USB A port, or is there no difference?
No difference. You can use either port
@@ToolsElectroDIY Thank you very much 🌹
Anker 67w support pps technology?
PPS 45w or 25w...??
Yes pps is supported
how long does it take to fully charge a macbook
which one>?
Bạn cho mình hỏi là cục anker 67w gan prime này khi cắm 3 cổng thì có sạc nhanh cả 3 cổng không nếu 3 thiet bị cùng ở mức công suất tương đương tầm 20w , ví dụ 1 iphone 13 + 1 iphone 12 + 1 samsung S 20 fe = C 1 + C 2 ( sạc cho 2 iphone ) + usb A ( sạc cho samsung ) . Bởi vì trước đây tất cả các cục sạc 65w khác đều tập trung điện cho C 1 ( 40w hoặc 45w ) , C 2 + usb A share 15w . Thanks very much❤❤❤
English pls
So which should I buy
bigger one.
Seems like you know alot about charger wattage and all that. I just got the Asus G14 and wanted to know if the 100w charger is safe for it?
Is It Safe to Use 65W Charger for Small Devices?
th-cam.com/video/T6CMuHzZwBY/w-d-xo.html
@ToolsElectroDIY I guess my real question is will I cause damage to my laptop if I don't use the supplied charger and use the Anker 100watt instead? Either to the laptop battery or possibly bricking the laptop?
@@davidtaroyan no it will not cause the damage. see the video I posted in my previous comment.
If you start the video with good morning i'd definitely think that this is tim cook's channel
Morning!
How much do you think it would charge per/min on a quest 3 vr also
I don’t know I don’t have that VR
Do you recommend using a high watts charger for an iphone that requires 27 watts
Like 120 watt adapter and only vharger your iphone with it which requires 27 watts
Yes it is safe to do so.
@@ToolsElectroDIY thanks for replying
Does anker prime 100w supports samsung 45w pps 2.0 ? If yes can it charge two devices at 45w pps 2.0?
I don't have the Samsung phone so I cannot verify that.
if I get this charger 67w and this cable:
20 V, 5 A, will it give me full effect of 67w?
or maybe I need to match like 3A & 20V?
it's not easy 😂
Yes it will, if your device can take in that much wattage
@@ToolsElectroDIY tyvm I'll order it
Which one should I buy for Hp spectre?
Both are fine
Why my huawei p30 pro still charge at max 45w on this anker 100w on type a port if the type a port only output at max 22.5w.
That’s right you use type C port whenever you can
@@ToolsElectroDIY i mean why type a is outputing 40w if it's only max 22.5w on its specs.
Does the cable matter for the 100watt charger? If so what cable should I get?
Yes cable matters! See watch this review th-cam.com/video/o2FrnePYn1Q/w-d-xo.html
Is it safe to use 100 watts on a quest 3 or should I stick with 67 watts
Yes, it is safe to use
The 67watt charger. when you charge 3 Devices at a time and you disconnect one device or connect one device the other stops to charge for one secondo. this only happens when usb a is connect. is this normal?
yes it is normal for this charger.
Your topic need change from 120w to correct -> 100w ???
👍🏽
Yes, correct thanks!
Does the 100w charge a docked switch
yes
Macbook should have been plugged into the other Type-C port, as the slip of paper says. Otherwise it won't recieve right power when multiple devices are plugged in.
true
Do you think this is good for a quest 3 vr?
Yes
You may have answered this question but I would like to only charge my iPad pro 12.9 and iPhone 15 pro max so need an output 30w per port will that be the case with the 67w charger or do I need to get the 100w
The 67W one is good enough.
@ToolsElectroDIY how about 65w charger? Or just 67 can be a bit better?
@@pctkheem2851 67W is newer.
@ToolsElectroDIY gotcha. Even if 67w doesn't say for example 735 charger gan(ii) I'm assuming with more tech with less watts?
Is PIQ 3.0 tech good?
The EU mandated USB type-C to save the environment from charger and charging cord waste by having us reuse the chargers and cords we already have even with new devices but the industry was clever and now we update chargers and cords to get the latest greatest - 45w, 65w, 100w, 140w, and on and on. You can't just update the charger either, you have to get the latest USB-C cord that can do the extra watts otherwise your charger won't put out those extra watts. So much for reusing our old chargers to keep them out of landfills.
cool
Can the 67w do 30w(usb c1) + 27w (usb c2) + 7,5w (usb A) ? Because i want to use it on ipad, iphone and airpods. I have 2 30w charger and 1 20w charger rn and not really travel friendly, but i dont want to reduce my charging speed if anker cant do that
no, the combined output won't exceed 67w
@@ToolsElectroDIY 30 + 27 +7,5 = 64,5w how that can be exceed ?
@@muhammadrizqi409 lol my bad
@@ToolsElectroDIY so how about my question ?
Because ugreen and aukey 67w only can do 45+7,5+7,5w when 3 device charging at the same time
Anker told me by email a while back that their GaN chargers over 65 watts were not "fully" GaN devices do you know if this still holds true? I have stayed with the 65w versions because of this.
I didn’t know that never heard of it
This makes no sense. Either they are Si or they are GaN. It's not a continuum. Are you sure you didn't mistake them referring to the difference between GaN and GaNPrime? Only Prime has real time temp monitoring.
This doesn't make sense. It's either Si or GaN. To my knowledge, there is no Si/GaN hybrid or "partial" GaN. Are you sure you didn't misunderstand and they were referring to the difference between GaN and GaNPrime? That would make way more sense.
@@RationallySkeptical Of course I cannot find it now, but when Anker first came out with the GaN tech charger in 2018 I had to have one, and read about this on the product web page, I even emailed Anker support to ask and they verified this, but I see no reference to it now so perhaps they have overcome the limitations of the original product.
Selamat hari raya abang man ghaye punye
Ak Design Pik
??
Vivo chargers are way fast
ok
i will never buy a gan changer with a USB A.
why
@@ToolsElectroDIY how do you plug your USB C - USB C into USB A without an additional converter? bringing another type of cable to use the port is plain silly. it defeat the whole purpose of having a USB C-C universal cable.