Hey there, thx for your review. Do you know if we can expect to charge the brick with 2 USBC cable at the same time to minimize charging time? In this can how many watts are used by each cable to charge in?
1:05 I have those carbon fiber sidepanesls of my Nitecore NB20000 somewhere it went so spicy pillow that those sides popped off :-D and nitecore didn't care. I'm not going to buy nitecore powerrbanks anymore
When I used Apple's USB-C to USB-C cable to charge my phone, my iPhone 15 pro max gets pretty warm and the powerbank gets CRAZY hot that I have to charge in small bursts to let it cool. May be a cable issue so I've yet to do more discovery there and see if using an Anker cable will solve it, but thought I'd mention... I wish I stayed content with my Anker powerbanks instead despite the weight 😬
Hopefully this is better than nitecore NB20000 which was nightmare and nitecore didn't care at al about their product even that I emailed them about the problems... Now I'm using biggest Anker Prime and been happy with it this far.
So you can charge the powerbank with 2 cables for faster charge time? I have some older tech that works only from normal USB to C. Does the dongle support that? I've had the first generation and it bulged up and stopped working.
Nice piece, for sure. But: The price is, as usual for nitecore products, extremely high. And besides the low weight and slim figure there is no other advantage ... technically, there are similarly if not even more advanced power banks available.
I found out that power banks tend to accumulate: I already have a 25,000 mAh power bank from Anker that I at some time replaced with a 10,000 mAh version due to weight reasons. Then, I switched to two newer battery packs that had USB-C and wireless charging. After that, I got an Olantern Classic 2 Pro for camping trips - it's a lantern that also works as a charger with 10,000 mAh. And when Olight released a smaller version of that lamp, I got that one as well.
@@aabeen1 it is the same as with ALL powerbanks. They are ALL capacity rated based on the internal voltage which is between 3,7 and 3,85 Volt. But the output of ALL powerbanks is set on 5 Volt (as per USB Standard). Additionally, the conversion from 3.7 (etc.) up to 5 Volt takes some capacity, and furthermore, the hypothetical capacity is never fully used in order to protect the battery. Means usually only 70-75% of the capacity can be used to charge other items. To find out the real capacity, you have to consider all of that. E.g. the conversion from 3.85 Voltage up to 5 Volt would give you a hypothetical capacity of 3,85 x 10.000 / 5 = 7.700 mAH and if you take 75% of that you end up at 5.775 mAh in best case. Nitecore itself specifies the USB/5V output capacity being for this model at 5.400 mAH, what would by 70% of the hypothetical capacity of 7.700 mAH. That is totally normal and following the laws of physics and rules of good manufacturing practise. So nitecore does same as all other manufacturers do - in the fat print they tell the capacity of their power banks based on internal voltage, in the fine print they specify what you get out via USB. ALL powerbank manufacturers specify their 10.000, 20.000 or 27.000 mAh capacity alwabased on the internal Voltage of 3,7-3.85 Volt and NOT concerning the 5 Volt Output Capacity. And SOME manufacturers specify in the technical data sheets or sometimes even printed on the power bank the 5V USB output capacity much lower, so you cannot say they lie or tell something different to what they advertise etc. That is why you have always to read the fineprint, or at least to consider for ALL powerbanks on the market that the USB output figure is ALWAYS only something around 50-60% of the said number, as rule of thumbs you get usually around 5.500 out of a 10.000 11.000 out of a 20.000 and 14.000 out of a 27.000 powerbank.
Ein ganz wichtiger Punkt ist, dass die Powerbank gleichzeitig aufgeladen werden kann, während sie ein gerät auflädt. Beim Trekking z.B. mit einem Solarpanel super praktisch.
Not that much info in the review. What is the weight (g)? What is the size? What protocols / voltages it supports? How fast can it be recharged?
You can find all technical specifications on the nitecore website. Finding that site via google takes you less time than writing a comment here.
He did say it's very light..
Hey there, thx for your review. Do you know if we can expect to charge the brick with 2 USBC cable at the same time to minimize charging time? In this can how many watts are used by each cable to charge in?
how about the bloating issues?
1:05 I have those carbon fiber sidepanesls of my Nitecore NB20000 somewhere it went so spicy pillow that those sides popped off :-D and nitecore didn't care. I'm not going to buy nitecore powerrbanks anymore
can i use this to charge my galaxy tab S9? or just for phones?
What about the new Auto-Slow-Charge feature in the new edition?
No cover for the on switch to stop it accidentally being pressed.
When I used Apple's USB-C to USB-C cable to charge my phone, my iPhone 15 pro max gets pretty warm and the powerbank gets CRAZY hot that I have to charge in small bursts to let it cool.
May be a cable issue so I've yet to do more discovery there and see if using an Anker cable will solve it, but thought I'd mention...
I wish I stayed content with my Anker powerbanks instead despite the weight 😬
Hopefully this is better than nitecore NB20000 which was nightmare and nitecore didn't care at al about their product even that I emailed them about the problems... Now I'm using biggest Anker Prime and been happy with it this far.
So you can charge the powerbank with 2 cables for faster charge time? I have some older tech that works only from normal USB to C. Does the dongle support that? I've had the first generation and it bulged up and stopped working.
Nice piece, for sure.
But: The price is, as usual for nitecore products, extremely high.
And besides the low weight and slim figure there is no other advantage ... technically, there are similarly if not even more advanced power banks available.
i'm sure there are and am mad at their high pricing not highest quality policy. have you got one such example for between 10k-15-20k ultralight?
I wish people would speak in amps.
10K milliamps = ten thousand one thousandths of an amp. In other words, 10 amps. Just say 10 amps.
I found out that power banks tend to accumulate: I already have a 25,000 mAh power bank from Anker that I at some time replaced with a 10,000 mAh version due to weight reasons. Then, I switched to two newer battery packs that had USB-C and wireless charging. After that, I got an Olantern Classic 2 Pro for camping trips - it's a lantern that also works as a charger with 10,000 mAh. And when Olight released a smaller version of that lamp, I got that one as well.
What a lack of info review. 🙄🤷🏻♂️
I had the first and it got wet and rusted/corroded around the inputs
Unfortunately its only 3500mAh....
Wait, not 10000mAh?
It’s 10K…
@@mikevsamyfound a review elsewhere on the TH-cam. May not be 100% reliable, but it's safe to say mAh only half of advertized.
Same as all other 10k mah powerbanks
@@aabeen1 it is the same as with ALL powerbanks. They are ALL capacity rated based on the internal voltage which is between 3,7 and 3,85 Volt. But the output of ALL powerbanks is set on 5 Volt (as per USB Standard).
Additionally, the conversion from 3.7 (etc.) up to 5 Volt takes some capacity, and furthermore, the hypothetical capacity is never fully used in order to protect the battery. Means usually only 70-75% of the capacity can be used to charge other items.
To find out the real capacity, you have to consider all of that. E.g. the conversion from 3.85 Voltage up to 5 Volt would give you a hypothetical capacity of 3,85 x 10.000 / 5 = 7.700 mAH and if you take 75% of that you end up at 5.775 mAh in best case.
Nitecore itself specifies the USB/5V output capacity being for this model at 5.400 mAH, what would by 70% of the hypothetical capacity of 7.700 mAH. That is totally normal and following the laws of physics and rules of good manufacturing practise.
So nitecore does same as all other manufacturers do - in the fat print they tell the capacity of their power banks based on internal voltage, in the fine print they specify what you get out via USB.
ALL powerbank manufacturers specify their 10.000, 20.000 or 27.000 mAh capacity alwabased on the internal Voltage of 3,7-3.85 Volt and NOT concerning the 5 Volt Output Capacity. And SOME manufacturers specify in the technical data sheets or sometimes even printed on the power bank the 5V USB output capacity much lower, so you cannot say they lie or tell something different to what they advertise etc.
That is why you have always to read the fineprint, or at least to consider for ALL powerbanks on the market that the USB output figure is ALWAYS only something around 50-60% of the said number, as rule of thumbs you get usually around
5.500 out of a 10.000
11.000 out of a 20.000
and 14.000 out of a 27.000
powerbank.
Ein ganz wichtiger Punkt ist, dass die Powerbank gleichzeitig aufgeladen werden kann, während sie ein gerät auflädt. Beim Trekking z.B. mit einem Solarpanel super praktisch.