Sadly not the kind of charger I am looking for... That said, your review makes the impression like it's from someone with -ten- hundred times the subs 👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻
Yes - we tested a Dell XPS 13 and a Microsoft Surface Book 2 15". The Dell charged at 40-45W (which is the most it can draw from any charger), but the Surface (which can draw just under 5A @ 20V via PD) pulled close to the peak 65W the Wotobeus charger supports (at 20V).
@@TechAutos That is great to know since some chargers won't boost. Also, it is a crap shoot as to whether the device can used a fixed voltage or needs a specific PPS voltage like the Samsung 45W implementation
The USB-C port will charge at up to 65W (though most phones charge much slower than that), while the USB-A port will simultaneously do 18W via Qualcomm Quick Charge 3.0 (which is the max you generally get out of USB-A, minus proprietary systems on a few Chinese phones). So you won't get 2x 25W, but you could get 18W + 65W (or whatever lower level your phone supports).
@@iZacq Wotobeus has another model with two USB-Cs and a USB-A (amzn.to/3CS8ZuJ ). We have not reviewed it yet, but the specs claim the two USB-Cs can deliver 65W and 30W when both are plugged in, both with PPS, so if it delivers on that spec, it should charge your two phones at 25W. If you plug in all three ports, the claimed split is 65W/15W/15W.
We actually purchased one of the Xiaomi 100W car chargers to test as well - may post a review later. The Wotobeus is a better bet, as the Mi charger delivers 100W only through a proprietary mode that works with certain Xiaomi phones; it delivers just 45W via normal USB-C PD to non-Xiaomi devices.
In theory, yes, it has the required specs and should be able to. That said, a lot of Lenovo PCs have had issues with USB-C charging (e.g. see www.windowscentral.com/lots-lenovo-laptops-have-usb-c-issues-theres-fix ), so you'll have to test and give it a shot.
This is exactly what I was looking for. $30 is a steal!
How about heat? Won't the socket get really hot?
Can it deliver 65 warp charge?
Sadly not the kind of charger I am looking for... That said, your review makes the impression like it's from someone with -ten- hundred times the subs 👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻
Thank you!
Did you try a PD load that needed a boost to 15V or 20V from the 12V the car provided?
Yes - we tested a Dell XPS 13 and a Microsoft Surface Book 2 15". The Dell charged at 40-45W (which is the most it can draw from any charger), but the Surface (which can draw just under 5A @ 20V via PD) pulled close to the peak 65W the Wotobeus charger supports (at 20V).
@@TechAutos That is great to know since some chargers won't boost. Also, it is a crap shoot as to whether the device can used a fixed voltage or needs a specific PPS voltage like the Samsung 45W implementation
We're to buy this wotobeus 83 watta car charger
It's on Amazon here: amzn.to/3d0JUmU
Will this charge 2 phones at 25w each ❓
The USB-C port will charge at up to 65W (though most phones charge much slower than that), while the USB-A port will simultaneously do 18W via Qualcomm Quick Charge 3.0 (which is the max you generally get out of USB-A, minus proprietary systems on a few Chinese phones). So you won't get 2x 25W, but you could get 18W + 65W (or whatever lower level your phone supports).
@@TechAutos
Thanks
If you do come across one that can charge 2 or 3 phones at 25w each please do share
@@iZacq Wotobeus has another model with two USB-Cs and a USB-A (amzn.to/3CS8ZuJ ). We have not reviewed it yet, but the specs claim the two USB-Cs can deliver 65W and 30W when both are plugged in, both with PPS, so if it delivers on that spec, it should charge your two phones at 25W. If you plug in all three ports, the claimed split is 65W/15W/15W.
@@TechAutos
Thanks so much
God bless you
So it charges lenovo flex 5 max speed
Great review. How does it compare with Mi 100 watt charger? Should I be going for this or Mi to charge my phones and Laptops?
We actually purchased one of the Xiaomi 100W car chargers to test as well - may post a review later. The Wotobeus is a better bet, as the Mi charger delivers 100W only through a proprietary mode that works with certain Xiaomi phones; it delivers just 45W via normal USB-C PD to non-Xiaomi devices.
@@TechAutos I dont understand what you are saying. wich one only delivers 45W?
@@projet2907 The Xiaomi charger delivers only 45W to non-Xiaomi devices over USB-C. The Wotobeus can do 65W on its USB-C port.
@@TechAutos Thank you !
So it charges lenovo flex 5max speed
In theory, yes, it has the required specs and should be able to. That said, a lot of Lenovo PCs have had issues with USB-C charging (e.g. see www.windowscentral.com/lots-lenovo-laptops-have-usb-c-issues-theres-fix ), so you'll have to test and give it a shot.