Thanks for reviewing these, though the video makes me sad. I bought a few of these because they seemed like good quality because they came from a company with many years of experience with power supplies. Keep up the good work.
You shouldn’t feel sad these aren’t BAD they just aren’t industry leading for each category. Yes, I was a little disappointed in the performance because I’ve seen there’s better options out there but they met all the efficiency requirements and have safety listings.
My script actually says. “Aye oh he” for the brand no idea how I’m actually supposed to pronounce this. Anyway yeah, average performers. The 30w adapter is a decent value.
@@AllThingsOnePlace they actually make chargers for many companies since 2014 never heard of them until apple and Samsung stopped supplying chargers with their phones these guys just came out of the woodwork
For the 65w charger class does it matter if you're only using them for travel? Ie charging on the go? Since you're not paying for the electricity anyways. And does the lack of acceptable power factor correction do any harm to the devices?
I mean, does it matter for your cost no, does it matter for wherever you plug it in, yes. If it costs the hotel extra dollars for electricity you think they aren't passing that cost onto your bill one way or another? It'd be very difficult to extract that kind of information though. For the most part the device doesn't care how the power gets to it, as long as it gets there.
@AllThingsOnePlace Okay, awesome. Is the aohi 67w dual port (usb c and a), worth getting over the basic aohi 65w changer? I've never had a problem with a single port charge but was wondering is there an upgrade on performance?
haha, yes, I think they are safe that way. I'd say the quality of power components may mean a little higher mean time before failure, MTBF, than some other manufacturers but that's pretty much the same of all the manufacturers these days.
@@AllThingsOnePlace Thank you, so the ETL listing generally can be trusted in terms of safety usage? I'm not technically literate so just trying to understand the video a bit better, is the main metric power efficiency and how well these adapters can use the input power or is there also considerations for safety and charging speed, etc? Like for the wave spikes at lower watts, practically speaking what do those mean?
THC may cause user dizziness or hunger but I think the charger is going to pull through. THD is an AC power metric and should not impact the DC side too much. It can cause some of the DC side metrics to get worse though. The DC side metrics would be voltage level, ripple, transient response, noise, I look at these but I haven't started cataloguing that data beyond voltage/current since besides the real cheap and unsafe stuff I haven't seen any dropouts in the power supplies. The biggest addition would be getting an oscilloscope capture of the ripple + noise at each power level or at minimum an RMS voltage reading of this figure. Things to improve in the future. I also was supposed to do a video explaining all of this over a year ago. Never got around to that...
I was trying to get a charger for the steamdeck that was as small as possible. Bought the 40w one and now not sure anymore. Any other recommendations for slim chargers? I'd like it to fit in the steamdeck case.
Yeah, that is a tough one, a lot of the 40W chargers won't do higher voltages because they are really two 20W (5V/9V) only chargers in one box. I wish some of the 65W chargers were a little better because some are very small and would be able to charge anything. I don't have any other specifics. I have a really slim adapter here but it isn't tested yet so I can't recommend that.
@@AllThingsOnePlace thanks for the response! I'll look forward to that test whenever it completes. Thank you for the info, this channel is amazingly helpful.
I recently learnt a way to measure charger efficiency. I use plugin watt meter and a usb tester.when you compare the readings you get efficiency percentage.
Yeah............I am going to have to give the AOHI brand of charge adapters, a big fat NO. I think the Basseus stays on top for good reason, and is the class leader, judging by your testing and data retrieved and all that. Nothing about these adapters from AOHI that you've shown today, impresses me. And infact, the 100W one for 80 dollars is perhaps the worst, because like you said, you don't get what you paid for, so your just wasting your money. Getting lost in a mountain of USB cables sounds like fun!
Yeah, I won’t be using them but there are worse options. They tried a little, at least the 100W has PFC. Every category is lead by a different brand though.
That's not good. There is going to be some defect rate amongst all electronic devices, it is inevitable as part of the manufacturing process that some are duds. Hopefully, you are in a place where they can get you a free replacement! I honestly don't use mine once I concluded the testing. I have better chargers for some reason, no idea why.
Thanks for reviewing these, though the video makes me sad. I bought a few of these because they seemed like good quality because they came from a company with many years of experience with power supplies. Keep up the good work.
You shouldn’t feel sad these aren’t BAD they just aren’t industry leading for each category. Yes, I was a little disappointed in the performance because I’ve seen there’s better options out there but they met all the efficiency requirements and have safety listings.
AOHI has also produced a magcube 67w. Did you ever test it? How does it fare? Hope the producer has improved much of the issues
I haven’t. I have the 40w two port coming in short format next week, it has issues.
Oh shit I was waiting for these I love these aohi I got the 65 watts
When the numbers were shifting as per the different modes applied, it becomes, ohhhhh shifffttt!
@@stellarproductions8888 yeah it wasn't good from the testing I do like the led changing colors for faster charging
My script actually says. “Aye oh he” for the brand no idea how I’m actually supposed to pronounce this. Anyway yeah, average performers. The 30w adapter is a decent value.
@@AllThingsOnePlace they actually make chargers for many companies since 2014 never heard of them until apple and Samsung stopped supplying chargers with their phones these guys just came out of the woodwork
Thank you for another review
Another one (or four) down. I have about 50 of these in the queue.
For the 65w charger class does it matter if you're only using them for travel? Ie charging on the go? Since you're not paying for the electricity anyways.
And does the lack of acceptable power factor correction do any harm to the devices?
I mean, does it matter for your cost no, does it matter for wherever you plug it in, yes. If it costs the hotel extra dollars for electricity you think they aren't passing that cost onto your bill one way or another? It'd be very difficult to extract that kind of information though. For the most part the device doesn't care how the power gets to it, as long as it gets there.
Do you prefer the anker 715 Nano 65w charger or that aohi 65w charger? Can't decide on which one to buy.
hmm. I think the Aohi has the edge in terms of performance.
@AllThingsOnePlace
Okay, awesome. Is the aohi 67w dual port (usb c and a), worth getting over the basic aohi 65w changer? I've never had a problem with a single port charge but was wondering is there an upgrade on performance?
Despite the lack of performance, would you say these chargers are generally safe to use and wouldn't catch fire or brick my electronics?
haha, yes, I think they are safe that way. I'd say the quality of power components may mean a little higher mean time before failure, MTBF, than some other manufacturers but that's pretty much the same of all the manufacturers these days.
@@AllThingsOnePlace Thank you, so the ETL listing generally can be trusted in terms of safety usage?
I'm not technically literate so just trying to understand the video a bit better, is the main metric power efficiency and how well these adapters can use the input power or is there also considerations for safety and charging speed, etc? Like for the wave spikes at lower watts, practically speaking what do those mean?
Can you test Aukey 90w wall charger?
Hello, yes, that is on the list. I don't have that particular one in house yet though.
How does THC effects the connected devices to the charger??
THC may cause user dizziness or hunger but I think the charger is going to pull through. THD is an AC power metric and should not impact the DC side too much. It can cause some of the DC side metrics to get worse though. The DC side metrics would be voltage level, ripple, transient response, noise, I look at these but I haven't started cataloguing that data beyond voltage/current since besides the real cheap and unsafe stuff I haven't seen any dropouts in the power supplies. The biggest addition would be getting an oscilloscope capture of the ripple + noise at each power level or at minimum an RMS voltage reading of this figure. Things to improve in the future. I also was supposed to do a video explaining all of this over a year ago. Never got around to that...
I was trying to get a charger for the steamdeck that was as small as possible. Bought the 40w one and now not sure anymore. Any other recommendations for slim chargers? I'd like it to fit in the steamdeck case.
Yeah, that is a tough one, a lot of the 40W chargers won't do higher voltages because they are really two 20W (5V/9V) only chargers in one box. I wish some of the 65W chargers were a little better because some are very small and would be able to charge anything. I don't have any other specifics. I have a really slim adapter here but it isn't tested yet so I can't recommend that.
@@AllThingsOnePlace thanks for the response! I'll look forward to that test whenever it completes. Thank you for the info, this channel is amazingly helpful.
I recently learnt a way to measure charger efficiency. I use plugin watt meter and a usb tester.when you compare the readings you get efficiency percentage.
That is essentially true. To get a rough idea of real power efficiency those are the tools.
nice
Thanks for watching!
Yeah............I am going to have to give the AOHI brand of charge adapters, a big fat NO. I think the Basseus stays on top for good reason, and is the class leader, judging by your testing and data retrieved and all that. Nothing about these adapters from AOHI that you've shown today, impresses me. And infact, the 100W one for 80 dollars is perhaps the worst, because like you said, you don't get what you paid for, so your just wasting your money. Getting lost in a mountain of USB cables sounds like fun!
Yeah, I won’t be using them but there are worse options. They tried a little, at least the 100W has PFC. Every category is lead by a different brand though.
I bought 65W AOHi Magcube and it died after 2 weeks🤦
That's not good. There is going to be some defect rate amongst all electronic devices, it is inevitable as part of the manufacturing process that some are duds. Hopefully, you are in a place where they can get you a free replacement! I honestly don't use mine once I concluded the testing. I have better chargers for some reason, no idea why.
hi can you tell me your contact?😃
It is on the channel page on UA-cam.
@@AllThingsOnePlace I have sent you an email, can you confirm?