Originally Posted by
frappant
https://www.anker.com/products/a2557...s70ENTeO6jB6UA
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I use a 4-port charger, 65 watt, with 2 PD USB-C ports and 2 USB-A ports.
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Main thing I'm not sure about is if the 15-watt MagSafe charging will cover most scenarios, where the goal is to get 100% in the morning. Wonder about the heat.
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The real test is when I travel, I am also charging my M4 iPad Pro (13-inch), the iPhone and Watch on that 4-port 65-watt PD charger as well as occasionally charging one of the AirPods Pro cases.
So if this wireless charger is charging the iPhone, Watch and maybe AirPods Pro, maybe it doesn't have enough juice to fully charge the iPad Pro at the same time overnight.
Worst case, I can use another charger to offload some of the charging, though often these places you stay in might have one outlet bedside or not one at all.
The Anker mag-go 3-in-1 charger comes with its own dedicated 40w charger block. The 15W spec is for the Qi charger for the phone, I believe. The cable between the dedicated charger and the device has a right angle connector, and the specs don't mention if it's usb-c or not. I'm guessing it is, but I'll know tomorrow. The specs say it consumes 25w and has this listed for each device:
15w for the phone
5w each for the watch and earbuds.
If the connector on the mag-go is just a normal 25w usb-c connector using PD protocol for the power and your own charger block can supply the 25w to the mag-go, in theory, it should work. You'll have to try it to see. But varying the charging in the other ports could vary the power supplied to the port you have the mag-go plugged into, depending on the charger. You could also ask anker at
[email protected] or
[email protected]
-David