I have an Omega 200w. I can't say im a fan of the quality of the plastics in this thing. The build quality could be better and sturdier for the price. Functionality wise, no complaints, charges my dell laptop with at 95w, verified in the Dell Bios which says what charger you plug in. My dell laptop comes with a 135w barrel charger though so type c charging is slower, but convenient, and 95w is enough for some heavy work that is not heavy gaming. I can plug in my phone and powerbank on the side and all of them charges at full speed. How well it holds up i wouldn't know, I just got mine recently. Cant really blame them because covid is a thing. Better late than never.
I would say these things are purely convenience and to reduce bulk for travel. Buying these to save money is dumb because to keep costs down, some build quality sacrifices might be made. And to have so much heat concentrated in a small area, there is no magic to help with that. these things will die faster. Either you buy them because you need them for a lot of travel or lack of space and plug points, or just stick to the usuals single or dual port chargers. those last way longer for the price you pay. then again, ewaste is a thing.
Impressive, but I'm not in the market for a 270W charger. Surely there's a middle ground between the typical 15-20W chargers and this? My laptop has a 45W USB-C brick and I'd maybe like a USB to charge a phone too.
270w is total support charging across all its ports. Its maximum power is 140w for those newfangled macbooks that charge 140w over type-c magsafe. multichargers target a different market, mostly travellers with multiple devices, and you want to save weight and space buy only bringing a single charger to charge your phone, laptop, tablet, camera, powerbank, whatever.
we need to know what wattage your phone needs, for example if your phone charges at 30w, and you have a 45w laptop, you need a 100w multicharger at minimum. buying a 65w charger will not work well for your setup.
well, they seems dodgy, you say they are from Sidney, Indiegogo always mentioned Los Angeles, and deeper search gave other result ... (not my research)
Companies have always been multinational. They are from Sydney just as mentioned on their website. Who says they cannot have their US branch manage their indiegogo campaign? Are you people so close minded? Xenophobic much?
are there adapters you buy for type c charging on a laptop? or does your laptop have to be native type c? cause my work laptop has its own plug one of the round thing power plugs. so that means an adapter like this would not be of any use to me correct?
Your laptop will need to support charging over USB Type-C for this to help. A lot of newer laptops allow it on top of the round plug you mentioned, although they may be limited to 65-95 W charging in some cases.
Yes there are converters from type c to the various barrel plugs for different laptop manufacturers. For now most(all?) of those are limited to 100w so if you have a laptop that uses more than 100w, you should avoid them. More than 100w support may come soon when more >100w chargers arrive on the market. There are some dubious looking ones, and there are proper branded ones so pick well to try them out.
I'm not gonna recommend any as I haven't use them before, I don't have laptops that use less than 100w sadly. Use google and amazon and whatever you guys use to determine its quality and safety.
Barrel plugs are as dumb as they come. Specific voltage DC with no smarts; Probably somewhere between 14.5V and 20V.
Unfortunately your laptop (like my old laptop) is the dumb variety. Unless you also have the USB power delivery icon next to one of your USB-C ports, it's the landfill-ready bespoke AC adapter fo you.
Yes barrel plugs are dumb, but those type c to barrel adapters will have their own conversion chips in them to do all their magic. Or maybe the smarts is on the charger side. I wouldn't know. Again established brands exist, if it doesn't work, they wouldn't make em. Im not talking about your aliexpress special.