QuickCharge requires a timing-dependent handshake to activate the higher voltage/power modes, which is probably a good thing, considering that 9 or 12v could be bad for a normal USB device expecting 5v.
QuickCharge requires a timing-dependent handshake to activate the higher voltage/power modes, which is probably a good thing, considering that 9 or 12v could be bad for a normal USB device expecting 5v.
Looks interesting , could probably also be used to limit the voltage to 5V and disable QC on the output for higher efficiency (74.4 vs. 68.4 Wh according to the table above) when time is not critical, e.g. charging the phone outdoors overnight. But itās an extra device to carry around and adds weight. Does anyone have a better idea? My phone has no such option, at least I couldnāt find it.
Ohh wow, thanks for that. Just what I was after! Would be nice to have an ultra portable 12v supply that is actually the correct mah rating! Do you think it would be possible to parallel two or more in increase the amps?
I have a small 12v fridge that runs at 2.5amp on eco mode. Although it does have a millisecond spike on start up. So unsure if two power banks would work in parallel. I know I will only get a couple hours of run time, just more of a dual use testing of the power banks.
Depending on what you want to do, itās probably safer to not have it always output 12v all the time (accidentally plugging a 5v device onto a 12v output USB port will likely fry itā¦
Anyway, this may be what youāre looking for:
5v to 12v step-up USB cable to DC 2.1x5.5mm (5v/2A => 12v/750ma max ā possibly good for some low-power/basic wifi routers)
(the step-up module converts the 5v to 12v (this works on any 5v USB power adapter or powerbank, even non-QuickCharge ones) but lower output current only)
(this one requests the power output from the power adapter / power bank itself)
oops, didnāt notice the QC2/3 trigger device already mentioned aboveā¦
(btw, I donāt think the RD Tech USB 2.0/3.0 meter posted above has a ātriggerā mode).
Some other meters like the YZXStudio ones also have a QC2/3 trigger.
for instance, this example of a ZY1276 USB meter triggering a QC2/3 wall charger to 12v and powering a small DC12v fan:
12v @ 2.5amps = 30 watts, that seems more than most non-USB-PD power banks can supply. I wonder if a USB-PD trigger can be used to request 12v @ 2.5A (am not familiar with USB PD yetā¦) which requires a powerbank that supports Type-C PD outputā¦
The above are just meant as temporary āquick-fixesā probably not designed for long-term use if you really need 12v @ 2.5A, better just get a real 12v power supply that can supply the current your 12v device needsā¦
I was interested in using QC2/3 powerbanks as a relatively cheap, readily available and safe way to power a portable Class-D amplifier off of lithium ion batteries. My plans to make a set-and-forget trigger fell by the wayside though when I realized the Blitzwolf BW-P3 I was using could deliver 3.6A @ 5V, or 18W without any QuickCharge negotiation, so I just fed that into a ālow noiseā (which is to say LC filter on the output) boost converter module and fed the amp off of that, no problem.
It will be interesting to see what develops with USB-PD.
There will be powerbanks delivering up to 100W with QC soon.
Currently power sources up to 89W for USB-C are available. In the future, more devices, cables and power sources will develop maximum power in this direction.
Pardon the late reply, I just got the Blitzwolf BW-C10 QC3.0 car charger the other day. I can confirm that it can quick-charge the Mi 20000mAh v2 (PLM05ZM).
I only did a quick check though. USB meter reports charging at 11.6v at 1.10A when I plugged the PLM05ZM powerbank to the BW-C10ās QC3.0 port. Not sure what is the highest current at 12v that the BW-C10 supports in real-world testing, will re-test when Iāve got more time (official spec says 12v @ 1.5A).
Not to mention the specs on that supposedly wonderful thing...
Charging time could be measured by the erosion of stones using 5V @ 1A ;) About 15 hours for a full charge!