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STONEGO QC 3.0 USB Wall Charger US Plug - US $2.19 (~AU $3.10) Delivered @ Joybuy

120

Mzxtby Quick Charge 5V3A Fast Phone Charging USB Adapter Universal QC3.0 is also on sale for 16 cents less

Mzxtby Universal EU plug US plug 5V/3A Quick Charge 3.0 USB Phone Charger is also on sale for 16 cents less

Specifications

Type: Quick Charge 3.0 USB Charger

Input: 100V-240V-50/60Hz 0.35A

Output: 5V=2.4A(Max) 9V=1.8A(Max) 12V=1.5A(Max)

Plug: EU/ US (Optional)

Material: ABS+PC

Colour: Black, white

Size: 484822mm

Net Weight: 43g

Other functions: QC3.0 is compatible with QC 1.0/2.0

Package Includes:

1 x QC3.0 USB Charger

Features

QUALCOMM 3.0 USB QUICK CHARGER - Fast but safe charging technology for lithium-ion battery is adopted in this design. International compatibility(100-240V) make it an ideal travel or daily companion.

RAPID FASH CHARGE - Support 2.4A input device fast charge, charging speed increased 1.5times, save time effectively.

SAFE TO USE - Only adopts premium components and smart circuit protections to keep you and your devices safe anytime.

FIREPROOF MATERIAL - Made by the UL fire rating of 94VO flame retardant PC Material. Sealed with ultrasonic technology, well protected internal structure.

HIGH STANDARD MATERIAL - Anti fall and wear resistance, quality assurance. Compact and space-saving design allows you to keep your devices and cables organized while charging.

Related Stores

Joybuy
Joybuy

closed Comments

  • -1

    EU or US plug, both useless here in Australia

    • +2

      Fits my Xiaomi power strip perfectly.

    • +1

      Real handy when traveling though.

      I'm getting a couple of the Euro ones for Bali.

  • +2

    Too cheap I'm suspicious this is not a quality product.

    • +1

      Name doesn't check out

  • +2

    AU Plug would be AUesome

  • +1

    I’m using this charger. Does what it says, recommended.

  • +1

    I suggest people read the 1 star reviews before purchase this product. Some people complained about overheating. Also, one of the 2 star reviews indicated that when he put it through a USB meter, it was not showing proper QC voltage (just 5V with higher current).

    If you think I am biased, then read the 5 star reviews in detail. Here is one of the 5 star reviews:

    This miracle gives only 4.9 volts and a 1.3 amper, and it's heating! He's in a dumpster!

    From the reviews, the warning signs are there.

    I understand why a lot of people find this attractive due to its low price. But, if you look at the specs, you can tell it merely implements one of the QC 3 features (and it isn't the one that makes QC3 great). Too many people reported they can only get 5V charging out of it. Then, you think about the price. You can tell it would simply use the cheapest design and rely purely on the QC3 chipset to manage the over-current protection (rather than proper design).

    • +1

      The review posted 01/17/2019 11:45 has a photo of it delivering 8.94V.

      The review posted 01/24/2019 15:13 has a photo of it delivering 8.93V and says it did QC2.0 & 3.0.

      While there are complaints about it not doing it I don't think I've ever seen a product with a lot of reviews that doesn't have some people unable to get it working properly.

      It's undoubtedly not a great product. But when some people can get the right voltage and some people can't you don't conclude it doesn't have the components to get the right voltage.

      • First, I did write "rely purely on the QC3 chipset" and that implied that I felt it has a QC3 chipset (well, unless I tested one or physically opened one, I wouldn't state it does not support QC3). However, there was a comment I saw which indicated the customer did not receive items which matched the pictures. Some people might have a lot of good experience with these third party chargers. However, below is my experience (first of all, my USB meter is not those el cheapo one, it can detect QC2, QC3 WITHOUT a phone, and can test USB-C/PD - put it this way, that meter is more expensive than an official charger from Apple/Samsung):

        • Some phones can be picky at times (in a good way) with chargers and cables. Google branded and Apple branded devices are good examples.
        • Chargers can be coded in a way that it will only fast charge certain devices (e.g. try Apple 12W charger on some of the Android tablets - the charger would refuse to fast charge some of them).
        • I had third party USB-C / USB-IF "certified" cable failed to engage fast charge on occasions (and you cannot easily tell from the device), you can through a USB-C meter.
        • With QC2/3 and USB-PD, phone, charger and cable do negotiate and phone can decide not to engage fast charge.

        The question is this: if you intend to use this cheap charger, will you be using a cheap cable as well? Also, what phone(s) do you have? Google and Apple tend to go for the conservative route and can knock back what they feel to be inferior cable or charger (just drop down to slow charge). Some other brands could be more forgiving. Lastly, you will often find that the manufacturers chargers tend not to overstate their QC ability (even if technically, some of the QC2 chargers included in the phone are QC3 - if you use these 3rd party's definition). 8.94V technically only shows QC2 (like I said, if you look at the specs written on that charger, it doesn't really implement the feature that makes QC3 great).

        The reality is that with these QC2/QC3 chipsets, they open the door for cheap charger makers to make dirt cheap and nasty chargers. We've seen multi port chargers with zero over-current protection on the 5V ports but has it on the QC port (simply because the chipset would enforce it). But, when you look at Anker's design, at least they do try to do the right thing and add in safety measures (still not as good as the original, but decent enough). Most of the other cheap chargers are really nasty.

  • +3

    Not worth dying in a house fire for.

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