• expired

[Pre Order] Xiaomi Mi GaN USB Type-C 65W Charger US $31.99 (~AU $49) Delivered @ Banggood

150
This post contains affiliate links. OzBargain might earn commissions when you click through and make purchases. Please see this page for more information.

US$31.99 (~AU$49) for the first 50 orders, …

Processing time: Expected on 30 March, 2020
Shipping time: 7-25 business days

Features:
- GaN and GaNFast New Technology.
- Smaller size and lighter weight.
- 65W HIgher Power Output for faster charging.
- Support full quick charge protocols for your phones.

Product Parameters:
- Brand: Xiaomi
- Name: Xiaomi GaN Type-C 65W
- Model: AD65G
- Input Parameter: 100-240 V —50/60Hz 1.7A
- Output Parameter: 5V/3A 9V/3A 10V/5A 12V/3A 15V/3A 20V/3.25A 65W MAX
- Working Temperature: 0- 40°C
- Product Size: 30.8 * 30.8 * 56.3mm

Package includes:
- 1 * Original Xiaomi GaN Charger
- 1 * USB C to C Cable

Note: This product will send with adapter which your country need.

Referral Links

Referral: random (143)

Referee gets $2 in coupons. Referrer gets 10% off (if referee spends over US$10)

Related Stores

Banggood
Banggood

closed Comments

  • +16

    Great specs in a compact and simple design, but sadly you lose both those benefits once you add an adapter.

    • +2

      Totally, it defeats the purpose of getting it. Shame, as they look awesome and I've been waiting for Xiaomi to bring out their GaN chargers as they are so much cheaper than the other leading brands. None seem to do them in AU plug types though.

      • -1

        The ridiculous thing is that the Chinese standard is just a stolen Australian standard but inverted 180 degrees.

        If you can get a Chinese model it will work locally almost universally.

        • Apparently the Chinese tend to use the parallel pin outlets (US plugs) for most things, with the three pin ANZ one only being used for larger appliances.

          • +1

            @macrocephalic: yeah anything that requires an earth pin seems to use the inverted ANZ configuration. Some of the three pin sockets are designed so that it is impossible to plug in a two pin australian appliance (some sort of lock on the two top pins that is disengaged by the earth pin)

        • -1

          China uses two main standards. The 110V/60hz US plug, and the 220V/50hz AU plug upside down.

          Which one you get depends on the voltage of the appliance.

          • -1

            @lostn: They use two plug types Type A (same shape as the US) and Type I (same shape as Aus/NZ). But they only use one voltage standard - 220V/50Hz. You can take a chinese domestic market appliance with a Type A plug and use it in aus if you have an adapter, without the need for a step-down transformer. If you get a Type A appliance that requires a 110V/60Hz supply then it is likely an appliance intended for sale in the US or another country that uses the 110V standard. I don't know of any country that uses two different voltage standards in parallel.. running a power grid like that (or rather two power grids concurrently) would be crazy expensive and pointless.

            The three-pin plug is for class 1 applications that require an earth pin. Many 3 pin sockets in China include a physical lockout preventing access to the active and neutral terminals unless an earth pin (which is slightly longer than the other 2 pins) is entered first.

        • +1

          What a ridiculous comment! No, you can't "steal" a standard. Only a stupid person thinks that's possible. China chose to make their 3-pin/grounded standard largely compatible with ours, TO OUR BENEFIT!!

          And secondly NO, the Chinese standard is physically compatible with US standard for the 2-pin variant. Advertised is the exactly like Chinese version.

      • Xiaomi power board ;)

  • +2

    Stick it in a Xiaomi power board and you're good to go :) No adapter required.

    • +3

      That also defeats the purpose though lol. The chargers have been designed to be compact for travel. I'm not going to take my power board with me everywhere I go 😂

      • Take the very very small one.

        • Still bigger than literally any multiport charger

  • Waiting for a stable 100W GAN Charger with multi port. Read reviews of the HyperJuice and people saying it isn't quite stable and no PFC

  • +2

    US plug. I wouldn't trust it.

    • -1

      Good thing it's not a US plug.

      • 2 parallel pins. How it it not a Type A US plug?
        https://www.worldstandards.eu/electricity/plugs-and-sockets/

        • Now you're just changing what was said. It's not a Type A US plug. Where are the holes? It's a Type A CN plug.

          • @Clear: Type-A US plug doesn't require holes. So stop being an ass.

            ANSI/NEMA WD 6-2002 "The hole in flat blade is optional, and it is intended for manufacturing purposes only. However if used it must be located as per dimensions shown above"

            • @dotJaz: That's far from being an ass. Trust me.

          • @Clear: Whatever it is it is not AU standard and requires an adaptor. And if your house burns down I hope the insurance company doesn't look too closely.

            • @MojoMiwo: Works fine in my Xiaomi power board. No adapters required. Won't void insurance either.

              • @Clear: You sure? Plugging a non compliant, not tested device into a australian power plug is OK with the insurance company if say a fire originates from it?
                I don't think so..

                • @MojoMiwo: just make sure you remove the evidence before you call them? lol.

    • what don't you trust about US plugs?

  • "Working Temperature: 0- 40°C"

    No good for summer in Australia then.

    • +2

      You're not supposed to use it outside in the sun.

      • Or in the garage, or non air-conditioned rooms?

        • +2

          Or a sauna? I guess I can't comprehend why someone would have their room so hot.

  • No PPS for 45W charging of Samsung Note 10 / S20?

    • I doubt it.

      I don't think there's any third-party chargers with PPS.

  • +1

    I know this sounds dodgy but I've just got pliers and twisted the pins to suit the au plug on a few chargers like this.
    Put the pliers right against the plastic so the twist is behind the plastic and when you plug it in there's no exposed pins. Damages the plastic a bit at the pins but you don't see it when it's plugged in and never had an issue

    Would void the warranty though

    • Glad I’m not the only one who does the twist. Great tip.

    • don't do that.

      Just use an adapter. Save yourself the warranty and the trouble. Costs $1.

    • it depends on how well the soldering is for the pins though. sometimes this may result in either loose pins or pins coming off.

  • do they make these in AU plugs? Or removable plugs?

Login or Join to leave a comment