[Prime] Anker 737 Power Bank, 24000mAh 3-Port Laptop Portable Charger with 140W Output $119.99 Delivered @ AnkerDirect Amazon AU

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ATL for this power bank from Anker!

Description:

Two-Way Charging Support: Supports Power Delivery 3.1 for input and output charging, with a maximum output of up to 140W under supported conditions. Note: Wireless charging is not supported.
Smart Digital Display: Easy-to-read digital display shows the output and input power and estimated time for the portable charger power bank to fully recharge.
High Capacity: Featuring a 24,000mAh portable charger battery capacity, juice up an Iphone 13 almost 5 times or a 2021 Ipad Pro 12.9" 1.3 times.
What You Get: Anker 737 Power Bank (PowerCore 24K), welcome guide, 24-month stress-free warranty, and friendly customer service.

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

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Comments

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  • +2

    This is good price

    • Best part is 140w input

  • Join Prime to buy this item at

    • +3

      … at..? Still waiting for it

    • at…. Amazon?

  • -1

    This definitely isn't airplane compliant right?

    • +1

      Still compliant.

      ≤100Wh (e.g., ~27,000 mAh): Allowed on most flights without approval.

    • Why wouldn't it? 3.7V × 24,000mAh = 88.8Wh, which is well below the usual 100Wh limit.

    • It would be for many airlines, but not if you are flying through China.

      • Correct. No CCC stamp

        • Unless the models are different, mine came with a ccc mark.

    • +1

      You can take it onboard, but you can't use them on a lot of airlines any more, so unless you've got a long stopover & need to charge a laptop mid-way with no access to power, then they're now pretty much useless for flying (I bought mine for long haul flights & motorcycle touring).
      Heavier than a GaN charger by a long way. Probably only useful for charging a windows laptop halfway through the day if you really can't be near power.

      • I asked mostly because, I only use powerbanks during a holiday where I need to be out for a whole day. So, it's less of me using it on a plane and more when I land kind of thing.

        But yeah, no, thanks for the tip!

      • so unless you've got a long stopover & need to charge a laptop mid-way with no access to power, then they're now pretty much useless for flying

        They're very useful for when you've drained your phone battery on an 8-14 hour flight and still need to use it to navigate to your hotel or do translations after.

  • +1

    No CCC for China?

    • Some (other) Anker batteries have it but others have reported that the same model from other countries don't (eg my "Anker Laptop Power Bank (25K, 165W, Built-In Retractable Cable)" from Anker AU store direct website does have CCC) but I guess no solid evidence either way.

      • I have it no CCC

      • I email them recently and they replied with none of the high capacity is CCC certified.

        Their website is a bit sneaky on CCC certificate. I believe the website intentionally phrase it that the battery meet CCC standard. But what we really need is the CCC logo embedded on the device.

        • Their website is a bit sneaky on CCC certificate. I believe the website intentionally phrase it that the battery meet CCC standard.

          Hmm, where do they mention CCC on their website?

    • +1

      You can't get CCC compliant powebanks here really. Bets option is to order on taobao and get it delivered to your hotel in china. Or just use the rental ones there and skip buying another

      • +1

        You can get them on Amazon, e.g. this and this.

      • I recently purchased a similarly shaped one from Ugreen and it has CCC on it, knowing that I'd be transiting through China and sure enough during one of the layovers the security guy gave it a thorough visual check for the CCC logo and found it.

        This is what I got

  • +1

    So it's a portable battery for a laptop? How long can it run a laptop for?

    • Look up the specs of your laptop, but imagine ~1 to 1.5hrs as a very rough guide line. Less for gaming laptops

  • I bought one scratch and dent in the US for this much a year ago, definitely a good price.

  • +1

    I always think about buying this… how low does it need to go before I pull the trigger….

    • I have one. It's big, it's heavy, but it fully charges in 90 mins and I've had no issues , even after dropping a few times. Seriously this can be used as a baton if need be and probably still work.

  • +2

    For anyone that cares, it doesn't do 12V PD. Shame.

    • What does that mean?

      • +3

        Not much to normal power bank users who just use it with their phones and laptops - it works great for those.

        Some people want to use a special cable with Type C on one end and a barrel DC plug on the other to power standard 12V devices. The cable has a chip that tells the charger to output 12V which is one of the standard USB PD voltages which this power bank doesn't support.

    • +2

      12V actually isn't part of PD

      "https://www.usb.org/sites/default/files/2021-05/USB PG USB PD 3.1 DevUpdate Announcement_FINAL.pdf"

      "A choice of three new fixed voltages: 28V (above 100W), 36V (above 140W) and 48V (above
      180W) joining previously defined 5V, 9V, 15V and 20V fixed voltages."

      • +1

        It was part of the original USB PD 1.0 (and 2.0 Version 1.1) specification under Profiles 2-5. It is not mandatory under the newer PD specs so it is up to manufacturers to support it if they want to, hence this situation where some power banks support it and some don't.

        PPS and AVS makes fixed voltages moot, but PPS/AVS triggers are still rare unfortunately.

    • Please recommend large powerbank that supports 12V if you found one… cheers

  • do most airlines still allow PBs? I heard our domestic ones shut them down now too

    • +2

      Yes you can take them onboard, you just can't use them in the air.

  • -6

    Be warned, this thing is about as big as a (Boeing) 737. I bought one and returned it after realising how heavy it is.

    • I look forward to the day when 24000mAh power bank is the size of a USB stick. Cannot wait.

  • 630g wow

  • Other than being a "better" brand, how does this compare against its competitors, like Ugreen and the OB fave INIU? Both being sold the same price currently but at higher capacity… I reckon will be cheaper too once a discount code comes along?

    • anker was the king till the chinese clones offered similar quality for lower prices

      • +1

        nigh on identical to Ugreen in quality just more expensive and premium-marketed, iniu you do get what you pay for re failure rates

        • I have both Iniu and Ugreen. Both decent quality no need to pay extra for a name.

          • @cent88: I have the Ugreen one bought on sale with the CCC certification for about $109 last month. Can't be happier but yes it is chunky. Bringing it along for a day during travel takes effort!

            • @pongky: Still lighter than this thing. Mine is about 420 grams. And I use it to charge my phone, tablet and Asus Rog Ally X when on flights, lol.

  • Does this have PPS? I have a Google Pixel 9 Pro XL and found that lots of powerbanks don't fast charge it.

  • If I remember correctly, this doesn’t support pass through charging.

    • It does have pass through, but it's a bit slow. No point since you can fully charged it in 90mins anyway

  • Had one of these for a long time, absolutely fantastic. Charges a laptop well, shows the wattage its charging each port at so you can tell if a cable is slow/crap, shows how long it will last for and how long it will take to charge, and also charges fast.

  • +1

    I ordered this and it did have a ccc mark on the powerbank

    • Same just got mine today! had the triple CCC on the powerbank

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