Since the new iPad Pro does not come with a charger, I need to buy one separately. The main question is how many watts I need for fast charging. I know that higher wattage is fine, but I want to keep the weight down while still being able to fast charge it.
I checked today, and my iPad Pro charged at 27 watts. I used the 35 watts duo brick from Apple.
Blaze said:
I checked today, and my iPad Pro charged at 27 watts. I used the 35 watts duo brick from Apple.
Thanks for the info, that helps a lot. How did you measure that?
Blaze said:
I checked today, and my iPad Pro charged at 27 watts. I used the 35 watts duo brick from Apple.
Thanks for the info, that helps a lot. How did you measure that?
You’re welcome! I used a digital power meter that plugs into the socket.
Vale said:
Blaze said:
I checked today, and my iPad Pro charged at 27 watts. I used the 35 watts duo brick from Apple.
Thanks for the info, that helps a lot. How did you measure that?
You’re welcome! I used a digital power meter that plugs into the socket.
Cool, thanks. I need to get one of those.
Blaze said:
Vale said:
Blaze said:
I checked today, and my iPad Pro charged at 27 watts. I used the 35 watts duo brick from Apple.
Thanks for the info, that helps a lot. How did you measure that?
You’re welcome! I used a digital power meter that plugs into the socket.
Cool, thanks. I need to get one of those.
I have a 100W USB-C cable with an LED display and a Belkin 65W charging brick. The max wattage is 35W!
Vale said:
Blaze said:
Vale said:
Blaze said:
I checked today, and my iPad Pro charged at 27 watts. I used the 35 watts duo brick from Apple.
Thanks for the info, that helps a lot. How did you measure that?
You’re welcome! I used a digital power meter that plugs into the socket.
Cool, thanks. I need to get one of those.
I have a 100W USB-C cable with an LED display and a Belkin 65W charging brick. The max wattage is 35W!
Interesting, what was your battery level? A lot of YouTubers say 60W even through the keyboard.
Jai said:
Vale said:
Blaze said:
Vale said:
Blaze said:
I checked today, and my iPad Pro charged at 27 watts. I used the 35 watts duo brick from Apple.
Thanks for the info, that helps a lot. How did you measure that?
You’re welcome! I used a digital power meter that plugs into the socket.
Cool, thanks. I need to get one of those.
I have a 100W USB-C cable with an LED display and a Belkin 65W charging brick. The max wattage is 35W!
Interesting, what was your battery level? A lot of YouTubers say 60W even through the keyboard.
It was at 45%. Maybe they were using 100W bricks.
The iPad does come with a 20W brick and USB-C.
Blake said:
The iPad does come with a 20W brick and USB-C.
Unfortunately, that’s not true where I live. In some European countries, Apple only includes the cable.
Blake said:
The iPad does come with a 20W brick and USB-C.
Unfortunately, that’s not true where I live. In some European countries, Apple only includes the cable.
Oh, I see. You can get a 30W brick to charge the iPad.
Vale said:
Blake said:
The iPad does come with a 20W brick and USB-C.
Unfortunately, that’s not true where I live. In some European countries, Apple only includes the cable.
Oh, I see. You can get a 30W brick to charge the iPad.
Thanks for the suggestion. I just ordered one.
Older bigger pros can charge up to 36W if I remember correctly.
I heard they support 60W actually.
I’m using the M1 iPad Pro 12.9 inch. The max charging speed is 40W, but it gets pretty warm when I’m using it.
Vale said:
Since the new iPad Pro does not come with a charger, I need to buy one separately. The main question is how many watts I need for fast charging. I know that higher wattage is fine, but I want to keep the weight down while still being able to fast charge it.
Will using a 60W or higher charger damage the device?
Vale said:
Since the new iPad Pro does not come with a charger, I need to buy one separately. The main question is how many watts I need for fast charging. I know that higher wattage is fine, but I want to keep the weight down while still being able to fast charge it.
Will using a 60W or higher charger damage the device?
Nope, I have been using an 87W charger at home for a long time. The iPad only uses what it needs. I just wanted to find out how much it can take to get a matching charger. I got a 30W Anker nano in the meantime. It’s really small.
Remi said:
Vale said:
Since the new iPad Pro does not come with a charger, I need to buy one separately. The main question is how many watts I need for fast charging. I know that higher wattage is fine, but I want to keep the weight down while still being able to fast charge it.
Will using a 60W or higher charger damage the device?
Nope, I have been using an 87W charger at home for a long time. The iPad only uses what it needs. I just wanted to find out how much it can take to get a matching charger. I got a 30W Anker nano in the meantime. It’s really small.
So even if I use something like 1000 watts for charging, it won’t harm the iPad, right?
Vale said:
Remi said:
Vale said:
Since the new iPad Pro does not come with a charger, I need to buy one separately. The main question is how many watts I need for fast charging. I know that higher wattage is fine, but I want to keep the weight down while still being able to fast charge it.
Will using a 60W or higher charger damage the device?
Nope, I have been using an 87W charger at home for a long time. The iPad only uses what it needs. I just wanted to find out how much it can take to get a matching charger. I got a 30W Anker nano in the meantime. It’s really small.
So even if I use something like 1000 watts for charging, it won’t harm the iPad, right?
Nope, you’re wrong because PCs have 2000W power supplies and don’t use 2000W all the time. The iPad takes as much as it needs.
Zeek said:
Vale said:
Remi said:
Vale said:
Since the new iPad Pro does not come with a charger, I need to buy one separately. The main question is how many watts I need for fast charging. I know that higher wattage is fine, but I want to keep the weight down while still being able to fast charge it.
Will using a 60W or higher charger damage the device?
Nope, I have been using an 87W charger at home for a long time. The iPad only uses what it needs. I just wanted to find out how much it can take to get a matching charger. I got a 30W Anker nano in the meantime. It’s really small.
So even if I use something like 1000 watts for charging, it won’t harm the iPad, right?
Nope, you’re wrong because PCs have 2000W power supplies and don’t use 2000W all the time. The iPad takes as much as it needs.
You’re