I have the iPhone 12 ProMax and use Anker 20w PD and just bought the Pro version my battery health is at 94% . And that’s rocking the MagSafe , well worth the money. Great video
Monitor its temperature…not actually iPhone temperature. So point of this is…. Your household should not catch fire from charger. I don’t use fast chargers and battery health after years around 97-99 on every iPhone since this feature was released
I’ve been using the iPhone 13 Pro Max for over two years, and I’m still at 100% battery health. I’ve accomplished this in three ways. First, I only use a 5 W charger. Second, I never charge the phone above 75%. And third, I always blow a desk fan at the phone to keep it cool. The key to prohibiting battery degradation is to never overheat the phone. Topping off the charge above 75% also puts excessive stress on the battery. If you follow these steps, you may look like a fanatic. But you’ll extend the battery life beyond what you think is possible.
you're breathtaking 🫵 !!! You can also add - avoid deep discharge. I try not to discharge more than 20%. And also do not use magsafe or regular wireless, at least without airflow, they heat up the iPhone in the same way as 30w charges.
I’ve had my iPhone 12 since November and I’m sitting at 96 I’ve been using a mix of both apples usb c and anker and anker has been my fav as it was cheaper another great video Terren #AnkerNanoPro ✌🏽
@@Hunt3rr4455 yes they are good chargers but all fast chargers produced heat and that cause fast deterioration of battery health.. better use 5 w for routine.. in emergency fast:20 w
@@doctoratiq why the f are you gusy so obsessed with battery health?? like use 5 watt for charge?? that would take 4 5 hours just to complete the charge..
My 12 pro max still 100% on battery health 11 months later lol I’ve been using a Belkin wireless charger w overcharge protection. Only resort to fast charging on emergencies
You’re 100% right. The temperature sensor Anker is mentioning is meant for the brick from overheating. However power IQ does manage its cable and what’s the best wattage the cable and phone controller needs. But yes the iPhone has its own temperature sensor.
Am i the only one noticing that complete nonsense with the temperature control? The iPhone will stop charging itself when it gets too hot. You dont need to fall for this here. If you want to maintain battery health just use a different low power charger.
I’ve still got the Powerport PD version so I’m wondering if there’s any improvements in the charging aspects and I can’t seem to find a vid about it, would appreciate it if anyone can give me an answer
It is quicker and has smart internals to know how fast or slow your phone needs to be charged to keep it at s cooler setting meaning saving the batteries health.
Really enjoying your videos Terren. ^_^ Would you happen to know if the charger is sensing its own temperature or the actual temperature from a supported device like an iPhone? #AnkerNanoPro
@@tricktreat688 Nano Pro uses cheap Aishi and Samxcon chinese capacitors while Apple 20w uses Rubycon and Nippon Nichi Con capacitors which is best capacitors coming from Japan. Thats the dirty price of paying for apple price. :)
@@tricktreat688 UPDATE: As of September 2021, upon the release of new Ipads and Iphone 13, new stocks of Apple 20w chargers now uses AiShi capacitors. Same capacitors used by the new Anker Nano Pro. Current chipset and capacitors are now identical.
It doesn’t say that it will make your battery last forever It just makes the battery capacity decrease slower than it usually does by controlling the temperature
@@beamishlotus7269 The logic to charge the battery is built into the phone, NOT the “charger”. This brick is a simple power supply, and nothing more. It cannot cool your phone. The only thing it can do is provide more, or less power.
@@beamishlotus7269 The iPhone 13 pro max can use up to 27W of power. The phone will fast-charge much faster initially with a 30W power supply than a 20W power supply. However, iPhones are more aggressive about pulling current vs other devices, so it throttles back more aggressively with a 27W power supply than a 20W. The end result is that a 100% charge takes about the same amount of time with a 20W as it does with something faster. The devices are completely powerless (hah!) and cannot influence this behavior. Anker absolutely cannot take credit for this.
First comment in this channel but i follow since a few months now, you're video are great and pleasing to watch, good job! (oh and i participate #AnkerNanoPro)