Not to mention the company reps are complete POSs when responding to you. Super rude and sarcastic. Won’t support them especially after reading some of the reviews on Amazon
8:15 These wires are called the balance leads, 3:38 you revealed that plug here; This 'junction' is the balance input. 5:05 shows the battery monitoring IC, hence the input of that lead.
I really like this. I can’t find any information on this exact model however. It’s says on the face Pandaer, is that a limited edition model? The bear on the back is super cool too. I can only find the ugly silver colored one
You can check it in here: www.kickstarter.com/projects/edc-power-bank/storm2-slim-the-portable-130-watt-edc-cyberpunk-power-bank?ref=discovery_newest But what we shown in video is Chinese special edition, just the casing is different.
I hate when battery manufacturers lie about mAh when building battery packs like this. This pack is NOT 20,000 mAh! It's only 5,000 mAh. Those four batteries are each 5,000 mAh, but the are using them in series to increase voltage. Batteries in series DO NOT increase the mAh like that. This is why the watt hour rating of batteries is a more accurate rating, but manufacturers still like to falsely flaunt the mAh like this.
funny how your bitching and wont give any answer yourself to the problem, as mAh is such relative terms and it would cofuse even more to claim itf from a higher voltage on a product that is so multiple voltage depended as a consumer powerbank at the end of the day, this powerbank do have 4x 5000mAh batteries inside, so 20.000mAh, and as long as its a variable voltage from 5v to 21v it would have no relevance to take a mAh value from a higher voltage, as it will vary greatly depending on what voltage the user is using it at and buck or boost cirquitry. - and why they are using the ref. LIion ref voltage of 3.6v and then usally state a real capacity based on an effiancy number, useally around 2/3.. The same with the Storm2. it had 25.600mAh with an adj. DC out that could go from 3.3v to 25v, so a person using the powrerbank at 3.3v and with your logic it would be 27920Mah powerbank at 3.3v and only 3600mAh if the user used it at the 25v it also can do (baseed on a ref of 25.600 with 3.6v) as the mAh value will vary greatly depending on what voltage it is being sucked at, and what effiancy percentage that are in play but that aint relevant here. On powertools you can give a value at nominel voltage, as these packs are only planned to be used at a fixed voltage. but that aint the case with powerbanks.. so it is the right approach.. and the best to simply state what battteries are present in this powerbank and use the batteries own reference voltage. also why you shall usally look at the watthour, and also why regulation like fx flight limits etc.. are not stating mAh-values as it can vary greatly depending on the voltage, but gives a limit in watt hours (wh).
@@bluegizmo1983 if you haven't noticed it, they usually do, and its not like you need a Ph.D. to see the wh-value.. It almost seems like you don't even know how the wh is calculated if you think it's a problem they don't show it.. even a child knows what it is. Its the same with wattage- 5v with 1A = 5watt a power bank with 10.000mah and with LIion cells 3.6v = 36.000wh so a storm2 slim with 20.000mAh will have a watthour at 72.000 (20k x3.6) so anybody under the can in a blink of an eye.. sees what the wh is.
@@bluegizmo1983which they already do. The have both on their website. But if Sharge is the only one using Wh then it's still useless because you can't compare it to other powerbanks so it's not fair to blame sharge for this
You can support this product on Kickstarter: www.kickstarter.com/projects/edc-power-bank/storm2-slim-the-portable-130-watt-edc-cyberpunk-power-bank?ref=discovery_newest
@ChargerLAB Plese try charging other power banks like zendure supertank pro with this powerbank. The 100w input/output will give us a real since of temperature, output wattage, etc.