Level 7. 20,700 points. May 13, 2019 9:20 AM in response to kevdude1234. Apple's iPhone chargers work with voltage anywhere in the world., 110, 115, 120, 220, 230, 240 and whatever else you might find. All that is needed is a mechanical adapter so that the plug fits into the receptacle. ( 0)To fast charge your Apple Watch you will also need one of these power adapters Apple 18W, 20W, 29W, 30W, 61W, 87W, or 96W USB-C Power Adapter or a third-party USB-C power adapter that supports USB
2019 Macbook Air, 18W charger: - Will slowly charge with normal tasks (Safari, Pages, Keynote). - Won't charge when using apps that use a lot of resources (like FCPX editing). - Will slowly lose battery percentage when pushing the laptop (like FCPX rendering) With M1 Air and 20W charger it will be only better than this.
It will definitely not hurt your watch at all but it’s a bit of a waste to use 20w, I’d rather use that for fast charging a phone! I bought the 20W charger for my iPhone 12 so that I can use MagSafe. I was just wondering so that I can only use one adapter for all my devices. But I already got my answer thanks!
Yes. There is no risk, or danger in using the 12 watt charger to charge the Apple watch. The charging circuit in all Apple devices is smart, and will only ever draw as much power as it requires. It cannot be overcharged, and it cannot receive more power than it needs, since power is not pushed to it, it is drawn by it. You can see the
Apple vs Anker: 20W Power Adapter for iPhones and iPads. 2. Apple vs Anker: Dual Port USB-C Charger for iPhones and iPads. 3. Apple vs Anker: MacBook Chargers. 4. Apple vs Anker: MagSafe Charger for iPhone. 5. Apple MagSafe Battery vs Anker Magnetic Battery Pack.
You completely missed the point. OP is concerned about the heat produced by 20W charging and wonders if 5W would be better for long term. Using+charging is in general bad idea due to the heat generated, if charging alone creates heat, using a device will be always worse. 4.
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