Did they say what's the capacity of the power bank?
10000 mah.
Edit: Beaten.
Did they say what's the capacity of the power bank?
10000 mAh.
Ah, not bad for an extra 4 hours full settings on Zelda. I guess I'll get the 5v/3a power bank then.10000 mah.
Edit: Beaten.
Sounds about right, 10,000 mAh * .6 = 6,000 mAh / 4,310 = 1.39 charges.
1 charge at full brightness etc = ~3 hours * 1.39 = 4.17 hours, which is basically what they said, 4 hours and 13 minutes.
So looks like I've been right all along more or less, a normal non-PD power bank can charge the Switch while in use, just like an iPhone or iPad and increase the charge. You just need to avoid weird power banks that only have Qualcomm Quick Charge ports that would drop the charge to .5A instead of 2A or more.
So the ~20,000 mAh power banks commonly linked (Anker / RAVPower) would give an additional 8 1/2 hours, and then with the switch's battery close to 12 hours total. That's on max brightness though, on normal brightness it should definitely be over 12 hours.
I just recently fried a cheap stereo by testing out a plug from a different stereo on it because I was too lazy to find the right plug and it fit. Well now it's garbage, but hey, that's what warranties are for. If you're going to test it, do it in the first month, when you can return it with no worries for another Switch.
Dumb question, but does anyone know if the Switch's firmware lives on the hardware or on the SD card?
Mostly I just wanna know if I should be swapping in my roomier SD card for the card the system ships with before powering it on for the first time.
Sounds about right, 10,000 mAh * .6 = 6,000 mAh / 4,310 = 1.39 charges.
1 charge at full brightness etc = ~3 hours * 1.39 = 4.17 hours, which is basically what they said, 4 hours and 13 minutes.
So looks like I've been right all along more or less, a normal non-PD power bank can charge the Switch while in use, just like an iPhone or iPad and increase the charge. You just need to avoid weird power banks that only have Qualcomm Quick Charge ports that would drop the charge to .5A instead of 2A or more.
So the ~20,000 mAh power banks commonly linked (Anker / RAVPower) would give an additional 8 1/2 hours, and then with the switch's battery close to 12 hours total. That's on max brightness though, on normal brightness it should definitely be over 12 hours.
So, how do you charge the switch if your dock is at home? There is no extra cable? Or I can just use an extra USB-C cord and power brick from the many phones in my past?
Except for long flights/trips away from an outlet. I would need to use a power brick? I may grab one after I open the switch.
Warranties aren't supposed to cover user error, and manufacturers explicitly state that warranties are void if you use non-licensed accessories. I think returning a product because you tested a non-officially endorsed accessory while knowing that there is a chance it could damage the product is a douche move, and possibly illegal. Unless you're buying one of those no-questions-asked 3rd party warranties.
Anyway, this reddit thread might interest some here: https://www.reddit.com/r/NintendoSw...o_not_charge_your_switch_with_a_powerbank_or/
Wait, why is it 60% of the 10,000 mAH? Just trying to understand the calculation.
My basic understanding of it is the transfer of energy from the power bank to device you're charging (the Switch) isn't 100% efficient. Hence not 1:1; it tends to be around 60% efficient.
I'm 99% sure you mean 5V / 3A, not 5A. I don't think any USB-C power banks output 5A at any voltage.
Either way, the answer is "Yes" you can charge it while playing, but whether that charge increases the battery level while in use or just slows the drain, we don't know. The only thing I've seen is that a Jackery Titan USB-A power bank with Qualcomm QC 2.0 cannot increase the charge of the Switch while in use.
While all power banks carry no risk to using, wall chargers are another thing. I just recently fried a cheap stereo by testing out a plug from a different stereo on it because I was too lazy to find the right plug and it fit. Well now it's garbage, but hey, that's what warranties are for. If you're going to test it, do it in the first month, when you can return it with no worries for another Switch.
D'oh, that's my power bank.
So basically if I'm on a long flight, plug it in right away and hope it keeps the power from draining before the flight ends?
Any USB-C chord and a power brick would work. I have a retina MacBook, so I could use my charger for that.
Did they use a usb-c to usb-c cable? Or a to c?Rerez got a 30,000mAh battery from Aukey. They drained the Switch completely, then played it while charging, and after about an hour it had only added 8% to the battery during that hour. With the system off, it took about 2 hours to fully charge the last 92%: https://youtu.be/Dn72uuvnSUY?t=247
Did they use a usb-c to usb-c cable? Or a to c?
Rerez got a 30,000mAh battery from Aukey. They drained the Switch completely, then played it while charging, and after about an hour it had only added 8% to the battery during that hour. With the system off, it took about 2 hours to fully charge the last 92%: https://youtu.be/Dn72uuvnSUY?t=247
Rerez got a 30,000mAh battery from Aukey. They drained the Switch completely, then played it while charging, and after about an hour it had only added 8% to the battery during that hour. With the system off, it took about 2 hours to fully charge the last 92%: https://youtu.be/Dn72uuvnSUY?t=247
Oh, this is very good news. Dunno why he act as if 8% charge WHILE playing is a bad thing; of course it charges slower while playing a game as intensive as Zelda. That it charges at all is great, and 2 hours to near fully charge when turned off is good. It's also worth noting that he uses a USB C to C cable to charge it.
The Ars Technica article must've had something else going on to get such poor results. I'm starting to believe they used an A to C cable with a Quickcharge port and that keeps it charging slower, so you'll want to use a USB-C port or a non-QC USB-A port to charge.
Switch doesn't ship with an SD card, and a card is not required to use the system. The firmware is on the internal memory.
Hey knowledgeable-on-this-complicated-stuff gaf! Quick question. I was hoping to score a second AC adapter for the Switch and saw the extra one is $30 on Amazon. My question is, is this alternative cord and brick combo by Nyko effectively the same thing, or should I spring for the Nintendo one? I just like the idea of a cable/brick combo more, especially if I ever get a powerbank or anything like that in the future, thanks!
That's weird - didn't the 3DS ship with an SD card already nestled in the system?
Is there any reason I couldn't use my newer MacBook Pro power supply (USB-C) to charge the switch when it's away from the dock?
I highly recommend getting this: https://www.razerzone.com/gaming-accessories/razer-power-bank
It will run USB C to C with 15v at 3a.
As for a wall charger, I'd look at Google's offering that the poster above linked.
If you want to bankrupt people, sure, Switch only needs 5V / 3A though (to increase charge in use), so that Razer's overkill, unless you're charging laptops with it, and even then the RAVPower PD-USB one is less than 1/2 the price for over 2x the capacity. Any cheap USB-C charger will work fine with the Switch. Probably even the cheaper ~$15 USB A ones too, that cost like 1/10th the price.
If anyone is interested in my recommended wall charger for the Switch itself, I would get:
https://store.google.com/product/usb_type_c_18w_power_adapter
Or
https://store.google.com/product/usb_c_dual_port_charger
Both are good 15W charger, I'm almost 100% sure its compatible.
As for a wall charger, I'd look at Google's offering that the poster above linked.
So I post my question again, what's the difference between all these usb cord ?
If you want to bankrupt people, sure, Switch only needs 5V / 3A though (to increase charge in use), so that Razer's overkill, unless you're charging laptops with it, and even then the RAVPower PD-USB one is less than 1/2 the price for over 2x the capacity. Any cheap USB-C charger will work fine with the Switch. Probably even the cheaper ~$15 USB A ones too, that cost like 1/10th the price.
Those are both more expensive than the official charger (Nintendo 39W wall wart is priced at $30) and neither one puts out 39W.
Why would you recommend those over the Nintendo one that is cheaper and can power the Switch in docked mode?
not sure what you mean by different, but with USB-C you do want to be careful that the cord you're getting is properly manufactured to deliver the right voltage. a lot of them (especially the USB A to C cables) aren't, and could potentially harm either your device or your charger by delivering too much power or trying to draw too much power.
Any old 5V power bank will work, but it might charge quite slowly (at worst a full charge could theoretically take 6 hours, though that is the absolute worst case scenario).I asked this in another thread, but since the conversation is happening here: So if all I want to do is charge it while the thing is off any old 5v powerbank will do fine? Like even the cheapos?
Any old 5V power bank will work, but it might charge quite slowly (at worst a full charge could theoretically take 6 hours, though that is the absolute worst case scenario).
The Digital Foundry showed that a 5v/2.1A power bank can keep the Switch charged at 100% while playing Zelda at max settings, and likely charges it a slow rate, so a 5v/2A power bank should be decently fast. You might want to avoid Qualcomm Quick Charge technology in a power bank, since the Switch doesn't support it, which results in the system not recognising what power draw it can do, and therefore defaulting to the USB port's standard power draw of 5v/0.5A (this is your worst case scenario).Is there anything specific I can look for when trying to avoid the slow recharge time you mention?
I've got a long flight coming up (close to 9 hours), and I'm thinking I'll stagger my time: Switch - 3DS - Book - Switch know what I'm saying?
The Digital Foundry showed that a 5v/2.1A power bank can keep the Switch charged at 100% while playing Zelda at max settings, and likely charges it a slow rate, so a 5v/2A power bank should be decently fast. You might want to avoid Qualcomm Quick Charge technology in a power bank, since the Switch doesn't support it, which results in the system not recognising what power draw it can do, and therefore defaulting to the USB port's standard power draw of 5v/0.5A (this is your worst case scenario).
A 10000 mah power bank will give you 4-5 hours of extra Zelda time (depending on your settings) for a total of 6.5-8 hours, so for a 9 hour flight that should go a long way (if not all the way).
Has there been any info about loading times? Physical cart vs SD download?