• @[email protected]
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    220 hours ago

    If they can charge a car in 5 minutes using 1.3 MW charging, why wouldn’t 120 Watt be fine for charging your phone in 20? Also the charging is protecting the battery by reducing speed as it approaches 100%. The lifespan seems fine, I’m not detecting any deterioration. By today’s standards it’s not even that fast. And it is very convenient to be able to top it off quickly. That way I also don’t have to leave it charging overnight, I can do it while I make coffee and eat my breakfast. That way I minimize trickle charging which can also harm the battery.

    The battery has to be made for fast charging, and Samsung is apparently way behind on that.

    that’s already faster than what I’m comfortable with.

    Then why did you buy a Samsung?

    • @[email protected]
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      118 hours ago

      I’m curious what car charges at 1.3MW. Most I’ve heard of is closer to a quarter of that, and that’s only for 20-80% before it drops back significantly because it generates significantly more heat gain the upper 20-30%

      • @[email protected]
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        217 hours ago

        I’m curious what car charges at 1.3MW

        BYD has the entire 1MW system ready in cars you can buy today, with charging stations for it being rolled out in China.
        CATL has a battery capable of 1.3MW, but it is AFAIK not available in any cars yet.
        Current high end Chinese cars on the market in EU are about 400 kW charging.

        BYD Charges at 1MW, although they will probably not be available in America due to protectionism.
        1.3 MW is the newest CATL Battery, which for American manufacturers were supposed to work with, but may be impossible now too due to protectionist tariffs.

        https://insideevs.com/news/756144/byd-han-l-megawatt-charging/

        BYD is launching two EVs that boast “Megawatt” charging capability, capable adding about 250 miles of range in just 5 minutes.

        https://www.perplexity.ai/discover/top/catl-unveils-battery-charging-K2CWUCOTQuuj6G_DkbaTjw

        peak charging rate approaching 12C with maximum charging power exceeding 1.3 megawatts

        But even a pretty average 80-85kWh car today can charge 10-80% in about 20 minutes. More expensive cars do it in 15 minutes.

    • @[email protected]
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      15 hours ago

      Trickle charging does not harm batteries. On the contrary, the slower you charge a battery the safer it is. This is why all battery protection reduces charging wattage as the battery gets more and more full. Fast charging damages batteries, faster charging means faster degradation. There’s no way around that, it’s just physics, entropy comes for us all. Battery makers are just betting you’ll buy a new device before it becomes noticeable.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 hours ago

        Trickle charging does not harm batteries. On the contrary, the slower you charge a battery the safer it is.

        Charging when the battery full or very close to it is absolutely harmful, and that’s what trickle charging does. It especially harmful if the charger isn’t 100% accurate, and especially for Lithium batteries.
        Apparently some people also use the term for just slow charging in general, but this is obviously what I meant in this context.
        Trickle charging compensates for self discharge and the idle power used, so even when accurate, to keep charging a little bit to maintain a 99%-100% charge is definitely harmful.
        It’s way better to only charge to 80% for instance. Which is the reason all fast charging times for cars a measured up to 80%.

        Trickle charging is damaging if for instance you charge your phone when you go to bed and don’t disconnect the charger until morning, that means many hours of trickle charging at near full capacity.

        Because my phone charges fast, it never trickle charges for long at near 100%.

        • @[email protected]
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          210 hours ago

          Phones have had pretty good battery management for many years now. My phone adaptive charge gets to 80% and stays there without charging until 20 minutes before my alarm when it activates charging again to get to 100% exactly as the alarm goes off. The default behavior is a basic care that makes it so the battery stops charging at 100%, waits to drop to 95% then goes back again to full in a cycle. The risk of overcharging from leaving a phone charger connected overnight has been null for about a decade. Fast charging, on the other hand will always degrade the battery. It is way too much tension over way too short of a time span.

          Trickle charging has only ever meant keeping electrical voltage on a full battery for acid batteries (actually overcharging). It has never meant that for consumer electronics.

          • @[email protected]
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            110 hours ago

            It is way too much tension over way too short of a time span.

            Except charging speed of a phone depends on the capability of the battery used for that phone, and new batteries that are made for it, can handle way faster charging than older batteries.

            My phone adaptive charge gets to 80% and stays there without charging until 20 minutes before my alarm

            Oh my god, that is the absolute worst. So the day you are extra busy and have to get up a little earlier than usual, and depend more on your phone than normal, it’s only charged to 80%! That’s exactly the kind of unintelligent solutions I hate. They always fuck up when it’s most inconvenient.

            the battery stops charging at 100%, waits to drop to 95% then goes back again to full in a cycle.

            So repeated charging from 95% to 100% which is clearly not good for the battery.

            • @[email protected]
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              16 hours ago

              You are wrong in all of your replies, but I have ran out of time to educate you. Good day.