So now they have explained how to identify a genuine Apple Charger, the fake producers can finally get it right.
Still metal is a great conductor of electricity, stick to a polycarbonate shell and you will be fine.
Apple has responded to a recent spate of incidents in which iPhone users were electrocuted whilst apparently charging their handsets with a new guide on its Chinese site detailing how to identify an official power adapter. Clicking on a prominent link on the homepage will take visitors to a dedicated web page explaining how all …
Well, what's funny is that they seem to deliberately try to avoid getting it right. While there probably are some that are true clones, most are easy to spot given even a cursory glance. My fake says "Abble" instead of "Apple". There are other fakes that says "Designed by California" instead of "Designed by Apple in California" and leave out the little "Apple Japan" mention.
I assume they're doing this because they're afraid of getting sued so they carefully avoid using the Apple name. Why, I'm not really sure, since Apple trying to sue some fly-by-night company in China that could shut down and spring up the following Monday under a new name seems like a waste of their time.
I probably should worry about using the fake given recent events. I bought it (them, I bought two) because I wanted to have one spare I keep in my suitcase and one I keep in my laptop case so I wouldn't have to remember to take the real one I use at home for nightly charging whenever I'm on the road. When I last used the suitcase one a few weeks ago I had to plug the lightning connector in about 4 or 5 times until the phone gave an indication it was charging, I guess that's the tradeoff. The real one connects perfectly every time.
Whatever money Apple makes from selling chargers is probably about .00001% of their total profit, it probably would give them some good publicity if they said "from now we're going to sell our chargers at cost" (which I've heard is $5 - $7, presumably because they use better components than the cheaper clones) and gave as the reason the desire to avoid any more unfortunate deaths. If Apple's were $5 or $10 I'd have bought two more of theirs, but at $29/ea I didn't really want to pay that for spares I only use occasionally...
First, because Apple. It's a status symbol, to a large extent. If you've gotten yourself one of the most expensive phones on the market, you want to flaunt it - not buy a cheap-looking charger.
Secondly, USB charging isn't quite that simple. It is on the iPhone - that's a basic USB power thing. Give it five volts and it'll be happy to draw the 500ma USB permits. The iPad, however, demands a bit more power than that - which means it can't just run off of any charger or USB port, it has to be a device that supports both the high-current mode and the negotiation to tell the iPad it is safe to draw that much. This is why the iPad won't charge normally from the USB ports of most non-Apple devices* or USB power adapters not specifically designed for such devices.
The situation isn't any different on Android tablets. It's a basic law of USB: If you draw more than 500mA without checking the device is ready, you'll either crash the USB controller or trip the polyfuse.
*I understand it will charge but only when in sleep state - there isn't enough power available to run the pad and charge the batteries at once.
Why by a fake Apple charger? Why not just buy some other USB charger that was neither fake nor expensive?
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I actually only needed the extra lightning cables, the charger came with it for "free". I only ever use the fake charger that I keep in my suitcase for travel (the laptop bag just needs a cable since I use the USB port on it for charging/syncing)
I should dig up another USB power adapter to use for it because the other posters are right that it may be dangerous to use. I don't much care if it is the same size or looks like the Apple one, a charger is a charger.
If your fake is the tiny form-factor, DESTROY AND THROW IT AWAY IMMEDIATELY.
Or better, carefully pull it apart and post photos, then throw it.
I'm serious, those really are incredibly dangerous!
Every single one of the UK smaller-than-a-normal plug fakes I've seen have such tiny clearances that they will connect the USB shell (and thus phone chassis) to the mains merely by slightly wiggling the cable in the wrong direction.
My experiences with spare chargers for kit boils down to there being roughly 4 grades of kit. I'll go for PC laptop chargers, since that's what I see more off.
Grade 1: Official replacement branded new charger might set you back $65, and will work perfectly.
Grade 2: Second hand official chargers are usually pretty good and you can get them for about $30ish but no security of supply. Retired corporate is often the best, you can pick up unused ones that have been sitting in a drawer for years.
Grade 3a: Now we get onto the generics and knock offs. These are the good quality ones, often from the same runs as the official one, but not branded. These run to about $25-30, and appear to have gone through at least basic QA, and work consistently with stable outputs, and don't go crazy hot when left on for more than 6 hours. But you should still check them :)
Grade 3b: A few companies sell chargers with a variety of output settings and different adapters. Usually these are very good (or a complete dog), since they've also been tested, and would seem to be made of fairly decent grade components. However, they do run to $50+
After that anything else starts to have corners being cut which will end up damaging the device or generating excess heat (ie catch fire). My advice to people who have a dead charger on a 200 buck laptop is to either plan on a new machine, or a halfway decent charger, as a $10 charger from eBay is probably going to be a health hazard.
I suspect that the PR was chucked together with some boiler bits to be clarified by the techies later.
i.e. Think of it as saying ${random_standard}, or "chuck in some standard or other that ours comply with here, as appropriate to each market this is released in".
In other words: "oops".
I think it'd surprise you the amount of innovation that goes into your average iphone charger. To meet the low standby power requirements, etc., the low heat dissipation, the high reliability, etc. yadayadayada. The things are actually pretty complex and to make them as small as they are is actually a pretty sweet feat of engineering. I'm not saying they don't make a tidy profit, but it's also FAR from simple...
Ahhh... belkin- one of the few firms to offer lifetime warranties.
Apple- one of the few firms that try to charge you extra for your statutory rights.
Just out of interest, does anyone know why so many double insulated products have no earth lead. I appreciate that the item doesn't need earthing but what about the lead itself? Is it a cost thing?
Seriously, how many seemingly intelligent people don't know that the word 'electrocution' means an electric shock that ENDS YOUR LIFE. That's like saying he had a nasty case of execution, but got better.
Yours sincerely,
Mr Pedant.
PS. On a similar vein, a person killing themselves with a noose is HANGED, not HUNG. ;)
I beg to differ, sir. A picture can be HUNG but not HANGED. A person can be HANGED (to death) but they can also be HUNG (from a harness - presumably alive.) Strictly speaking, I suppose it's possible to use HUNG if you managed to die whilst being held up on a rope by something other than your neck. Possibly it's more about intent than it is about which bodily appendage is inserted into the rope. I'll let the linguists argue about that one. ;)
http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/hang?q=hanged#hang__15