Oppo has been spearheading the fast-charging market in the past few years and today the company introduced the mightiest charger for smartphones ever at 125W. At a launch event in China, we saw three new ultra-fast charging solutions - the 65W AirVOOC wireless charge, a pocket-sized 50W mini SuperVOOC charger, and 110W mini flash charger.
The 125W flash charge technology is said to charge a 4,000 mAh battery up to 41% in five minutes, while it will need a total of 20 minutes to reach 100%. In order to protect the power cell and the smartphone, the design of the tech comes with three parallel charge pumps that split the power, and Oppo has implemented 10 additional temperature sensors for extra safety.
The AirVOOC wireless flash charge adopts a circular design for better cooling, a glass panel for heat dissipation, and “self-developed isolated charge pump technology” with parallel dual-coil design to increase wireless charging efficiency. It operates on the same level as the wired 65W SuperVOOC 2.0 - two coils are charged simultaneously and a full charge of a 4,000 mAh battery should take about 30 minutes.
Currently, the charger is in its conceptual stage, since there are no Oppo smartphones that support the standard. The bottom of the charger comes with a cooling fan that lowers the temperature by two degrees Celsius, and the overall design is made in such a way to always provide a flow of fresh air.
The 50W mini SuperVOOC charger is no bigger than a portable 4G modem. The idea is to put it in a pocket or a purse and get on with your day, instead of having to bring around the standard heavy power brick. It is compatible with VOOC protocols (up to 4.0 at 30W) and also works with 27W and 50W PPS.
In order to provide proper current, the mini charger comes with so-called “pulse charging” - Oppo removed an electrolytic capacitor and allowed the charger to literally pump massive amounts of power at equal time slots of 40 ms, instead of going for the traditional increase of power throughout time.
The 110W mini flash charger has the same idea - it is slightly bigger, but operates on the same level. It will be compatible with all popular standards - SuperVOOC up to 65W, VOOC up to 30W, constant output of PD at 65W and Quick Charge at 36W.
Oppo even said it could charge competitor devices, although at limited rates - the Huawei P40 Pro at 18W, instead of 40W, the Xiaomi Mi 10 Pro at 30W, instead of 65W, and a MacBook Pro at 65W - in all cases charging be carried out with the original cable, provided in the retail box.
Currently, there are over 157 million users all over the world of the various VOOC technologies, and Oppo is promising to keep delivering fast-charging solutions with applying for more than 2,800 global patents on flash charging.
Here's the full Oppo presentation on video:
Coming back a year later and find out it's funny to see people roasting OPPO's fast charging technology without even knowing the facts.
You're making a strawman fallacy. Anand Lai is much more intelligent than you, and much more intelligent than me. He was the founder of AnandTech, and chief editor for a long-time, and the quality of his professionalism and work speaks for it...
Man I stopped reading Anandtech back in the day (2011-2012) days, where they would cover up for shortcomings of iOS and iPhone during reviews while subject Android flagships to next level scrutiny. They'll test other products fairly but the...
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