Android Phone/Tablet charging from same adapter?

fakemishra

Disciple
I have Samsung S23 ( 25W ) and Xiaomi Pad 6 ( 33W). It is a hassle to use two separate chargers.
Can I just go ahead and charge my phone with the same charger of 33W? Would it damage my phone?
 
No it wouldn't damage the phone, the device and the charger always does a handshake before upgrading to a higher voltage.

The supported voltage outputs seem slightly different for Samsung 25w vs Xiaomi 33w, so would need to check whether the fast charging works as expected. If the device and charge cannot come to a supported fast charging protocol, it will default to the regular 5V.

In short, it wouldn't cause any damage, but it may not always charge at the max possible rate.
 
No it wouldn't damage the phone, the device and the charger always does a handshake before upgrading to a higher voltage.

The supported voltage outputs seem slightly different for Samsung 25w vs Xiaomi 33w, so would need to check whether the fast charging works as expected. If the device and charge cannot come to a supported fast charging protocol, it will default to the regular 5V.

In short, it wouldn't cause any damage, but it may not always charge at the max possible rate.

this is valid for new gen devices but incase any standardized fast charger is used with old gen devices they apparanty start giving issue with battery backup or device overheating while charging or worst is damaging battery or damage charge circuit. learned it the hard way when i used a fast charger with ps4 controller
 
this is valid for new gen devices but incase any standardized fast charger is used with old gen devices they apparanty start giving issue with battery backup or device overheating while charging or worst is damaging battery or damage charge circuit. learned it the hard way when i used a fast charger with ps4 controller
This is what worries me. But as you said, new gen devices don't have much to worry.
No it wouldn't damage the phone, the device and the charger always does a handshake before upgrading to a higher voltage.

The supported voltage outputs seem slightly different for Samsung 25w vs Xiaomi 33w, so would need to check whether the fast charging works as expected. If the device and charge cannot come to a supported fast charging protocol, it will default to the regular 5V.

In short, it wouldn't cause any damage, but it may not always charge at the max possible rate.
That is reassuring. Thanks for being so elaborate. I suppose this is going to be fine.
 
I have a Samsung phone/tablet, an iPhone 15 and iPad. Since they all have a USB C port, I just use any charger that's available.
I've been monitoring the iPhone battery health all year, and it does not seem to have been impacted due to this.
 
Back
Top