when i use my HTC thunderbolt as a GPS in the car and plugged into my griffin dual-USB port charger, it never really seems to charge...just maintain the current power leveli assume that's because it's using just enough (or perhaps just a tad less) power than it's getting from the charger and as such, doesn't charge...since it will actually charge when i have it simply plugged in (but screen off and no GPS app running), it chargesi have one of those Y-cables that used to come with external hard drives back in the day when some enclosure/HDD combinations wouldn't get enough power from the USB ports and you'd plug the single cable into two ports to power it...would using one of these cables allow me to fast-charge my phone?the griffin adapter is NOT compatible with the ipad (apparently each port doesn't supply enough mA?)...so i assume the voltage is the same (5V), but it would multiply the amperage supplied to the phone (500mA to 1000mA), thereby allowing for fast charginggood idea, do-at-your-own-risk-but-will-probably-not-blow-up-your-phone idea, or zomg-dont-do-it! idea?
5/3/2012 7:11:16 AM
5/3/2012 8:12:38 AM
5/3/2012 8:26:44 AM
The rating of that adapter might also be for total power output, not just each USB port. My old droid barely charges when using GPS navigation and the battery gets pretty warm so I know it's sucking up some power as well.
5/3/2012 8:32:09 AM
^ if that's the case and the thunderbolt is willing (ie. isn't limited to 500mA), then the Y-cable might still help, yes?edit: actually, i think specialkay is right: http://store.griffintechnology.com/powerjolt-dual-micro
5/3/2012 8:34:27 AM
500ma will charge that phone but very slow1a will charge it, I bet if you look at your oem charger its 1amp
5/3/2012 8:43:41 AM
My DX does the same thing. I have an OEM charge that is close to 1A and it can only hold the current charge when using nav/screen is constantly on.
5/3/2012 9:50:07 AM
if you want to get ass backwards about the whole thing, get a small inverter and plug the AC charger in. Im assuming the AC charger will give it more amps.
5/3/2012 12:35:38 PM
5/3/2012 1:01:44 PM
Logically, yes. But you are forgetting how this works. The phone pulls the current, the charger doesn't push it. How it knows how much it can legally pull is by asking the charger over the data lines (either digital negotiation or by checking for a particular circuitry). As such, even if your charger is rated to 10A, if the circuitry there-in contained is not what your phone is expecting from its OEM charger, or is blocked by the Y-adapter, your phone may pull as little as 100mA (the USB standard when negotiation fails). As such, the only way to know is to try it and measure the current. Or, buy your phone's OEM charger.All that said, there was a rom hack available for my old phone which would force the charging circuit to always pull the maximum current of 800mA regardless of what it was plugged into. I never used it, but I seriously considered it. [Edited on May 3, 2012 at 11:57 PM. Reason : .,.]
5/3/2012 11:55:34 PM