Using this Power Bank with You to School
You can take it with you to school if you have power issues and charge it while you're at school for the entire day so that should keep him going. So let's go ahead and actually see how this works, so it is charging now you can see on the front here that the light is on, so it is charging. Let me go ahead and open it up and power it on and right now it is pulling about 30 WTS of power, so that's the 30 Watts that it's pulling while it's opening and launching.
To use this portable charger fully, you need a 60 W charger but they don't always use for that full power. This one takes a full 60 W charger but they don't always use for that full power, this is totally out of battery because it was sitting downstairs and I didn't particularly have something to charge it with or I wasn't really worried about it at the time but just plugging it in getting pulling 32 watts here you can sort of see that there is about 30/32 over here and here also so you do see that those do complement each other so you know that the power coming out of there is what it says it is.
Powering Up My Laptop
Now my laptop is up and running, powered and working great. You can start to see the power of having one of these sort of bricks around your house again. Sending my son off to school I want to make sure he has the appropriate amount of power for his laptop the entire day sometimes you know if you're using it all day long you can find that your laptop will start to run on a battery having something like this as a backup or even something to charge it with is absolutely priceless.
The Features of This Charging Bank
Let me go ahead and read some of these features off here. I did say it was a 20,000 milliamp hour battery again that's just basically the amount of juice this thing will hold it is a 100 watt charger it has a smart display on the front which you just click this button to turn it on it does have the three ports on the front and it is airline safe so nowadays the airlines are getting a bit picky on what kind of batteries you can bring on so as long as it's Airline safe that means that you know like if I'm going on a 5 or six hour flight I want to bring my devices maybe I want to bring like a steam deck maybe I want to bring my iPad maybe I want to bring a laptop whatever I want to do now I have that additional power that allows me to make sure that my device or devices work the entire time.
It does have the standard shortcircuit protection uh and the smart output so whatever device that you're charging it's not going to send over current to the device whatever the device wants it knows that it's going to sort of pair with that device and send out the right amount of power and it also doesn't get that hot even when I had three devices plugged in I wasn't feeling a lot of heat coming from this and I think that that's pretty important too because you don't want something that you feel is going to burn up or feel super hot if you're looking at kind of some of the stats it will charge a MacBook Air to 50% in 30 minutes so that's a sort of high power output to be able to charge that MacBook and it will charge an iPhone to 50% in 25 minutes so you are getting the PD fast charging for whatever you want to hook up to it.
Is This Power Bank from X Digi Worth It?
I'm saying absolutely yes I'm a big fan of having the access to the power that I need when I need it this one has all the features that I like including the digital display the smart charging it does have a high milliamp hour so it means it's going to be able to charge those devices that I need and be reliable thanks to X Digi for sending this over for me to share this with you I appreciate that because I always like to share things that I feel are really important or something that we will all like.
If You're Interested
If this helped you out in any way hit like subscribe I'd love to see you back but until next time this is Carl from techable goodies and I'm out
WEBVTTKind: captionsLanguage: enwhat's up everybody this is Carl from technal goodies and if you are like me you're always trying to sort of keep your devices charged sort of make sure that you have power bricks available for everything that you have so I have something today that's a little bit interesting this is the X Digi power bank this is a 20,000 milliamp hour 100 wat charger it actually is 130 W Max but the interesting thing about this is that it kind of checks all my boxes I'm a big fan of just having the ability to power my devices wherever I'm at and when it comes to some of these bricks or some of these other power banks that you can get typically they're underpowered for all your devices I have laptops that take 100 watt charging I have laptop SL tablets that take 60 W charging I have iPads I have iPhones so this will cover the gamut of all those devices and also with the smart display will allow you to see what kind of wattage is being pulled from that device so let's open it up take a look at it test it out and see if it's something that can kind of keep up with our daily needs all right so right away in the box we have a USB to USBC cable now not all USBC cables are the same what you're going to want to do is make sure you use this when you are charging your device there is no brick provided I don't think with this device and that means you're going to have to use one that you already own but it looks like if you have one it'll use a full range of wattages all the way up to 65 Watts Max to charge this so you should be able to use some bricks that you have or pick up another brick that will work for this the device itself is actually pretty slim line it is heavy cuz it is a 20,000 milliamp hour battery obviously if you're thinking about milliamp hours you're looking at the amount of power that can be stored that you can then pump into your device devices 20,000 is pretty high so it should be able to power like laptops and tablets with no issue on the front here you do have a smart display screen which is actually something that I really like you have the power button here to push which sort of initiates the initial screen here and you can see that it currently has about 50% charge and then on the top here you have a couple of ports you have two USBC ports on the front here one is for in that's for charging but it's also an in/out so you charge your devices but that's the one you're going to want to plug into when you want to refill the battery and it also has another USBC out and it has a USB a out which is obviously nice I don't think I'd want to have a device that also doesn't have the usba a but let's go ahead and give this thing a try so I have this USB 4 cable that I picked up and so this is considered a 240 W Max cord one thing I like about this is it also has like the little digital display that'll show you how much Watt AG or how much power is being pulled from it I think I just picked this up on teu I can't remember where I got it and with the digital display on this we should be able to sort of check and see whether or not it matches up with the Dig digital display on the actual power bank itself so I also have my Dell Latitude uh laptop sltt which I actually really like I got it on the Dell refurbish site and this typically has a charging sort of pull of 60 WS if I was to use something like a 30 40 W charger like my anchor 30 W charger it's not going to charge this you're going to get a warning in Windows that says this is a low power and not really going to charge or keep your device going something like this is going to be able to power it and keep it topped off while you're using it so let's go ahead and just jump right in and get ourselves a test with this so I'm going to plug it into the USB one here USB C1 all righty so we've got this plugged in now and one of the things that you're going to see is that on the front here there are multiple screens that you can cycle through so for example right now I'm seeing that there is about a uh 50% battery level that's how much I have left to charge if I click this button on the front you're going to see that it actually shows each one of the ports and what sort of wattage that it's pulling now my particular laptop here isn't super power hungry at this point in time so it's only pulling 2123 watts and if I look here you can actually see that the the wattage output indicators are pretty much synced up there so that's one of the things that I absolutely love about some of these power Banks is that you can see the wattage that it's pulling my expectation would have been plugging it in seeing the full 60 watts being pulled from the laptop but I'm not seeing that because the laptop kind of determines how much it wants to pull at what particular time and right now we're only pulling 20 watts now the cool thing about this too is that if I want to also plug in my iPad that I'm using over here to sort of view what my camera is doing if I plug this in also at the same time then you're going to start to see the fact that not only is the laptop pulling 24 25 watts then the iPad is also starting to pull out power too and you can see that it's actually now the iPad sometimes takes a little while to settle on what wattage it wants to pull but what you'll see is now that we're pushing out about 40 watts of power to be able to charge the laptop and the iPad at the same time now if I wanted to I suppose I can also take advantage of the usba a port at the same time so what I'm going to go ahead and do is plug in the usba A and I'm going to plug in my phone so this is the iPhone 15 Pro so it does take the USBC connection I plug that in and now I'm charging so let's see what this gets up to so as you can see here all three of the ports are being utilized and every one of them is pushing out power to my different devices how long will this last for well we're already down to about 49% so any battery that you go ahead and tax pretty much to the limit is really just going to be able to push as much power as it can based on what the devices that you have connected so you will find that any battery that you use even a 20,000 milliamp hour is going to start to discharge pretty quickly but this power brick is capable of sort of pushing that power out to the multiple devices now there are a couple more screens that I can show you here so if I click this you're going to come through to sort of like a device informational screen it'll tell you how much your battery has cycled how many cycles are left in the health of your battery if you go to the next screen you can actually make this a vertical versus horizontal screen so it'll flip the screen there and if we go back out you will get the full device power I obviously like to keep it on the screen it's sort of showing me what that device is pushing out to each one of the other devices so I'll go ahead and leave it on that so let me go ahead and I want to do another test here let me go ahead and unplug all these so I have another laptop here that I want to test so this is sort of a small 13-in laptop that my son was using for school but the problem with it is that the power brick that came with this device ended up failing so once your power brick ends up failing what do you do in emergency situation you don't do anything because you can't charge the device without buying another power brick but being a USBC based device a smaller laptop does actually charge with the USBC Port now that he has a broken power brick that came with it what do I do I go ahead and say hey why don't you start using this you can take it with you to school if you have any power issues you can go ahead and charge it while you're at school for the entire day so that should keep him going so let's go ahead and actually see how this works so it is charging now you can see on the front here that the light is on so it is charging and let me go ahead and open it up and power it on and right now it is pulling about 30 WTS of power so that's the 30 Watts that it's pulling while it's opening and and launching so again this one takes a full 60 W charger but they don't always use for that full power this is totally out of battery because it was sitting downstairs and I didn't particularly have something to charge it with or I wasn't and I wasn't really worried about it at the time but just plugging it in getting pulling 32 watts here you can sort of see that there is about 30 32 over here and here also so you do see that those do complement each other so you know that the power coming out of there is what it says it is and now my laptop is up and running powered and working great so you can start to see the power of having one of these sort of bricks around your house again sending my son son off to school I want to make sure he has the appropriate amount of power for his laptop the entire day sometimes you know if you're using it all day long you can find that your laptop will start to run on a battery having something like this as a back up or even something to charge it with is absolutely Priceless so as far as the features of this charging Bank let me go ahead and read some of them off here I did say it was a 20,000 milliamp hour battery again that's just basically the amount of juice this thing will hold it is a 100 wat charger it has a smart display on the front which you just click this button to turn it on it does have the three ports on the front and it is airlin safe so nowadays the airlines are getting a bit picky on what kind of batteries you can bring on so as long as it's Airline safe that means that you know like if I'm going on a 5 or six hour flight I want to bring my devices maybe I want to bring like a steam deck maybe I want to bring my iPad maybe I want to bring a laptop whatever I want to do now I have that additional power that allows me to make sure that my device or devices work the entire time it does have the standard shortcircuit protection uh and the smart output so whatever device that you're charging it's not going to send over current to the device whatever the device wants it knows that it's going to sort of pair with that device and send out the right amount of power and it also doesn't not get that hot even when I had three devices plugged in I wasn't feeling a lot of heat coming from this and I think that that's pretty important too because you don't want something that you feel is going to burn up or feel super hot if you're looking at kind of some of the stats it will charge a MacBook Air to 50% in 30 minutes so that's a sort of high power output to be able to charge that MacBook and it will charge an iPhone to 50% in 25 minutes so you are getting the PD fast charging for whatever you want to hook up to it so is this power bank from X Digi worth it I'm saying absolutely yes I'm a big fan of having the access to the power that I need when I need it this one has all the features that I like including the digital display the smart charging it does have a high milliamp hour so it means it's going to be able to charge those devices that I need and be reliable thanks to X Digi for sending this over for me to share this with you I appreciate that because I always like to share things that I feel are really important or or something that we will all like so uh if you're interested I will leave the link down below if this helped you out in any way hit like subscribe I'd love to see you back but until next time this is Carl from techable goodies and I'm outwhat's up everybody this is Carl from technal goodies and if you are like me you're always trying to sort of keep your devices charged sort of make sure that you have power bricks available for everything that you have so I have something today that's a little bit interesting this is the X Digi power bank this is a 20,000 milliamp hour 100 wat charger it actually is 130 W Max but the interesting thing about this is that it kind of checks all my boxes I'm a big fan of just having the ability to power my devices wherever I'm at and when it comes to some of these bricks or some of these other power banks that you can get typically they're underpowered for all your devices I have laptops that take 100 watt charging I have laptop SL tablets that take 60 W charging I have iPads I have iPhones so this will cover the gamut of all those devices and also with the smart display will allow you to see what kind of wattage is being pulled from that device so let's open it up take a look at it test it out and see if it's something that can kind of keep up with our daily needs all right so right away in the box we have a USB to USBC cable now not all USBC cables are the same what you're going to want to do is make sure you use this when you are charging your device there is no brick provided I don't think with this device and that means you're going to have to use one that you already own but it looks like if you have one it'll use a full range of wattages all the way up to 65 Watts Max to charge this so you should be able to use some bricks that you have or pick up another brick that will work for this the device itself is actually pretty slim line it is heavy cuz it is a 20,000 milliamp hour battery obviously if you're thinking about milliamp hours you're looking at the amount of power that can be stored that you can then pump into your device devices 20,000 is pretty high so it should be able to power like laptops and tablets with no issue on the front here you do have a smart display screen which is actually something that I really like you have the power button here to push which sort of initiates the initial screen here and you can see that it currently has about 50% charge and then on the top here you have a couple of ports you have two USBC ports on the front here one is for in that's for charging but it's also an in/out so you charge your devices but that's the one you're going to want to plug into when you want to refill the battery and it also has another USBC out and it has a USB a out which is obviously nice I don't think I'd want to have a device that also doesn't have the usba a but let's go ahead and give this thing a try so I have this USB 4 cable that I picked up and so this is considered a 240 W Max cord one thing I like about this is it also has like the little digital display that'll show you how much Watt AG or how much power is being pulled from it I think I just picked this up on teu I can't remember where I got it and with the digital display on this we should be able to sort of check and see whether or not it matches up with the Dig digital display on the actual power bank itself so I also have my Dell Latitude uh laptop sltt which I actually really like I got it on the Dell refurbish site and this typically has a charging sort of pull of 60 WS if I was to use something like a 30 40 W charger like my anchor 30 W charger it's not going to charge this you're going to get a warning in Windows that says this is a low power and not really going to charge or keep your device going something like this is going to be able to power it and keep it topped off while you're using it so let's go ahead and just jump right in and get ourselves a test with this so I'm going to plug it into the USB one here USB C1 all righty so we've got this plugged in now and one of the things that you're going to see is that on the front here there are multiple screens that you can cycle through so for example right now I'm seeing that there is about a uh 50% battery level that's how much I have left to charge if I click this button on the front you're going to see that it actually shows each one of the ports and what sort of wattage that it's pulling now my particular laptop here isn't super power hungry at this point in time so it's only pulling 2123 watts and if I look here you can actually see that the the wattage output indicators are pretty much synced up there so that's one of the things that I absolutely love about some of these power Banks is that you can see the wattage that it's pulling my expectation would have been plugging it in seeing the full 60 watts being pulled from the laptop but I'm not seeing that because the laptop kind of determines how much it wants to pull at what particular time and right now we're only pulling 20 watts now the cool thing about this too is that if I want to also plug in my iPad that I'm using over here to sort of view what my camera is doing if I plug this in also at the same time then you're going to start to see the fact that not only is the laptop pulling 24 25 watts then the iPad is also starting to pull out power too and you can see that it's actually now the iPad sometimes takes a little while to settle on what wattage it wants to pull but what you'll see is now that we're pushing out about 40 watts of power to be able to charge the laptop and the iPad at the same time now if I wanted to I suppose I can also take advantage of the usba a port at the same time so what I'm going to go ahead and do is plug in the usba A and I'm going to plug in my phone so this is the iPhone 15 Pro so it does take the USBC connection I plug that in and now I'm charging so let's see what this gets up to so as you can see here all three of the ports are being utilized and every one of them is pushing out power to my different devices how long will this last for well we're already down to about 49% so any battery that you go ahead and tax pretty much to the limit is really just going to be able to push as much power as it can based on what the devices that you have connected so you will find that any battery that you use even a 20,000 milliamp hour is going to start to discharge pretty quickly but this power brick is capable of sort of pushing that power out to the multiple devices now there are a couple more screens that I can show you here so if I click this you're going to come through to sort of like a device informational screen it'll tell you how much your battery has cycled how many cycles are left in the health of your battery if you go to the next screen you can actually make this a vertical versus horizontal screen so it'll flip the screen there and if we go back out you will get the full device power I obviously like to keep it on the screen it's sort of showing me what that device is pushing out to each one of the other devices so I'll go ahead and leave it on that so let me go ahead and I want to do another test here let me go ahead and unplug all these so I have another laptop here that I want to test so this is sort of a small 13-in laptop that my son was using for school but the problem with it is that the power brick that came with this device ended up failing so once your power brick ends up failing what do you do in emergency situation you don't do anything because you can't charge the device without buying another power brick but being a USBC based device a smaller laptop does actually charge with the USBC Port now that he has a broken power brick that came with it what do I do I go ahead and say hey why don't you start using this you can take it with you to school if you have any power issues you can go ahead and charge it while you're at school for the entire day so that should keep him going so let's go ahead and actually see how this works so it is charging now you can see on the front here that the light is on so it is charging and let me go ahead and open it up and power it on and right now it is pulling about 30 WTS of power so that's the 30 Watts that it's pulling while it's opening and and launching so again this one takes a full 60 W charger but they don't always use for that full power this is totally out of battery because it was sitting downstairs and I didn't particularly have something to charge it with or I wasn't and I wasn't really worried about it at the time but just plugging it in getting pulling 32 watts here you can sort of see that there is about 30 32 over here and here also so you do see that those do complement each other so you know that the power coming out of there is what it says it is and now my laptop is up and running powered and working great so you can start to see the power of having one of these sort of bricks around your house again sending my son son off to school I want to make sure he has the appropriate amount of power for his laptop the entire day sometimes you know if you're using it all day long you can find that your laptop will start to run on a battery having something like this as a back up or even something to charge it with is absolutely Priceless so as far as the features of this charging Bank let me go ahead and read some of them off here I did say it was a 20,000 milliamp hour battery again that's just basically the amount of juice this thing will hold it is a 100 wat charger it has a smart display on the front which you just click this button to turn it on it does have the three ports on the front and it is airlin safe so nowadays the airlines are getting a bit picky on what kind of batteries you can bring on so as long as it's Airline safe that means that you know like if I'm going on a 5 or six hour flight I want to bring my devices maybe I want to bring like a steam deck maybe I want to bring my iPad maybe I want to bring a laptop whatever I want to do now I have that additional power that allows me to make sure that my device or devices work the entire time it does have the standard shortcircuit protection uh and the smart output so whatever device that you're charging it's not going to send over current to the device whatever the device wants it knows that it's going to sort of pair with that device and send out the right amount of power and it also doesn't not get that hot even when I had three devices plugged in I wasn't feeling a lot of heat coming from this and I think that that's pretty important too because you don't want something that you feel is going to burn up or feel super hot if you're looking at kind of some of the stats it will charge a MacBook Air to 50% in 30 minutes so that's a sort of high power output to be able to charge that MacBook and it will charge an iPhone to 50% in 25 minutes so you are getting the PD fast charging for whatever you want to hook up to it so is this power bank from X Digi worth it I'm saying absolutely yes I'm a big fan of having the access to the power that I need when I need it this one has all the features that I like including the digital display the smart charging it does have a high milliamp hour so it means it's going to be able to charge those devices that I need and be reliable thanks to X Digi for sending this over for me to share this with you I appreciate that because I always like to share things that I feel are really important or or something that we will all like so uh if you're interested I will leave the link down below if this helped you out in any way hit like subscribe I'd love to see you back but until next time this is Carl from techable goodies and I'm out