10-02-2020, 09:02 AM
(This post was last modified: 10-02-2020, 09:06 AM by moonwalkers.)
(10-01-2020, 09:00 AM)MtnSk8 Wrote: @moonwalkers
K, but you asserted, quite rudely, that anything over 7.5w MUST be PD.
You were totally wrong.
Instead of writing a novel you could just say "oops, sorry for being so wrong and so rude"
Bottom line:
THERE IS NO PD CHARGING ON THE PBP.
Have a nice day!
My comment about me getting annoyed wasn't directed specifically at you, it was more at the general "WTF says PD but can't charge quickly" attitude. I should've made that clear and apparently I failed to do so, for that I apologize.
And yes, I was wrong in my claim that without PD USB type C cannot deliver more than 7.5W, but I incidentally happened to be correct that just because the port cannot go above 3A@5V doesn't mean it doesn't support PD. You were correct that USB type C can deliver 3A without PD, but incorrect that inability to go beyond 3A@5V means it doesn't support PD. Hence my statement that looks like we may be both correct and incorrect at the same time.
I hope I've clarified my position and we can return to a more civilized discussion.
And to address your last comment:
Quote:THERE IS NO PD CHARGING ON THE PBP
According to the specs, it appears there are effectively three different ways to negotiate power delivery:
- standard in-band "unit load" approach, where device requests the number of said unit loads and host controls the power output - until introduction of USB type C also the only standard approach
- USB type C @1.5A and @3A, where upstream host provides given fixed power and the downstream device decides how much it will take
- USB PD, where devices initially use standard minimal unit load and then re-negotiate both voltage and current.
While we now know that PBP does indeed support USB PD (since that is a prerequisite for supporting DisplayPort alternate mode), we can verify your claim of PBP not supporting PD charging using the experiment I proposed above - take an Android phone known to support PD, take a known to support PD USB type C cable, connect those to PBP, and configure the phone to provide power to PBP--if PBP starts charging then there is most definitely PD charging on the PBP. Like I said before, I don't have either the phone or cable like that handy, so if someone else could try that it would be awesome.
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