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Anker PowerCore Speed 20000 QC £23.19 Sold by AnkerDirect and Fulfilled by Amazon
£23.19Amazon Deals
Anker PowerCore Speed 20000 QC, Qualcomm Quick Charge 3.0 Portable Charger with Power IQ, 20000 mAh Power Bank for Samsung, iPhone, iPad and More
Cut it in half and give one half to a friend or the wife:D
amazon.co.uk/d/M…3JV
Don't think it's ever been higher than £30
techadvisor.co.uk/rev…76/
That is a very interesting comment. Do you know of a link to airlines' policies on this?
Average price about £35 so RRP should be ignored. Anything near £20 for 20000mAh is very good, especially Anker.
(click pic to enlarge)
**NB. This is an Amazon lightning deal; 39% claimed; 26mins left **
its normally jump between £30-40 but they pull the d*ck move of increasing it to £70 two weeks before the sale
Voted hot
not got a link i'm afraid, in my case I contacted first choice directly who confirmed to me that 20aH is the maximum allowed powerbank. Could be different for different airlines perhaps.
You are talking about cabin luggage right? Is there any issue with putting it in the hold luggage?
Completely banned to put l-ion in the hold.
I bought a 20000mah one which was ~400g and was too heavy to lug around IMO. Then bought this one: CLICK which is advertised at 240g but it actually weighs over 250g and does not feel that much lighter than the previous one in my bag. Its a shame that capacity is directly proportional to weight
Not entirely true
British Airways do allow Power Banks up to a certain capacity
They are not allowed in hold. Only in hand luggage.
In the cabin, only in device batteries are allowed in the hold.
It's a difficult one, because you don't know what voltage they'd use to calculate the Wh. Potentially it could be more than 100Wh.
I think it is industry practice to consider the capacity in terms of the 3.7V cells rather than the 5V output, classical marketing "overstatement"
Actually it's 4.2v for the individual cells as they're Panasonic 18650bs, but they're in a set of series and parallel bringing it up to at least 8.4v (they may use higher to cover QC). They'll then use a buck convertor to get the right voltage.
If they calculate Wh using the individual cell voltage it's 84Wh, if they use the true voltage of the cells it's at least 168Wh.
The marketing thing is a bit bs, as 20Ah is ~17Ah at 5v.