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That thing in the picture is a third party charger? It's got all of the regulatory markings OK, but sure, it's conceivable that it's the cause. To be honest I've used all sorts of chargers with my Pixel 2 (the Google one, a HTC 10 charger, an Anker charger, my 5 year old tablet's charger, and a mainland European HTC M9 charger) and never met anything like this, but it's possible. There's nothing in the output specs that looks wrong though (obviously it won't fast charge, but so what?).
Have you tried your usual charger with a plug adapter? Or do Google do something stupid like provide US-only chargers (110V/60Hz) to US customers and multi-voltage chargers to the rest of the world? Palm used to do this, so I guess others might.
For that matter, have you just tried it with a different cable?
No, the whole point of the charger is to convert to DC, and that one says it's rated for 50 and 60 Hz. No phone can accept AC input.Yeah. Other charger is ok. I guess there are 50 and 60 cycle and Europe is different. Maybe Pixel needs 60 and this needs 50¿
No, the whole point of the charger is to convert to DC, and that one says it's rated for 50 and 60 Hz. No phone can accept AC input.
Plus they use the same Pixel hardware globally, and I've used mine in both the EU (several countries) and in the US.
As Mike says, the question is whether that particular charger is not doing what it should (especially if the other charger works in the same country).
No, the whole point of the charger is to convert to DC, and that one says it's rated for 50 and 60 Hz. No phone can accept AC input.
Plus they use the same Pixel hardware globally, and I've used mine in both the EU (several countries) and in the US.
As Mike says, the question is whether that particular charger is not doing what it should (especially if the other charger works in the same country).
I've never met a charger with separate slots for different types of device (2 slots, yes, but not different ratings). Is that an Apple thing?I would guess. This works fine.
Of course this has just one slot. Maybe the other has its smartphone and iPad switched?
I would guess. This works fine.
Of course this has just one slot. Maybe the other has its smartphone and iPad switched?
A USB to Lightning charging adapter is kinda redundant, since every smartphone charger I've seen this decade has a removable cable with a USB socket at the charger end. So as long as you have a USB to Lightning cable with you you can use it in any charger.FYI Apple iPads and iPhones don't use Micro-USB or USB type-C to charge them, they use Lightning connectors. Although depending on country Apple may include a USB to Lightning adapter, so can use any USB chargers. Some countries and regions the USB to Lightning adapter is optional extra.