gibsonfan159
Lurker
AC chargers give the message " phone is using more current than it can charge. However, USB charger plugged into AC adapter works fine.
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You need to define "a/c chargers" a bit more.
are you saying that the standard 2.1 amp a/c module using the OEM cable/equivalent is not able to charge the battery?
if that is the case, something is wrong with it.
I have a wireless charger installed inside the back of my phone, and that will only provide ~750 milliAmp of current to the battery. It is possible to have a lot of apps that require more power than that if the screen is bright and moving a lot... in this situation, the battery would indeed go down, not take a charge.
I have never seen the message you speak of.
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It's not about voltage, and it's not about a standard, and it's not about car or ac or USB.
It's about current.
Voltage is pushed by the charger but the phone / battery draws (pulls) current.
Your phone never runs off of the charger, it runs off of the battery at all times.
And it can charge the battery at the same time.
If and only if the current supplied by the charger is greater than what the battery is already supplying to the phone.
All you've learned is that 800 mA (0.8 A) is not enough.
Your "USB adapter charger" is the same as any "ac charger" - it converts 120 VAC to 5 VDC - and supplies a stated current.
Look at the usb charging module. By law, it lists its rated current supply.
I don't know the exact number, but I know from what you've said that it's greater than 0.8 A and by experience, I would guess that it's 1 A, or 2 A or more.
And that's why it charges when a 0.8 A charger won't.
Hope this helps.