Huawei p20 lite does not charge with almost charge?

es
- in P series
27

My Huawei P20 Lite does not charge with fast charge. It always shows only a flash, although he used to always display two.

The power supply is probably not, because my fastcharge powerbank with Power iq 2 also does not load it with fast charge.

Ab

This is only possible with a cable which supports this. Best the originals. Likewise, the power supply must be the original power supply!

It can't work on a powerbank, because unfortunately Huawei does not use the usual Qualcomm fast charge but their own system.

An

In fact, all the components involved are compatible? Before there's a misunderstanding here: Huawei's fast charging technology is called SuperCharge. Fastcharge is another technology.

The problem with the fast charging function is often the charging cable. Since you should get something more sensible and regularly exchange problems.

An
1

Why absolutely original? Explicit SuperCharge compatibility is good as well.

I also have experience that makes original parts only cheap garbage to certified cheap waste. With good third-party goods you can often do more with less money.

Ab

Because it works 100% on the original and costs the same as the third party.

Also, third-party vendors never know if the technology is supported. Had the same problem a year ago with my Honor, that's not even a story in itself with Quick Charge.

es

I use the original cable and the original power supply

es

I use the original power supply and the original cable

Ab

Strange, maybe you can disable that in the settings? Under battery or something?

es

Since I have already seen, but unfortunately have found nothing.

Ab

Hmm, weird. Can you try it with another cable, which supports fast charging. Otherwise, it may be on the phone. Maybe reset to factory settings. But is it so much slower?

An

I quote:

regularly exchange in case of problems.

In particular, cables break down quickly. All fast-charging technologies have their problems there. Data flow, etc. Functioning, but no longer the fast loading.

es

Thanks, I'll try it

An
-1

Also, third-party vendors never know if the technology is supported.

Of course, they write when Supercharge is supported. The manufacturers are not so stupid and tinker because extra veins in order not to mention anything about it. A search on the well-known sales portals for "USB cable Supercharge" brings plenty of hits. The same thing with a search engine brings recommendations.

Because it works 100% on the original and costs the same as the third party.

Explicit cable or charging technology manufacturers just get more out and build more durable cables. First-time providers see themselves as "only in duty" if there's no third-party market.

Ab

That's right, Supercharge is stated, so I never looked at it. However, the technology Huawei Quick Charge (2.0?) Used on my mobile phone can't be found anywhere. At that time I ordered 2 No Name cables and one of them worked with fast charging, although nothing was stated.

My original cable looks almost as new after 1.5 years and daily loading. Only not quite white.

An

Which quick charge technology is used depends on the processor. If your device has a Qualcom processor, it's QuickCharge.

Of course you should not take any cable. I have had quite good experiences with Anker. Compared to the included cable, my ZTE Axon 7 (QuickCharge 3.0) charges about 20 minutes faster, although it is longer.

Ab

I have a Kirin processor, but 2 years ago Huawei did not have a standard fast-charging technology yet. Therefore, it is not consistent for my phone.

Of course, with Quickcharge it's easiest to find something. I also had good experiences with Anker.

An

Now I get out. First you write "The technique used on my phone Huawei Quick Charge" and the U-turn.

Ab

Sorry for the misunderstanding. As you said, Huawei has her "Supercharge" charge level. But my Huawei uses an older technology called "Huawei Quick Charge," and it's not available anywhere, I mean that!

An

But my Huawei uses an older technology called Huawei Quick Charge

I would have said no adhoc because "QuickCharge" is a QualComm brand used only with Snapdragons. But a short search has revealed the following article: https://www.huaweiblog.de/kaufen-2/huawei-quick-charge-adapter-ladegeraet/

After that there was actually a "Huawei QuickCharge" or synonym "HiSilicon FastCharge". In the article also corresponding chargers are linked. The sellers are now also writing "Quick Charger".

But anyway… The P20 lite uses Supercharge.

Ab

That's it. Say yes is pretty strange.

It was also time that there's finally a single technology at Huawei.

An

There's nothing uniform. It depends on the processor. And since the https://www.chinahandys.net/honor-8x-max-testbericht/Huawei%20Honor%208X%20Max with Snapdragon has just come out…

Ab

I mean, I thought it was very stupid that Huawei shipped the few models with Quick Charge instead of using Snapdragon's QuickCharge or their own supercharge right from the beginning… All other manufacturers are using Qualcomm QuickCharge

An

All other manufacturers are actually using Qualcomm QuickCharge

Somehow you do not want to realize that this is not correct. It depends on the processor manufacturer which rapid charging technology is used. Most smartphone manufacturers use processors from different manufacturers.

Ab

So if I look at all the phones that are offered, 70% use Qualcomm processors or not? Mediatek only use China phones and the rest goes to Huawei Kirin processors.

An

What you "feel" has nothing to do with reality. You already "feel-over" the smartphone market leaders Samsung and Apple, who (often) install their own development.

https://www.teltarif.de/mobile-soc-qualcomm-snapdragon-umsaetze/news/70483.html Certainly a lot, but not nearly 70%, and it means, conversely, that the overwhelming majority of smartphones do not host Snapdragon.

Ab

That it is significantly less was aware of me, so yes "felt" 70%. Still, Snapdragon is in more smartphones like the Exynos or Kirin models, so it's already the market leader in mobile processors.

I would still like a uniform charge level desirable, no one wants to buy a second power bank, because you switched to Huawei.

An

You tell me too much the argument about the wind direction. Nobody denied that Snapdragon is the market leader.

Of course, a consistent standard would be nice. But that has long been abolished. Turn to your local politicians to create laws that force companies to promote standardization rather than licensing them. But this fails for years at z. B. Clothing sizes.

Ab

Since I give you absolutely right, that would make sense in such a few things in life to agree on a standard, it starts at km and miles…