Google may have misled consumers about Pixel 6 charging speed
Pixel 6 actually charges at 22W
The 30W charger Google has introduced alongside the Pixel 6 duo isn’t being used to its full potential
On top of that, Google has adopted the new USB Power Delivery PPS charging standard and the 30W charger is PPS compliant, so it’s hard to fathom why the company would embrace a new protocol to provide just a smidgen more power.
Google is being ultra-conservative with the charging approach
What’s seemingly happening is that Google is being super cautious with its approach. Fast charging usually uses more power initially and then reduces it to maintain a safe temperature. The Pixel 6 apparently maintains the 22W speed until half of the battery is filled up, which takes 31 minutes.
After reaching 61 percent, which takes around 40 minutes, the phone drops to 15W. Once the battery is charged to 75 percent capacity, the power falls to 12W. After nearly 63 minutes, when the phone reaches 85 percent, the power slowly drops to 2.5W.
Google’s 30W brick does a better job at charging Galaxy S21 Ultra
To hand it to Google, AA notes that the Pixel 6 Pro didn’t touch 35°C, which wasn’t the case with the S21 Ultra. Also, it could be that Google is being conservative to prolong battery life. As a reminder, the phones get five years of security support.
The publication also charged the Pixel 6 Pro using the older 18W USB Power Delivery charger, and with it, the phone only took ten more minutes (121 minutes) for a full charge and took nine minutes longer (40 minutes) for a half charge.
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