Big numbers sell. In the minds of consumers, 5,000 is better than 2,000, and 10,000 is better than both. And when it comes to 10 million, well, that beats everything, right? There’s one area of tech where I see big numbers being thrown around a lot, and that is power bank capacities.
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Power bank manufacturers have adopted the milliamp-hour (abbreviated as mAh) as the default measure of battery capacity for power banks. This is handy for marketers because even the smallest power banks have capacities measured in the thousands of milliamp-hours. However, mAh is not the best measure of power bank capacity, and I’m here to explain why.
The problem with relying on mAh for battery capacity
The issue with using mAh as a measure of battery capacity is that it reflects a battery’s power capacity at a specific voltage output. If you tweak the output voltage, the mAh rating changes.
The mAh is calculated using the formula:
mAh = (Wh x 1000) / V
Where Wh is the energy capacity of the battery measured in watt-hours, and V is the voltage of the battery.
The default voltage that most reputable power bank manufacturers use is the voltage of the battery inside the power bank, which is typically 3.7V or 3.85V. If you remember a few of your math classes, you might have noticed from that equation a few lines above that the lower the voltage, the higher the mAh rating. This is advantageous from a marketing point of view because the default voltage output for an old-school USB-A port is 5V, and USB-C ports can go to 20V and beyond. This makes the mAh capacity rating somewhat meaningless because it changes with that output voltage.
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Quite a lot of people are noticing this because they are going out and buying USB power meters, measuring the outputs of their own power banks, and finding that a power bank rated for 10,000 mAh only outputs around 6,000 for them.
Some manufacturers do now discuss this capacity discrepancy, such as Anker, and I’ve seen quite a few have it listed on the spec sheet for their products. Here, Anker does a good job of highlighting that there’s also a chunk of power lost through circuit losses.
To make matters worse, some unscrupulous manufacturers may “fake” high mAh ratings by assuming some ridiculously low voltage (V), thereby inflating the mAh number. This means that a manufacturer could print absurdly large capacity numbers on the packaging and not technically be lying because they are assuming some absurdly low output voltage. I know this because I report improperly rated products to UK Trading Standards (a body that investigates illegal business activity and unfair trading), and this argument was used as a defense more than once.
I tend to avoid reviewing these sorts of power banks because they almost always are a disappointment.
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Source: Robotics - zdnet.com