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December 21st, 2015, 04:16 PM
#21
The Chargers mountainM posted are pretty slick. As he said, you can get a whole whack of charges (6-8)(20000 mah) for around 40 bucks which is the less than the one charge ctc and Costco chargers offer for the same price.
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December 21st, 2015 04:16 PM
# ADS
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December 21st, 2015, 04:26 PM
#22
No offense but those costco options are actually terrible!
Anker is almost impossible to beat, and they are very reliable. I have a couple around the house and use them all the time.
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December 21st, 2015, 09:42 PM
#23

Originally Posted by
MountainM
I second just getting a small Lith Ion battery pack that you can use to charge phones, and tablets... Anything that charges via USB. The link someone posted to the one at Canadian tire has pretty crappy capacity compared to other units available. Look at the Anker line on amazon.ca
http://www.amazon.ca/Anker-10000mAh-...keywords=anker
This is 10000mAh, vs the 3000mAh that Canadian tire had for the same price....
Most phone batteries are around 2250-3000mAh so you'll get more than a couple charges, and you can go larger capacity if you would like.
That does look like a great deal!
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December 22nd, 2015, 10:32 AM
#24

Originally Posted by
RHYBAK
Buy one of those new fangled portable backup battery chargers everybody and their brother should have by now.
I don't have one? And I don't have a brother either?[emoji6]

Originally Posted by
greatwhite
Hook a USB adapter or cig lighter to the terminal then plug in your phone.
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March 27th, 2016, 11:16 AM
#25
A solar powered charger at Cantire. looks interesting 60 bucks tho.
http://www.canadiantire.ca/en/pdp/po...l#.VvgGpKxNI4A
gravity is a myth....the earth sucks
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March 27th, 2016, 12:07 PM
#26

Originally Posted by
Rugger
Ended up going with this:
All it cost me was $2 or 3 for the adapter.
Sinker: usually at this time of year the car is a 2+ km hike away and I don't feel like hauling a deep cycle up in a toboggan

Add a small 2 to 5 watt solar panel and you'll never have to worry about having enough battry charge to top up your phone. Can tire sells them as do a few places. Just be sure that the current from the panel is not more then 10% of the a/hr of the battery. Your battery is 7.2 a/hr so nothing more then 600 to 700 milliamps ( .6 to .7 amps ). Look for one that has a regulator circuit in it. Most of the little ones do.
Take the warning labels off. Darwin will solve the problem.
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March 27th, 2016, 03:22 PM
#27
Looks great, but I would put a fuse between the cig plug and the battery .... just incase.
I'm retired .... Fishing is my job
Frogger
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March 28th, 2016, 01:24 PM
#28
Thanks for the advice Snowwalker and Frogger, I think I'll look into bot of your suggestions.
My wife recently bought herself a surface. Its wall transformer delivers 5.2v while all of the phone transformers deliver 5.0. Would it be ok to charge her tablet with 5.0v?
Heeere fishy fishy fishy fishy! :fish:
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March 28th, 2016, 01:37 PM
#29
Rugger, do you spend a 'reasonable" amount of time there without easy access to power?
If so, some of the various Solar power options would be my suggestion.
Ive used goal zero products for a few years now. Charges everything from phone, and or run my laptop, led lights to light cabins/tents, etc,etc.
Running LED lights


A prospectors tent for a week of spring bear last year. The light source at the back of the tent is from a single incandescent bulb, powered by a Genny. The front light source, and outside the tent entrance are two led lights powered from the solar battery. It has 150w capacity ( So something that draws 150w will drain it in an hour, two 3w LED lights about 25hours run time) That battery can accept USB, regular electrical plugs, adapters for cig lighters etc. I can charge it via solar power, wall, car, etcc, etc.
If I had a cabin in the woods, where there was no power...
If you just want something capable of charging phones there are small options, ideal for canoe trips etc.
Last edited by JBen; March 28th, 2016 at 01:40 PM.