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Hey... Check out my charging devices at dro.ps/v/JgxSOGM
dro.ps/v/ZTOJSZp
other nice powerbanks for less money and good quality!
The "EC Technology Portable Charger" actually has the best price per mAh.
How can you guys want something that wont even give you 100% from a full charge
Maybe I'm missing something obvious... but why is Lithiumcard winning by such a large margin? The Anker E3/ E4 holds 8 ~ 11 times the capacity of the Lithiumcard, offers two ports for a total of 3A for simultaneous charging and are going for $25.99 and $29.99 respectively on Amazon.
Personally voicing my support for ankers. The e4 can carry enough charge to go a few days with my s3 without recharging, even with heavy usage
Lithiumcard looks pretty sweet, I got a charger on my keyring but its like usb 2, it had a 8gb storage but I don't use that, and only 800mAh. :/. So if that Lithium card falls in the $20-35ish range I'd get one I'd say.
The things I don't like about the Lithiumcard are that it charges too fast, (I know that sounds like a good thing but with modern batteries charging fast means discharging fast too) and that it only holds 1200 mAh of power. There are very few devices that that would help much. Tablets are laughing at that. It won't even charge a cell phone up all the way unless you have a dumbphone. Maybe an mp3 player. But these days the thing you need is more power, which is why bit batteries are the thing. I'm sure there's a bigger one that fits in a pocket easily. I have one from RavPower that cost me $40 and has 14,500 mAh. And that's not the biggest one they sell. I put their 23,000 mAh one in the voting because it will easily charge any device multiple times, and from my experience they make great products. Flashlight and multiple USB power output, and yet it seems a lot smaller than the amount of power it holds. And is a 14,500 mAh one is $40, even the price drop to what you want Pumbliss isn't that good of a price per mAh. They are overpriced for what you get, and there are a few other ones for far cheaper that can fit into a wallet and get you the same amount of charge, which isn't much.
Of course, once virus batteries get done developing and integrating with technology, these things will hold a ton more power and still be tine, charge fast and discharge slow, etc. But that's a discussion for another day.
I'll vouch for the Lithiumcard, mine lives in my wallet and has rescued my phone a few times now. It only gets my iPhone 5S up about 50%, but that's 100% better than a dead battery for something you can forget about carrying.
I wanna see this Lithiumcard hit $25-$35, if it does this will be my main present to give for the holidays