First Impressions: LuguLake 6000mAh Portable Qi Chargers Become An Immediate Success

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LuguLake launches a new 6000mAh portable Qi charger which becomes an immediate success among mobile phone users.

LuguLake’s latest portable Qi wireless charger is an immediate success among mobile phone users. The product has been proven to be easy and safe to use and received positive customer feedback. Getting their name from an actual lake in China, LuguLake have the brand recognition of big accessory makers. When people search on Amazon for a Qi charger this particular item kept popping up.

There’s really nothing else like it on the market.

Premise

What sets the LuguLake apart from other inductive chargers is its portability. People charge up the internal battery via AC, and then take it — using its inductive mat to charge the Qi-compatible device.

With 6,000mAh of available power people should, in theory, be able to charge their Nexus 5 — and then provide another half-charge to the Nexus 5 after that.

The LuguLake charger is roughly the size of a typical phablet — as people can see in the photo above it’s bigger than the Nexus 5 but smaller than the Nexus 7.

The great thing about the official Nexus charger is that the connection beep comes from the device, sounding a lot less ghetto than the cheap, tinny beep people will hear from the LuguLake.

The panel is easy enough to understand… There’s a big power button and an arc of blue LED lights underneath to indicate how much of a charge. Curiously, the lights progress from right to left rather than left to right.

The sticky rubber feet are a nice touch, though, turning any flat surface like a desk, table or car dashboard into a no-slip zone.

In Use

To keep costs low the LuguLake charger ships without an AC adapter. They recommend a 5V minimum source for power; the micro-USB charger that came with the Nexus 7 seems to work fine, although it does take some eight hours to reach a full charge.

As for discharging the unit — that is, charging the device — the experience has so far been good but not great. People find the charger easier to hold when it’s charging the smaller phone rather than the larger tablet. That said, the magnet that holds the device in place could stand to be a lot stronger.

The biggest issue with the LuguLake is that there’s no automatic shut-off when charging. With nothing connected it will shut itself off in about five minutes; leave the device on it, however, and it will keep discharging until its own battery depletes.

The pay-off is that people no longer have to deal with cables. It sounds trivial, they know, but once they get hooked on inductive charging they will feel like some kind of caveman when they have to muck about with wires. And in the case of a portable charger it’s especially great to not have to worry about forgetting — or breaking — the delicate lifeline between the device and an emergency power source.

Early results look promising — the thing is on its third charge and hasn’t let me down yet. The real test will be the trip to Hong Kong and Malaysia, which starts next week… People will be sure to post an update when they get back.

Contact Info:
Name: Joyce
Email: Send Email
Organization: USA LuguLake Industrial Investment Co.,Ltd
Website: http://www.lugulake.us/

Release ID: 44735

CONTACT ISSUER
Name: Joyce
Email: Send Email
Organization: USA LuguLake Industrial Investment Co.,Ltd
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