When you plug the pack into the back and charge it, it also charges your phone. It acts as a Magsafe charger and vice versa, when you connect the cable to your phone, it charges the pack. However, I have heard in reviews that if you charge via your mobile phone, the battery of the pack charges slowly. It is best to connect directly to the pack, then it charges fastest.
Yeah on first glance it looks like that. But this powerbank has a higher voltage (around 7 Volt) than the batteries inside the iPhone (around 3.8 Volt). That menas you‘ll actually get more juice out of these 1460mAh. In reviews they got about 55-60% on an iPhone 12 Pro Max. Which still isn‘t all that much but more than 33% ;)
No, this MagSafe battery is not compatible with the iPhone 17 Pro for magnetic attachment because of its specific design for the iPhone Air. It can, however, charge other devices via its wired USB-C port.
The MagSafe battery (12 W) is compatible with the iPhone 12 and holds securely to the device thanks to the perfectly aligned magnets. It enables wireless charging and significantly extends the battery life of the iPhone 12.
Yes, you can use the MagSafe battery (1460 mAh, 15 W, 11.13 Wh) with your iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max. Users have reported it works fine with the iPhone 15 Pro Max despite it not being officially listed in the compatibility, and it is designed to attach magnetically and charge wirelessly. However, Apple officially lists compatibility only up to the iPhone 14 series, so for the iPhone 17 Pro Max, there is no official confirmation, but the MagSafe technology and magnetic alignment suggest it should work similarly.
Well, I think the MagSafe gets warm and so does the iPhone. Maybe a bit more than when charging with a cable. But I've never really been bothered by it or noticed it in a negative way.
This is clearly aimed at millenials: Don't worry, by buying this proprietary accessory you're not making a definitive decision - everything remains freely combinable. Plus style, because it's also important when buying Apple. Probably from the same pen as the real estate advertisement that turns a gloomy panelled hell from the early 80s into an "investment property with country house charm".