crwdns2933423:0crwdne2933423:0
crwdns2918538:0crwdne2918538:0

crwdns2934243:0crwdne2934243:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-That laptop uses the 19.5V wide barrel tip, which is super easy to find and can be purchased anywhere laptops are sold, especially Dells. The thin one can be a challenge, but not the wide tip because of how many laptops use it.
+That laptop uses the 19.5V wide barrel tip, which is super easy to find and can be purchased anywhere laptops are sold, especially Dells. The thin one can be a challenge, but not the wide tip because of how many laptops use it. ***Your Chromebook uses the same tip as my Lat 7490.***
[image|2558498]
As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste. The adapter only draws what it needs so if you only need 65W max on a 130W adapter, you’re leaving 65W of max capacity on the table. Yes, sometimes mine is a waste too (like on mid spec Lats with the i5 and can run on 90W comfortably) but on the other hand say I power a i7-8650U 7490 - that headroom is potentially useful. Even the 8th gen-present 4C/4T or 4C/8T U series CPUs are not power sippers once you step into the world of i7 but aren’t power hogs like the old 47W MQ Haswells - they never made it into the E6440 for a reason.
Check this label on the back of the Chromebook to be sure:
[image|2554851]

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

That laptop uses the 19.5V wide barrel tip, which is super easy to find and can be purchased anywhere laptops are sold, especially Dells. The thin one can be a challenge, but not the wide tip because of how many laptops use it.
+
+[image|2558498]
As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste. The adapter only draws what it needs so if you only need 65W max on a 130W adapter, you’re leaving 65W of max capacity on the table. Yes, sometimes mine is a waste too (like on mid spec Lats with the i5 and can run on 90W comfortably) but on the other hand say I power a i7-8650U 7490 - that headroom is potentially useful. Even the 8th gen-present 4C/4T or 4C/8T U series CPUs are not power sippers once you step into the world of i7 but aren’t power hogs like the old 47W MQ Haswells - they never made it into the E6440 for a reason.
Check this label on the back of the Chromebook to be sure:
[image|2554851]

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

That laptop uses the 19.5V wide barrel tip, which is super easy to find and can be purchased anywhere laptops are sold, especially Dells. The thin one can be a challenge, but not the wide tip because of how many laptops use it.
-As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste. The adapter only draws what it needs so if you only need 65W max on a 130W adapter, you’re leaving 65W of max capacity on the table. Yes, sometimes mine is a waste too (like on mid spec Lats with the i5 and can run on 90W comfortably) but on the other hand say I power a i7-8650U 7490 - that headroom is potentially useful. Even the 8th gen-present 4C/4T or 4C/8T U series CPUs are not power sippers once you step into the world of i7 but aren’t power hogs like the old 47W Haswells.
+As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste. The adapter only draws what it needs so if you only need 65W max on a 130W adapter, you’re leaving 65W of max capacity on the table. Yes, sometimes mine is a waste too (like on mid spec Lats with the i5 and can run on 90W comfortably) but on the other hand say I power a i7-8650U 7490 - that headroom is potentially useful. Even the 8th gen-present 4C/4T or 4C/8T U series CPUs are not power sippers once you step into the world of i7 but aren’t power hogs like the old 47W MQ Haswells - they never made it into the E6440 for a reason.
Check this label on the back of the Chromebook to be sure:
[image|2554851]

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

That laptop uses the 19.5V wide barrel tip, which is super easy to find and can be purchased anywhere laptops are sold, especially Dells. The thin one can be a challenge, but not the wide tip because of how many laptops use it.
-As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste. The adapter only draws what it needs so if you only need 65W max on a 130W adapter, you’re leaving 65W of max capacity on the table. Yes, sometimes mine is a waste too (like on mid spec Lats with the i5 and can run on 90W comfortably) but on the other hand say I power a i7-8650U 7490 - that headroom is potentially useful. Even the 8th gen-present 4C/4T or 4C/8T U series CPUs are not power sippers once you step into the world of i7.
+As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste. The adapter only draws what it needs so if you only need 65W max on a 130W adapter, you’re leaving 65W of max capacity on the table. Yes, sometimes mine is a waste too (like on mid spec Lats with the i5 and can run on 90W comfortably) but on the other hand say I power a i7-8650U 7490 - that headroom is potentially useful. Even the 8th gen-present 4C/4T or 4C/8T U series CPUs are not power sippers once you step into the world of i7 but aren’t power hogs like the old 47W Haswells.
Check this label on the back of the Chromebook to be sure:
[image|2554851]

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

That laptop uses the 19.5V wide barrel tip, which is super easy to find and can be purchased anywhere laptops are sold, especially Dells. The thin one can be a challenge, but not the wide tip because of how many laptops use it.
-As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste. The adapter only draws what it needs so if you only need 65W max on a 130W adapter, you’re leaving 65W of max capacity on the table. Yes, sometimes mine is a waste too (like on mid spec Lats with the i5 and can run on 90W comfortably) but on the other hand say I power a i7-8650U 7490 - that headroom is potentially useful.
+As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste. The adapter only draws what it needs so if you only need 65W max on a 130W adapter, you’re leaving 65W of max capacity on the table. Yes, sometimes mine is a waste too (like on mid spec Lats with the i5 and can run on 90W comfortably) but on the other hand say I power a i7-8650U 7490 - that headroom is potentially useful. Even the 8th gen-present 4C/4T or 4C/8T U series CPUs are not power sippers once you step into the world of i7.
-Check this label on the back of the Chromebook to be sure: [image|2554851]
+Check this label on the back of the Chromebook to be sure:
+
+[image|2554851]

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

That laptop uses the 19.5V wide barrel tip, which is super easy to find and can be purchased anywhere laptops are sold, especially Dells. The thin one can be a challenge, but not the wide tip because of how many laptops use it.
As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste. The adapter only draws what it needs so if you only need 65W max on a 130W adapter, you’re leaving 65W of max capacity on the table. Yes, sometimes mine is a waste too (like on mid spec Lats with the i5 and can run on 90W comfortably) but on the other hand say I power a i7-8650U 7490 - that headroom is potentially useful.
+
+Check this label on the back of the Chromebook to be sure: [image|2554851]

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

That laptop uses the 19.5V wide barrel tip, which is super easy to find and can be purchased anywhere laptops are sold, especially Dells. The thin one can be a challenge, but not the wide tip because of how many laptops use it.
-As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste. The adapter only draws what it needs so if you only need 65W max on a 130W adapter, you’re leaving 65W of max capacity on the table.
+As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste. The adapter only draws what it needs so if you only need 65W max on a 130W adapter, you’re leaving 65W of max capacity on the table. Yes, sometimes mine is a waste too (like on mid spec Lats with the i5 and can run on 90W comfortably) but on the other hand say I power a i7-8650U 7490 - that headroom is potentially useful.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

That laptop uses the 19.5V wide barrel tip, which is super easy to find and can be purchased anywhere laptops are sold, especially Dells. The thin one can be a challenge, but not the wide tip because of how many laptops use it.
-As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste.
+As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste. The adapter only draws what it needs so if you only need 65W max on a 130W adapter, you’re leaving 65W of max capacity on the table.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

That laptop uses the 19.5V wide barrel tip, which is super easy to find and can be purchased anywhere laptops are sold, especially Dells. The thin one can be a challenge, but not the wide tip because of how many laptops use it.
-As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 45 or 65W, leaning towards 45W for a low-end Chromebook) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste.
+As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 65W, but could be 45W) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

That laptop uses the 19.5V wide barrel tip, which is super easy to find and can be purchased anywhere laptops are sold, especially Dells. The thin one can be a challenge, but not the wide tip because of how many laptops use it.
-As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 45 or 65W, leaning towards 45W for a low-end Chromebook) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same despite the fact it’s a total waste.
+As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 45 or 65W, leaning towards 45W for a low-end Chromebook) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same (19.5V) despite the fact it’s a total waste.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934241:0crwdne2934241:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

That laptop uses the 19.5V wide barrel tip, which is super easy to find and can be purchased anywhere laptops are sold, especially Dells. The thin one can be a challenge, but not the wide tip because of how many laptops use it.

As long as it meets or exceeds the factory wattage (likely 45 or 65W, leaning towards 45W for a low-end Chromebook) it’ll work. I could let you use my 130W adapter as long as our tip voltages are the same despite the fact it’s a total waste.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open