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[* black] Reaching the battery, we are quite happy to see that Huawei has ''stuck'' to its pumpkin ~~flavored~~ colored pull tabs, which allow for heatless battery removal.
[* black] The Li-Ion battery in the Mate 40 Pro is 16.94 Wh (4400 mAh, 3.85 V)—slightly less capacity than the 17.32 Wh (4500 mAh, 3.85 V) cell we found in the [guide|127743|Mate 30 Pro|stepid=248905|new_window=true].
[* icon_note] For more context, the [guide|138640|iPhone 12 Pro Max|stepid=275966|new_window=true] L-shaped cell is 14.13 Wh (3687 mAh), the tiny [guide|138505|iPhone 12 mini|stepid=275593|new_window=true] battery is 8.57 Wh (2227 mAh), and the [guide|131607|Samsung Galaxy S20|stepid=259201|new_window=true] Ultra houses a giant 19.30 Wh (5000 mAh) pack.
[* black] Those two connectors are very likely two separates routes for electrons coming in via a wire vs. those coming in ''through the air'' as seen in the [guide|126000|iPhone 11 Pro|stepid=243554|new_window=true].
-[* icon_note] This battery can charged at up to 66 W with a cable, and up to 50 W wirelessly. Those are huge numbers! 66 W is more juice than either of the new [https://www.ifixit.com/News/46884/m1-macbook-teardowns-something-old-something-new|M1 MacBooks|new_window=true] sip from their respective charging bricks.
+[* icon_note] This battery can be charged at up to 66 W with a cable, and up to 50 W wirelessly. Those are huge numbers! 66 W is more juice than either of the new [https://www.ifixit.com/News/46884/m1-macbook-teardowns-something-old-something-new|M1 MacBooks|new_window=true] sip from their respective charging bricks.
[* black] The Mate 40 Pro can also dole out 5 W to another device via reverse wireless charging.