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crwdns2933797:0Sam Goldheartcrwdnd2933797:0crwdne2933797:0
crwdns2936043:0crwdne2936043:0 crwdns2933505:0crwdne2933505:0 Sam Goldheart
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- | [* black] Would you look at that |
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+ | [* black] Would you look at that! An inductive charging coil! |
[* black] The Nexus 6 features a 3.8 V, 3220 mAh battery with a power rating of 12.2 Wh. | |
- | [* black] We're not sure if the inductive charging feature is really catching on, but there are certainly more devices featuring it. |
- | [* icon_reminder] Refresher on the science of inductive chaging: an inductive charging station drives an alternating current through a coil. The current moving back and forth in the base coil generates and collapses a magnetic field, which induces a current flow in the coil in the device. This AC current is then rectified into DC power to charge the battery. |
+ | [* icon_note] That's a step above the [guide|29206|iPhone 6 Plus's|stepid=69024] 11.1 Wh, but looks like [http://www.anandtech.com/show/8687/the-nexus-6-review/2|the Nexus battery life doesn't benefit much.] |
+ | [* black] Is inductive charging going to catch on after all? |
+ | [* icon_reminder] Quick inductive charging refresher: an inductive charging station drives an alternating current through a coil. The current moving back and forth in the base coil generates and collapses a magnetic field, which induces a current flow in the coil in the device. This AC current is then rectified into DC power to charge the battery. |