
Apple USB C – USB C
1 m, USB 2.0
Apple USB C – USB C
1 m, USB 2.0
The charging cable is supplied with the 87W MacBook Pro. The 87W (86.86W) is achieved with 20.2V x 4.3A. Of course, a safety factor is included here, but I would not exceed this number of amps by much. More amps could result in a hot situation ;)
Yes, you can!
Yes, the cable fits, the iPhone 16 Pro has a USB-C port for charging.
Yes, simply for charging
I assume that it is 60W, as it is very thin.
No
I don't know, but the cable is thick. I also have thin cables and charging is much slower.
The Apple chargers for which this cable was designed go up to 240W.
This works from the third generation iPad Pro. All (Apple) devices with USB-C
You need to purchase the USB-C to lightning cable
Yes, you can do that because the current does not increase and therefore does not exceed the specifications of the cable.
Kam im original Apple-Karton.
Hello, This is a usb-c to usb-c cable. It only charges an iPad. Unfortunately it does not allow you to exchange files. You have to buy a new cable, the 0.8 m Thunderbolt 3 (USB-C) cable CHF 45.00 or Thunderbolt 4 Pro cable (1.8 m) CHF 139.00. For my use this cable is unfortunately not very useful. I had to switch to the 0.8 m cable from Apple at chf 45.00. So too expensive for the service provided... Even if you have USB-C ports... it's useless... you can't connect an external SSD... Apple sometimes offers amazing things.
Not this USB-C charging cable. I can't even run my DELL screen on my MacBook Pro with it. Just tried it... but the 80cm Thunderbolt 3 cable from Apple supports USB 3.1 and transfer rates up to 40GBit/sec. and works great on hubs and monitors, I connected mine to it: Apple Thunderbolt 3 (0.80 m)
Yes, it would work. :)
https://www.digitec.ch/de/wiki/2891
Unfortunately no.
Head?
I would check your monitor's accessories to see if it already has a suitable USB-C cable. The charging cable of the MBP is really only used for charging.
Why don't you try it out and see if it works? It should already be...
USB-C is a manufacturer-independent standard. It therefore also works with Windows devices.
30 of 32 questions