Anker 737 Power Bank, 24,000mAh 3-Port Laptop Portable Charger with 140W Output $149.99 Delivered @ AnkerDirect Amazon AU

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Ultra-Powerful Two-Way Charging: Equipped with the latest Power Delivery 3.1 and bi-directional technology to quickly recharge the portable charger or get a 140W ultra-powerful charge.

High Capacity and Long-Lasting: Featuring a 24,000mAh battery capacity and 2× longer-lasting battery life, juice up an iPhone 13 almost 5 times or a 2021 iPad Pro 12.9" 1.3 times.

Smart Digital Display: Easy-to-read digital display shows the output and input power and estimated time for the portable charger to fully recharge.
What You Get: Anker 737 Power Bank (PowerCore 24K), welcome guide, 140W USB-C to USB-C cable, 24-month stress-free warranty, and friendly customer service.

Yes, you are allowed to carry this on a flight.

Review comparing the various Power Banks by our own Prong is here.

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

Related Stores

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Amazon AU
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AnkerDirect AU

Comments

  • +1

    Always the 1st question is.. can we carry this on flight

  • +1

    Got 4 notifications for this deal … anker, flight, laptop and iPhone 🤔

  • +1

    This has been great with my ROG Ally X - definitely a game changer on a flight.

    • +9

      I think you mean Game Charger.

  • +6

    This has been on sale to $149 so often - feels like the actual price.

  • +4

    Lowest at $111

    • +1

      I am waiting for sub $100 lol.

    • Not according to Camel it says $148 IS ATL?

      • Lowest was not on Amazon (Camels only tracks Amazon):
        https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/844044

        In any case, Camels is not infallible even for Amazon prices - it is frequently wrong, especially when it comes to coupon deals.

        • Yes ok, I agree Camel isn’t perfect. That eBay deal that was a fluke I definitely would have bought one at that price. At current exchange rate which is worse now than back then, plus eBay pays half the discount - so ATL for OzBargain. I should have SEARCHED first. Apologies.

  • +1

    Buy it for sure

  • +1

    I have used it for nearly a year. It's good if you're doing long travel or keeping it in your car to keep your laptop or hand-held. It's very heavy though. If you're travelling carry on only, better off getting a lower amp 65w powerbank for the lighter weight.

    • +1

      Isn't it dangerous to leave a battery in the car especially if it is parked under the sun?

      • +2

        Absolutely
        Don’t leave Li Ion power banks in hot cars, you don’t know when it could trigger thermal runaway
        Not sure if LiFePo are any safer in a hot car

        • +4

          LiFePo are generally safe up to 220 degrees C. Standard Li Ion are much lower. But neither should get thermal runaway from a hot car. Thermal runaway is usually due to damage to the battery. If there's extreme heat then you'll usually get some gas build up causing the powerbank to expand. Won't catch fire unless you use it (or more aptly, charge it) after that.

      • +1

        Yeah, kinda. Depends where you store it. If it's in the glove box then it should be fine depending on your car. Don't leave it in direct sunlight though.

    • +1

      Yeah agreed here it is good but now looking for a MagSafe powerbank I can put in my pocket for times I don’t wanna lug that huge weight around especially when I don’t wanna carry a backpack

  • +2

    24,000 mAh … why not just write 24 Ah?

    • +1

      24,000 sounds bigger

    • +1

      I mean, consumer powerbanks have been around for like 20 years (and consumer rechargeable batteries for way longer)…reporting in mAh has been pretty standard for a long time, for such products given the general sizes of such batteries (cf. EV batteries and larger power boxes, which are often kWh/Wh).

      Not saying that you are wrong…but you're only 20+ years too late to start this debate! :)

      Fwiw, I think "24k mAh" is the best you'll get! (As redundant as that is!)

      • No way Li-Ion power banks of this size have been around 20 years. Those early ones are all dead. LiFePo are only in the past five years and most were much lower power than this. All my Li-Ion battery packs are swollen and need to be recycled. I bought a 10K in 2018 that was the biggest I had up until recently. 20K LiIon were heavy, had terrible output power and took ages to charge.

        The newer and higher output LiFePo are only within the past five or six years - I’m pretty sure and I have had at least 10 power banks in the past 15 years. LiIon never lasted more than about 500 cycles (especially the cheaper brands). The LiFePo batteries I have atm are 2 x 10K mAh 1 x 20K mAh and 2 x 24K mAh. I think I have a 5K mAh around somewhere for when battery is almost flat and just need to keep phone going for an appointment. Its output power is rubbish. Can’t even do 65W iirc. I don’t use it much, probably cause I can’t find it.

        • I never said ones this size have been around for 20 years…

          But the ones that were around were 2,000 mAh, 5,000 mAh, 7,000 mAh etc. They weren't 2 Ah, 5 Ah, 7 Ah. They were always listed in mAh.

          The '000 mAh has been around for 20 years, absolutely.

          You've owned 10 powerbanks in the last 15 years, so you tell me: how many of those were measured in Ah, and how many were measured in mAh? (I guarantee you ALL TEN were measured in mAh - which was my point.)

          I believe you may have misunderstood the point I was making?

          reporting in ['000] mAh has been pretty standard for a long time

          You mentioned you have an old "5K mAh" powerbank - you specifically referred to it as "5K mAh"…that pretty much exactly proves my point, right? :)

    • +1

      Why not just write 88.80 Wh, you know, the actual unit that measures energy? Obviously not, monkey brains want big numbers.

  • These are great quality products

  • +1

    Is there any major downside between this and the UGREEN 145W Power Bank 25000mAh?

    • Review comparing the Power Banks by our own Prong is here.

  • Is this potentially a better buy? 200watts and cheaper https://amzn.asia/d/fzAM7B0

    • -1

      Depends if you want to take this on a flight on not. Airlines have a 160w limit for powerbanks so higher wattage powerbanks won't be allowed on the flight.

      • +1

        Except that's a 92.5 Wh powerbank, still below the 100 Wh limit.

      • "25,000mAh Capacity: UGREEN 25000mAh power bank fully charges MacBook Pro 16" up to 1.3 times, iPhone 15 up to 5.2 times and Galaxy S23 Ultra up to 3.6 times. 90Wh airline-approved capacity is ideal for carry-on, keeping your global travel full of energy. "

    • Review comparing the Power Banks by our own Prong is here.

      • +1

        The 200w ugreen linked to above is not included in that review.

    • +1

      The UGREEN's max output from single port charging is the same as Anker's (140W). The UGREEN excels only when charging two devices simultaneously where it outputs 100W on each port while Anker provides a combined 140W across both ports.

  • +1

    I have the 737 in this deal and the UGreen 145W. The Anker 737 powers my Macbook Pro easily and it's quoting over 12 hours capacity.

    Anyone looking for the ultimate in versatility and power whilst still being airline friendly should take a look at this one:

    https://www.anker.com/products/b1340-250-power-bank-kit?vari…

    Two units including 250W main unit and a magnetically attached 100W charging base with up to 140W PD on a single port. Can be completely recharged in less than 37 minutes. Configured and monitored via the Anker app.

    Yes, I have this one too.

    If you have access to Taobao you can get a good price. Cost me $157 USD for the combo (circa $246 AUD). Disclaimer: I bought outside of Aus.

  • I bought one of these and a 140W cable to charge my sons MSI Katana. Haven't seen this power bank supply anymore than 65 watts out. I have to turn the RTX GPU off and put the power plan to best power efficiency to get it too charge. If I try balanced power plan, the laptop constantly starts switching between balanced and best power efficiency and never draws anymore than 60 watts. It does a better job charging my HP Envy, but I am not convinced this power bank can do 140w out.

  • HODl for the 737 Max model, heard there’s going to be a big dive in the price.

  • I just have a question for all ozbarginers, if you purchase sooooo many powerbanks, how do you dispose the old ones? recycle it in the coles's battery recycle bin? but it does not mention that they accept powerbanks.

  • +1

    I paid $10 more earlier this month and also have the UGreen equivalent.

    Do your research but quality product at much reduced price but ATM only $1 more than ATL.

    This Anker 737 has some better info on the screen than the UGreen equivalent which is $20 cheaper, but it shows the charging and discharging power in watts and estimated time, real time charge and discharge % also you can charge and discharge at the same time.

    At this price the extra $20 over the UGreen equivalent the Anker 737 is the better choice and I’d say highly recommended.

    I should have waited but had no idea 3rd party seller on Amazon was going to drop the price by another $10 in the same month.

    Having both UGreen and Anker 737 I’ll probably not run out if power on any trips and it’s under airlines maximum battery capacity. I mainly use on driving or country rail trips.

    Not that heavy but the square shape might be bulky for a laptop bag - more than enough power for nearly all laptops however read another post said max output was only 65W?? but that’s not what the description says on Amazon. It says 140W max output.

    Do your own research but quality product at much reduced price but only $1 more than Amazon ATL.

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