I started digging into articles about USB Type-C because I recently got a phone that uses it (Sony Xperia XZ1), along with having quick charge capabilities, and a concern kept being brought up about "bad" cables causing explosions, damaging your computer, etc.
From what I understand, because of the amps/voltages Type-C allows, there can be damage done if the device (smartphone) tries to suck too much power from a power source (PC) that doesn't support that kind of power suck. Is this true?
Shouldn't the device have a way of gauging the source and limiting how much power it can suck, to prevent damage?
I saw that there are cables that have built in things that do exactly this, do these actually prevent disasters or are those just buzzwords/gimmicks/marketing?
To point to a specific situation, I want to plug in a Sony Xperia XZ1 phone to my PC. I got one of these cables to do it. http://www.cablebuilders.com/258501-usb30typeamaletotypecmale3ampratinglength1meter-1.aspx
Their customer service rep told me the cables are built to industry standard usb specifications. It's only a cable and doesn't have any chips or dip built in. Is this safe to use for transferring data at least? Should I avoid charging the phone with it while plugged into the PC?
From what I understand, because of the amps/voltages Type-C allows, there can be damage done if the device (smartphone) tries to suck too much power from a power source (PC) that doesn't support that kind of power suck. Is this true?
Shouldn't the device have a way of gauging the source and limiting how much power it can suck, to prevent damage?
I saw that there are cables that have built in things that do exactly this, do these actually prevent disasters or are those just buzzwords/gimmicks/marketing?
To point to a specific situation, I want to plug in a Sony Xperia XZ1 phone to my PC. I got one of these cables to do it. http://www.cablebuilders.com/258501-usb30typeamaletotypecmale3ampratinglength1meter-1.aspx
Their customer service rep told me the cables are built to industry standard usb specifications. It's only a cable and doesn't have any chips or dip built in. Is this safe to use for transferring data at least? Should I avoid charging the phone with it while plugged into the PC?
Last edited: