power supply - can laptop and its adapter be mixed and matched?

07
2014-07
  • Tim

    Possible Duplicate:
    Should laptops remain plugged in when their battery is 100% charged?
    charging laptop with a different manufacturer's charger

    I was wondering if today's laptops and adapters together with power cords can be mixed and matched?

    For example, my laptop is Lenovo T400 and its adapter outputs 20V and 4.5A. In my office, there is another laptop's adapter which outputs 19V and 4.3A. I was wondering if I forget to bring the adapter with my laptop to my office, will it be all right to use the other one instead?

    What are some principles to tell if an adapter can be used by a laptop?

  • Answers
  • Shinrai

    The answer is "generally if they're close enough, yes, but you do this at your own risk". Laptops generally have some tolerance in the incoming power that they'll accept so you'll probably be alright with something that close, but it can cause anything from odd behavior to outright damage. (Personally, I'd just buy a second adapter and LEAVE one at the office...)

    The best thing to do is look online and see if other people have reported problems, but you may have difficulty finding somebody with the same model using the same wrong adapter. I have no experience with changing T400 adapters but I'm GUESSING you'd be okay here. That's just a guess, though; you won't know until you try. Just don't let the smoke out...

  • MaQleod

    Generally it is a bad idea, you need to have proper voltage and amperage, otherwise you will cause damage. It is true that there is tolerance for slight variances, but laptops can vary greatly (for example, some take as low as 14v, others as high as 20v). Even if it is the same plug type, if you plug in the wrong adapter, over time it will do damage. The same goes for amperage. There is a distinct difference between 1.5 and 3.5. You can have an adapter that feeds 18.5v and 1.5 amps and if you plug it into a laptop in place of one that fed 19v 3.5 amps, you will definitely cause damage, even if the voltage is close. Be very careful when selecting alternate power adapters.

    With that said, in your particular case, it is very close. 1 volt is not a huge difference, but over a long period of time, the variance in force can potentially cause damage to the motherboard. It is usually healthier to have a bit more than a bit less.

  • 8088

    Look like a lot of us missed these points:

    1. Volt: it is only allowed +_5%

      That is, if your specified adapter is 20V you can use an adapter with a voltage range from 19V to 21V only.

    2. The current must be enough within this voltage range to produce the watts specified for your equipment (by using the formula W = V X A)

      In other words if your original adapter is 20V~4.5A=90W you can use 19V~4.74A (or higher)=90W, or 21V~4.28A (or higher)=90W.

    Note that your equipment will only suck the current it needs to yield its wattage on the supplied volt at any given time. In the case of the 90W equipment above, it will only sucks 4.74A of 19V, 4.5A of 20V and 4.28A of 21V from THESE ONLY INTERCHANGEABLE adapters for an OEM 20V 90W adapter irrespective of how much current the adapter is capable of supplying.


  • Related Question

    power supply - How can I tell if an AC adapter is compatible with my laptop?
  • Jim

    Possible Duplicate:
    charging laptop with a diffrent manufacture charger

    How can I tell if an AC adapter is compatible with my laptop? For example, does the voltage output have to bee the same, or just close? What power measurements matter?


  • Related Answers
  • Robert Cartaino

    Any AC adapter is considered "compatible" with any device if it has all the following traits:

    • The voltage of the adapter has to be identical.

      It's possible that a voltage can be "close enough" because many devices are built to work within a certain voltage range. But there's no way to know reliably how your device will handle a different voltage.
    • The amperage (amps) of the adapter has to be equal or greater than the device.

      A device "draws" amperage from an adapter so there has to be at least as much amperage available as the device needs.
    • The polarity of the adapter has to be identical.

      The polarity of your adapter (and device) is usually indicated by a diagram with two circles showing a plus (+) and a minus (-) pointing to the outer plug and the inner plug.

    Of course, the shape of the plug in your device has to match the shape of your adapter so you can plug it in. If you can match all four criteria, you should be okay.

  • ChrisF

    This has been covered before, but you need to ensure:

    • the voltage is the same
    • the polarity of the tip (of the laptop plug) is the same
    • the size and shape of the tip is the same (shape isn't usually an issue as they all tend to be round, but the size might be different).
    • the current is greater and or equal to the requirements of the laptop