05-21-2017 10:15 AM - last edited on 03-05-2024 10:22 PM by ROGBot
05-22-2017 03:55 AM
05-22-2017 11:13 AM
German Expat wrote:
You will not find a powerbank (except if you like a good workout carrying a huge weight) that will bring this laptop through the day. The power loss with the conversion from the powerbank to the laptop adapter is way too high.
The question is more why do you want to carry a bulky gaming laptop to run Microsoft Office and web browsing?
I would get a light laptop with long battery life for my regular day to day tasks and then buy a gaming laptop or desktop for heavy gaming either at home or at a friends house.
We use the Asus for gaming (mainly our 11 year old sun) and have a Surface for light usage. This then also has a usb c input and is easy to recharge. It is slow and will not run any games well (tried steam on it) but is perfectly fine for web browsing and taking notes.
Added: 4-5 years for a laptop is very optimistic, batteries degrade (with luck you can still find replacements) and technology progresses. I would rather buy a laptop that fits your needs. What do you need the GTX1070 for? VR? Heavy gaming?
05-28-2017 05:42 PM
05-31-2017 08:15 AM
05-31-2017 08:31 AM
xeromist wrote:
I think the only way you could use that power bank is to turn off the laptop and let it charge. That might be how this Kimberly person used it but it would have been better if she had said so.
FWIW, this is not a recommended use case for a gaming laptop, nor that power bank. However, since you already have both items it's worth a try.
For anyone else that is considering such a purchase, I would first hook your laptop up to a power meter like a Kill-A-Watt meter and see how much it draws under various loads. Likely the only load under 85w would be powered off charging.
Never attempt to draw more than 85w and if the batteries start to get hot, disconnect it immediately.
05-31-2017 09:19 AM