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Teardown reveals the risks of counterfeit iPad chargers

A teardown by an engineer investigating the differences between genuine and counterfeit iPad chargers found that despite looking almost identical externally, there were big differences internally, impacting on both power delivery and safety.

One safety difference is obvious: the Apple charger has much more insulation. The upper (high-voltage) half is wrapped in yellow insulating tape. Some components are encased in shrink tubing, there are plastic insulators between some components, and some wires have extra insulation. The counterfeit charger only has minimal insulation.

While the genuine charger delivered slightly above the 10W claimed, the counterfeit delivered only 5.9W, meaning it would take almost twice as long to charge. The fake charger power delivery was also found by engineer Ken Shirriff to be “noisy and low quality.”

But it’s the safety side that provides the greatest argument for sticking to the real deal. For example, safety regulations require a gap of at least 4mm between high- and low-voltage sides of any transformer. The genuine Apple charger comfortably exceeds this with a 5.6mm gap, while the fake charger gap was just 0.6mm.

The Apple charger also uses triple-insulated wire, while the fake one is uninsulated but for a thin varnish coating.

The full teardown is worth a read if you want chapter and verse, but the tl;dr version is that cheap chargers are cheap for a reason.

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Comments

  1. vkd108 - 11 years ago

    QED

  2. jSeunnasepp - 11 years ago

    “cheap chargers are cheap for a reason.”

    Unfortunately, Apple’s expensive chargers are not expensive for a reason. I am sure that – in spite of the extra quality – they could still sell them for 1/4 the price and still make money.

    • Abbi Vakil (@AbbiV) - 11 years ago

      They are expensive because Apple spent a lot of money developing them and because they like to make profit. Don’t you like to make money?

      • jSeunnasepp - 11 years ago

        I imagine it does not take a great deal of money for an engineer to design one of these chargers. Clearly the components are more costly than the cheap ones, but this still does not add up to anywhere near the price they charge.

        I have no problem with Apple making money. I own Apple stock. I do not fell they overcharge for their computers or iDevices.

        But as a customer I feel they do take advantage of me on accessories like these.

Author

Avatar for Ben Lovejoy Ben Lovejoy

Ben Lovejoy is a British technology writer and EU Editor for 9to5Mac. He’s known for his op-eds and diary pieces, exploring his experience of Apple products over time, for a more rounded review. He also writes fiction, with two technothriller novels, a couple of SF shorts and a rom-com!


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