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Rubbish, if the amps rating is lower than the supplied charger it just means that it will charge slower like an iPad. If you want the same performance as your original charger then go for one that is rated to at least 1.5 amps.

Pete
So I guess you've tried this on the A500 with a charger with almost 40% less amps & it actually charged?
 
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Rubbish, if the amps rating is lower than the supplied charger it just means that it will charge slower like an iPad. If you want the same performance as your original charger then go for one that is rated to at least 1.5 amps.

Pete
Just saw this old thread pop up because of the recent post.

The advice in the quote above is erroneous. It is important to always use a power adapter that meets manufacturer specifications. If the tablet was engineered to require 1.5A, then the power supply must provide at least that much current on demand or it may fail due to overload. Depending on the design of the affected components, such an overload may result in low voltage, cause the charging circuit to malfunction, blow a fuse, burn up, or all of the above.

What will likely happen if an a500 is used with an adapter that supplies insufficient current is that under higher loads -- i.e., using while charging -- a drop in voltage caused by the inadequate current capacity will cause the battery charge controller in the tablet to automatically disconnect to protect the equipment. This behavior has been observed by a number of Iconia owners while trying to use certain aftermarket chargers not meeting specifications, preventing the units from recharging.

A side note: It's interesting that the conversation in the thread above progressed as it did, because the power supply that the OP was asking about would have likely provided enough current to support roughly 5 tablets simultaneously. At 12V, 90W of sustained output power will supply 7.5A of current.
 
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OK - the power plug (mini usb or whatever you call it) seems to be same size as what we use on our Samsung phones - however those don't seem to charge it....they plug in fine but dont charge it - does this have to do with the amps and voltage thing???

That's because the round hole on the same side as the micro USB is where you plug in the charger, the micro USB is not wired for charging the device.
 
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The tablet will charge through the micro USB if it's hooked to your computer. Not sure how or why but it does. And it's a full charge as tho it was hooked to a standard c harger. I know this since I restored mine from ICS back to 3.2.1 and didn't have to charge it durring the process and then back to ICS and still didn't have to put it on the charger.
 
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I droped my tablet and it refused to charge on the charger. I thought about it and pluged in the mini usb and then it started charging normally through the charge plug. Also, I found you have to use a pure wave charger. If you use a modified wave charger it won't charge. Found this out when I tried to charge it in my truck with and inverter. The pure wave inverter would charge it but not the modified wave inverter. Why this has happened I do not know but just thought ya'all should know.
 
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