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Welcome to the club.

I’m a big fan of the BLE caberqu, it does a bit more than the treedix tester and has an app to save and export cable reports.

EDIT: here’s the link caberqu.com/…/39-ble-caberqu-0611816327412.html

BLE caberQU: a digital USB-C to USB-C cable tester

first and only digital cable tester for USB-C to USB-C cables | information on data speed, charging power, cable health and many more

caberQU

Your solution may very well also work, good thinking. A few things to consider though:

  • Putting capacitors in series requires balancing them
  • A silicon full bridge rectifier drops ~1.4V frm the input
  • Incandecent bulbs require a lot of current to get going, this may result in a delay for them to turn on
Haha pretty much
Interesting approach, never thought about using the cable for something completely unrelated.
Thanks, that’s pretty much exactly what I found: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_hardware#Allowable_curr…
USB hardware - Wikipedia

Has anyone ever seen a "10A" USB-C cable and can tell what their purpose is?

https://lemmy.world/post/20128123

Has anyone ever seen a "10A" USB-C cable and can tell what their purpose is? - Lemmy.World

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/20128020 [https://lemmy.world/post/20128020] > The video dissects a USB-C cable marked with a 10A rating even though there is no such rating in the standard. > > It would be interesting what this is meant for, as I’ve never seen a device with such a rating?

I’ve actually done that with a simple single diode rectifier and a supercap with zener voltage limitation:

If your supercap has a too low series resistance for the LED to light immediately you need an additional resistor in series with it. It is simple and small enough to directly fit inside the original lamp casing and has been working without a problem for over 3 years.

The USB-C standard and particularly the USB PD (power delivery) is so complex it almost feels comical.

The PD standard document (freely available on usb.org) is over 800 pages long and features a lengthy part about the role of the cable alone which is mostly hidden from the user. Here’s a short video about this issue: www.youtube.com/watch?v=6bZ0y9G-4Pc

Not all USB-C cables are equal

YouTube

Test of three different original apple USB-C cables

https://lemmy.world/post/18410718

Test of three different original apple USB-C cables - Lemmy.World

This video tests three different cables, ranging from cheap to really expensive and explains the differences between each other