It is a 12.1V/3000mAh/36.3Wh battery, and under lab conditions, it will give up to 15 hours at 50%. We tested the figures with a Power-Z metre, and they are accurate, so you can charge your 7.5/10W smartphone, albeit at those rates. The USB-C port can provide 5V/1.5A (maximum) as power bank as well – the maximum combined is 2.5A. It has a USB-C port for upstream charging and a USB-A port (no music – for service) or as a 5V/2A (maximum) power bank output. We noticed a lag on BT – not that you would notice unless you were using it with a TV. It has a 3.5mm three-pole stereo AUX-in port as well. It is primarily a BT SBC 16-bit/44.1Hz CVD music quality speaker. PS – don’t try to use it vertically – it impedes the bottom passive radiator and completely changes the speaker’s response. Because the flat (good) response neither adds nor subtracts from the original content. While you could call it bass-centric, it really depends on the music content/genre. From there, it dips slightly, and it flat (good) to 20khz. It builds well to 86Hz and then is flat (good) until 4kHz. Note that volume depends on input source – smartphones are limited to 80dB. You can push it quite comfortably to 85dB (max around 90dB).
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