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Thunderbolt 4 supports a maximum of 240W, not 100W as the manufacturer indicated and can indeed be charged via either Thunderbolt 4 port (USB-C) with an appropriate PD charger and cable. You will get a "weak charging state" message if it supplies <150W but using a 100W GANII Anker charger has been sufficient for most loads to keep the laptop charged and the laptop be shut down to top up if necessary. Intel's EVO platform requires that a laptop be capable of charging through Thunderbolt 4 specifications.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I bought this device and can charge it with a USB-C PD charger connected to either of the two USB-C ports. I'm not certain what the maximum wattage it'll take over USB-C is. The included charger is a 150 W DC jack charger. A 45 W USB-C PD charger is sufficient for keeping the device charged under light workloads or browsing. It may not be possible to charge the device at full speed over USB-C PD. You may want to purchase a returnable high-watt USB-C PD charger to test it out! (Yes, I know the other answer is the manufacturer. I'm not sure what lead to their incorrect answer here! Just trying to clear up the confusion I experienced when shopping for this device.)
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.The laptop can't be charged from the USB-C port. The USB-C/Thundebolt port supports a maximum of 100 watts power delivery.
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