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How does a Magsafe adapter know the voltage to output to a Macbook?

How does the adapter know what voltage it's to output to the MacBook?. I mean: and 85w adapter, for example, will give 14 to 20 volts depending of which MacBook model it's connected to. I read "Teardown and exploration of Apple's Magsafe connector" and this article mentions that the 1pin wire communicates the adapter wattage to the MacBook, but how can it know what voltage to output to the MacBook?.

Posted on Jul 2, 2015 4:40 PM

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Posted on Jul 2, 2015 4:56 PM

That is provided by the AC charger, not the port. The charger voltage is fed into a regulator on the motherboard that establishes the fixed or regulated voltage required for the motherboard. Essentially, the magsafe adapter is merely a connecter, nothing more. Most of the newest models run on 5 volts for the basic source. That is the DC regulated voltage. Although you can use the 85 watt charger on most laptops, you cannot use it the new Macbook because it does not have a magsafe port. Most MacBooks only use a 60 or 65 watt charger.

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Jul 2, 2015 4:56 PM in response to rodion15

That is provided by the AC charger, not the port. The charger voltage is fed into a regulator on the motherboard that establishes the fixed or regulated voltage required for the motherboard. Essentially, the magsafe adapter is merely a connecter, nothing more. Most of the newest models run on 5 volts for the basic source. That is the DC regulated voltage. Although you can use the 85 watt charger on most laptops, you cannot use it the new Macbook because it does not have a magsafe port. Most MacBooks only use a 60 or 65 watt charger.

How does a Magsafe adapter know the voltage to output to a Macbook?

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