Anker (安克) launches ¥1,099 300W, 26,250mAh power bank — Mainland China gold‑label custom edition compatible with Huawei (华为) and Xiaomi (小米)
Product launch and price
It has been reported that Anker (安克) has introduced a Prime Mainland China gold‑label custom edition power bank with a 26,250mAh capacity and up to 300W peak charging, priced at ¥1,099. Early buyers reportedly receive a data cable and a one‑year warranty. The unit is positioned as a high‑power, cross‑ecosystem accessory for users who carry multiple devices and demand rapid replenishment on the go.
Technical features and compatibility
The new model reportedly supports Huawei SuperCharge at up to 66W and Xiaomi’s wired Surge charging at up to 120W, and — for the first time on an Anker product — includes an “Anker Protocol,” the company’s private fast‑charge standard. It also carries built‑in PD 3.1 at 140W and 100W PPS, plus support for devices from Apple (苹果), Honor (荣耀) and vivo, among others. The bank offers two Type‑C ports and one Type‑A port, supports 250W dual‑device fast charging and can deliver up to 140W on any C port without down‑rating; it also supports pass‑through charging, OTA updates and an “Anker intelligent system” to manage charge states.
Certification and air travel
The product has passed China’s 3C certification and is reportedly permitted for carriage on airplanes. It has been reported that the 26,250mAh figure translates to roughly 97Wh when calculated at a common 3.7V cell voltage, keeping it under the typical 100Wh airline threshold — a key practical point for frequent flyers who need high-capacity backups.
Why this matters
Why does this matter? In China’s fragmented device ecosystem, cross‑brand compatibility and official certification are selling points — especially as domestic vendors and consumers adapt to proprietary fast‑charge schemes and tighter international supply chains. Priced at ¥1,099 with first‑release perks, Anker’s new offering targets power users who want laptop‑level PD speeds in a carryable battery, while also navigating regulatory and airline limits that govern high‑capacity portable batteries.
