Quote from: Tony Shark on July 11, 2020, 01:27:09
Anyway, this is not the first time they did this either. For example, the base config Dell G5 gaming laptop with 1050Ti from 2018 only shipped with a 130W barrel plug because they decided to cut cost on that part (shame on you Dell). As a result, battery drain was quite insane when both the CPU and GPU could boost properly. The best solution for that was to shelve out extra money for a 180W barrel plug instead.
As far as I know, it's a standard feature. It has been around for at least 15 years. It allows you to, for example, take a 200+ W workstation and power it from a 12 V travel adapter rated at something like 65 W. As long as you had juice in the battery, it could use it to supplement the external power supply and provide more performance. Or to use a weaker supply in a pinch from a different laptop. Also useful for docking stations. Not to mention, laptops are typically designed to be primarily used on the go, powered by battery. Weaker supply then simply means slower charging. It's not preventing you from using a laptop as a laptop. It allows you to use whatever supply you happen to have on hand and make the best of it. This is exactly how it should be.
Yes, they sometimes leave it up to you to choose the appropriate power supply. Again, nothing new. Even 15 years ago, there were options to buy more powerful "bricks" for many laptops, even high end models (like top of the range Latitudes, Precisions). I believe my first Latitude came as standard with a 65 W supply and I opted for the optional 90 W one. It wasn't much and it was nicer (it was nice even by today's standards, designed so that you can nicely wrap the cables around it with its curves rather than edges, double insulated with a two pin plug rather than the annoying three pin, it had an integrated elastic cable strap). I believe there was an even more powerful supply listed in the configurator, but it was more of a brick.
In this case, I believe they really want to use USB-C for charging. It's meant to be a MacBook with Windows kind of a machine. Form over function. And they have to live with the limitation. But that's not really the issue here. The issue is that a 130 W supply isn't providing 130 W. That's not intentional.