Not A Fan of Fuel Rod, But .....

Status
Not open for further replies.
Thanks for the response. The rod itself seems too large to put in the phone. I assume you plug the connector into your phone? And the rod has a battery?

The fuel rod is a portable charger like a wall outlet somewhat. It has a USB port on it that you plug the corresponding phone cord into and then the cord to your phone.

When you get the fuel rod is comes with cords to attach
 
Thanks for the response. The rod itself seems too large to put in the phone. I assume you plug the connector into your phone? And the rod has a battery?

Basically, the Fuel Rod IS a battery (inside a case, with connectors.)
If you were to open the Rod's case, the entire bulk of the inside is a battery.

If you connect the Rod's battery (via a cable) to your phone's charger input, the power that is in the Rod's battery will transfer into the phone's internal battery (recharging the phone.)
 
Hopefully, this will help. Pictures of the device itself with the included micro-USB cable (but not Apple adapters). Picture with a tube of chap stick for size comparison. Picture plugged into a phone.
 

Attachments

  • FuelRod1.jpg
    FuelRod1.jpg
    67.6 KB · Views: 42
  • FuelRod2.jpg
    FuelRod2.jpg
    63.3 KB · Views: 42
  • FuelRod3.jpg
    FuelRod3.jpg
    62.5 KB · Views: 36
  • FuelRod4.jpg
    FuelRod4.jpg
    60.6 KB · Views: 38
Hopefully, this will help. Pictures of the device itself with the included micro-USB cable (but not Apple adapters). Picture with a tube of chap stick for size comparison. Picture plugged into a phone.
So, if you have an iPhone, you will need to bring your own adapter?
 

So, if you have an iPhone, you will need to bring your own adapter?

It comes with a 30-pin adapter and a Lightning adapter in the package. You simply attach these to the included micro-USB cable.
 
A picture of the included adapters that can be attached to the micro-USB cable. As a heads up, if you have a fairly new non-Apple device with a USB Type C connector, you will need your own adapter. I use these Anker models, which are high quality.
 

Attachments

  • fuel-rod.png
    fuel-rod.png
    203.3 KB · Views: 20
iPhone is the best selling phone out there, they include the charging cable for an iPhone
That's what I had assumed. That's why I was questioning the previous poster's comment. S/he mentioned micro-USB, but NOT Apple adapters

It comes with a 30-pin adapter and a Lightning adapter in the package. You simply attach these to the included micro-USB cable.
Thanks! I misread your previous post to mean that it did not come with the iphone adapter, not that you just didn't include it in the photos.
 
So, if you have an iPhone, you will need to bring your own adapter?

iPhone is the best selling phone out there, they include the charging cable for an iPhone

It comes with a 30-pin adapter and a Lightning adapter in the package. You simply attach these to the included micro-USB cable.

When you first buy it it comes with a kit of various adapters. When you exchange it you don't get more cables.
 
Hah! A fellow engineer, I see. Electrical? We could have a great time discussing this, but I fear the rest of the forum members would eventually grab pitchforks and tomatoes.

Completely agree with everything you pointed out. However, all of that is completely out of our control, of course. As long as Disney offers the service, I will just keep swapping them out in the parks.

Self discharge is not always linear. So where a certain cell design may exhibit a drop-off of X % for the first days/week, a plot will often show an exponential decay. In some cases, this is directly related to ESR (or Re) of the design.

The fuel rods appear to be merely 18650 cells and what we also don't know is if they were ever subjected to an overcharge or over-discharge state. The built in BMS should be robust enough to detect a VCO on charge/discharge (or thermal runaway), but the damage done from even a single cycle can cause excessive dendrite growth on the anode/cathode and even the best separators are vulnerable.

We also don't know the charge rate, not just the number of cycles. Charge rate is directly related to MPV and can also cause a loss of capacity due to the active material(s) being damaged. I suspect these cells are rated at C/6 or higher.

Many, if not all, batteries have a limited number of cycles although super capacitors generally can be in the hundreds of thousands, if not millions, depending on many factors (DOD, rate, temperature, etc.). But, the energy density limits on super capacitors makes them very limited on energy sensitive applications (they do excel at power based applications).

Wasn't there a system like this in the UK that caused a lot of issues. Various stores like a Radio shack would have exchange machines.
 
For those who have used the fuel rods can we get by with one for a party of 4 or will we need multiple fuel rods to support our party?

The limiting factor is how quickly it can charge a phone and its probably not going to be as fast as your wall charger at home and definitely no Qualcomm Quick Charge v3.0. ;)

I would think 2 could work for 4 people as long as the first person started to use early so by mid day they were back up to 100% and they could exchange it to give it the next person who is now maybe down to 25%. It all depends on how much people use there phones and how quickly they need a recharge.
 
For my next trip I can see us getting a few of these. Much better than carrying around our 2 bricks (something like 20,000 or 10,000) or the 5 or so little 2,200 mAh ones.
 
Really dumb question, when you are at the end of the trip, do you turn the Fuel Rod in, or do you just take it home with you?
I have an Anker, but it's quite large, and I'd rather leave it at home and use this option if I end up needing one.
 
Really dumb question, when you are at the end of the trip, do you turn the Fuel Rod in, or do you just take it home with you?
I have an Anker, but it's quite large, and I'd rather leave it at home and use this option if I end up needing one.

You bring it home. You could turn it in if you want to, but part of the reason you're paying such a high price for such a small charger is because you're allowed to keep it.

Bring it home then when you go back to Disney or anywhere else with a Fuel rod location, you can swap it out for a new one
 
You bring it home. You could turn it in if you want to, but part of the reason you're paying such a high price for such a small charger is because you're allowed to keep it.

Bring it home then when you go back to Disney or anywhere else with a Fuel rod location, you can swap it out for a new one
Thank you, that's what I thought.
 
So, if you have an iPhone, you will need to bring your own adapter?

When I bought mine, it came with a micro USB (Android) cable and a Lightning (Newer iPhone) adapter as well as an adapter for the wide charger ancient iPhones used.
 
Really dumb question, when you are at the end of the trip, do you turn the Fuel Rod in, or do you just take it home with you?
I have an Anker, but it's quite large, and I'd rather leave it at home and use this option if I end up needing one.

There is also no where really to turn it in to.

Wait I can see it now People are going to start Fuel Rod Swaps like the Refrigerator or Stroller swaps*. :)

* Is this still a thing? I don't follow the resort boards but I think over the 10 years or so I've been around here all rooms, even values, now have fridges.
 
First time I used my Mophie, I couldn't figure out why it wasn't charging my phone. I didn't realize the Mophie had an "on" button. One of my friends had to point that out to me.
 
Does anyone know if the Fuel Rods have an adapter for S8? This phone has some funky new kind of android adapter, not like the standard one. Kind of annoying.

Also, how long does it take to charge your phone? Do you have to leave it connected most of the time? Sorry if these are stupid questions. I've never used a battery pack power source for any phone before.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.















Receive up to $1,000 in Onboard Credit and a Gift Basket!
That’s right — when you book your Disney Cruise with Dreams Unlimited Travel, you’ll receive incredible shipboard credits to spend during your vacation!
CLICK HERE













DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter

Back
Top