October 29, 2009 3:13 PM PDT

Scosche PowerFuze: The Hannah Montana
of USB power adapters

by Antuan Goodwin
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 2 comments
Share

Scosche PowerFuze Pro in action

The PowerFuze keeps your USB devices juiced in the car and at home.

(Credit: Scosche)

You should see the mess of cables, chargers, and charging cables that clutter my backpack every day. Moving from car to car and home to work while testing a variety of devices means that iPod sync cables, USB cables, Mini- and Micro-USB cables for mobile phones and GPS devices, 12-volt car chargers, and 110-volt wall chargers eat up a good deal of my bag space. For me, this is why Scosche's PowerFuze charger system looks interesting. This charging solution should let you replace a number of cables and chargers for an all-in-one approach. It's a car charger and a wall charger. Ideally, it's the best of both worlds.

The PowerFuze system crams a few different charging configurations into one package. When you're at home, it is a two-port "Made for iPod" and "Works with iPhone" certified USB AC charger that plugs into a 110-volt wall outlet. When you're on the road, a 12-volt USB charger pulls out to take advantage of your vehicle's DC power port. If you have 12-volt DC car accessories that you want to use indoors, the vacant 12-volt port will work as a power inverter to accommodate them. With 1 amp of current split between the two channels, you shouldn't expect to power a 12-volt air compressor on the PowerFuze, but there's more than enough overhead for most portable devices.

Then again, most users only have one car, so they won't really see the point of carrying around the 12-volt charger. That little bugger will probably find itself perma-lodged into your car's DC power port after the first week--when you get sick of bringing it into the house every day. That being said, I still think it's nice to be able to pick up both chargers for one reasonable price and have the flexibility to use them together if you should decide to do so.

The PowerFuze and the PowerFuze Pro (with an included iPod sync cable) sell for $34.99 and $44.99 respectively. If you only need a car charger, look for the PowerPlug and PowerPlug Pro with sync cable for $19.99 and $29.99, respectively. Check out Scosche.com for more details on this cool little stocking stuffer.

Recent posts from The Car Tech blog
Lotus tests a two-stroke engine
Need a new headlight bulb? There's an app for that
Lincoln MKS: Luxury through technology
A glimpse of the 2010 BMW Z4 sDrive 35i
Chevy will make only 10,000 Volts in first year
Lincoln MKT proves hard to leave
The 2010 Lotus Evora: An everyday driver?
Sanyo sees big growth in batteries
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by cvaldes1831 October 29, 2009 3:36 PM PDT
A possibly superior way to do this is to get power inverter for your car that outputs 110V to a standard NEMA 5-15 outlet and plug a small power strip into that. That way, you can power non-USB devices (e.g., your computer) as well as USB-powered devices using a standard charger (the iPhone USB charger is tiny).
Reply to this comment
by antuan.goodwin October 29, 2009 4:44 PM PDT
That's one way to do it, if you plan on running multiple items that use 110V power. I used to run a laptop on an inverter for working on the road. For power users and road warriors, I can recommend your setup.

However, I'm not quoting stats, but I'd be willing to wager that the vast majority of users aren't plugging up computers and blenders in their cars. If you're only charging a phone or powering an MP3 player, there's no need to go from 12-volt DC to 110-volt AC back to a 5-volt DC USB port for a single device. In this case, a simple, single port USB car charger (or even a dual port unit) is more efficient, more discrete, and much cheaper.

Search Car Tech

advertisement

About The Car Tech blog

CNET's Car Tech blog covers the latest developments in the automotive industry, with commentary on car stereos, hybrid and concept cars, GPS, and much more. The Car Tech blog offers the latest news and reviews from CNET's Car Tech reviews channel.

Add this feed to your online news reader

The Car Tech blog topics