The thickness of the wire _may_ affect the charging speed.
Charging depends on the voltage applied to the battery, very thin wire will drop part of the 5v supplied by the charger so the current flow could be lower.
The Usb2 spec says a host should be able to supply 900mA. The business about 2 volts on the data leads is all about detecting if there is a client device attached that is using the data leads ie passing data. Where no data is present the charger should be able to supply 1.8 A, this cludge is so that you don't connect a device that drags down the 5v whilst another device - for example a GPS - requires the full 5v
Pete
Sent from my IDEOS S7 using Android Tablet Forum
Charging depends on the voltage applied to the battery, very thin wire will drop part of the 5v supplied by the charger so the current flow could be lower.
The Usb2 spec says a host should be able to supply 900mA. The business about 2 volts on the data leads is all about detecting if there is a client device attached that is using the data leads ie passing data. Where no data is present the charger should be able to supply 1.8 A, this cludge is so that you don't connect a device that drags down the 5v whilst another device - for example a GPS - requires the full 5v
Pete
Sent from my IDEOS S7 using Android Tablet Forum