Tesla Wireless Charger

Tesla unveils its own AirPower-like wireless charger

Tesla's Wireless Charging Platform is scheduled to ship in February next year

Tesla has unveiled its own Wireless Charging Platform, a wireless charger that can charge up to three Qi devices at one time.

The concept of Tesla’s charging mat is similar to Apple’s AirPower in that the three devices can be placed anywhere on it and receive up to 15 watts of power each, reports MacRumors.

According to Tesla, the angular design of the charging mat was inspired by the Cybertruck, and it features an aluminium housing, Alcantara surface, and a detachable magnetic stand that can be used for flat or angle charging.

Conveniently, Tesla’s charging pad will also ship with a detachable magnetic stand that lets users adjust the viewing angle of a smartphone on top of it. It’s also lined with Alcantara, a suede-like synthetic fabric found throughout the carmaker’s vehicles.

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While the charging pad isn’t compatible with MagSafe, Tesla says that users can place devices like smartphones and wireless earbuds anywhere on the surface “without precise alignment.”

“Inspired by the angular design and metallic styling of Cybertruck, our Wireless Charging Platform provides 15W of fast charging power per device for up to three devices simultaneously,” Tesla said.

“Its sleek design is composed of an aluminium housing, a premium Alcantara surface and a detachable magnetic stand that allows you to lay the charger flat or at an angle for better viewing. Featuring FreePower(R) technology, which charges your Qi-capable devices such as phones or earbuds placed anywhere on its surface without precise alignment,”

Apple announced the AirPower in September 2017, a multi-device charger designed to charge the iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods simultaneously.

Apple wanted users to be able to charge their devices wherever they wanted on the AirPower, but the overlapping wireless coils required were problematic, with Apple seeing heat management and interference issues that made the product unviable, according to the report.

Tesla’s Wireless Charging Platform is scheduled to ship in February next year.