Baseus Enercore CJ11 fast-charging 67W wall charger The Baseus EnerCore CJ11 wall charger is a compact, do-it-all USB-C charger with two USB-C ports and one built-in retractable USB-C cable. It can deliver up to 67W from any port (or all three combined), and supports the Google Pixel 9 Pro XL and 10 Pro XL's specific fast-charging requirement of 18V/2A to top up at 37W.
If you just got a Google Pixel 10 Pro XL like me, odds are you already have a USB-C charger that will fill up the battery when it’s empty. Even an old, slow USB-C charger with no special features will do the trick, probably topping up at around 18W. That’s all you need to know if you’re OK with your phone taking up a couple of hours to charge. But if you want fast charging, you should buckle up.
The world of USB-C is as messy as it is simple, and although one uniform port does the job, there are dozens of different speeds, protocols, and capabilities hidden in it — some prevalent, others uncommon. The Pixel 10 Pro XL is one of those special cases; it requires a specific flavor of USB-C fast charging that not every wall charger will offer, and finding the right one can be frustrating.
I have six single-port and multi-port USB-C chargers at home now, which go from 45W to 100W. On paper, any one of them should be able to deliver the full 37W that the Pixel 10 Pro XL requires, but the reality is that only one does. And it’s not even the most powerful one on paper! It’s the 67W Baseus EnerCore CJ11, and it has one extra trick up its sleeve: an extra built-in retractable USB-C cable. Let me explain what makes it special and how I tested it to ensure it supports my Pixel 10 Pro XL.
So what’s so special about the Pixel 10 Pro XL’s fast charging?
Rita El Khoury / Android Authority
Just like the Pixel 9 Pro XL, the new Google Pixel 10 Pro XL requires a special flavor of USB-C fast charging. The two phones can go up to 37W via USB-C Power Delivery PPS, but in order to reach that maximum draw and fill up at the highest speed, they need around 18V of power at 2A. That’s much higher than the usual 9V that most fast-charging phones like the Galaxy S25 Ultra, for example, use.
When my colleague Robert Triggs investigated this issue special requirement with the Pixel 9 Pro XL, he noticed that the phone couldn’t negotiate this higher-voltage, lower-amperage demand with many chargers. This dropped it down to a slower 27W (9V/3A) power and took longer to fill up the phone’s battery. The Pixel 10 Pro XL’s charging follows the same footprint and, considering how slow it fills up even at the full 37W, dropping to 27W isn’t always a good idea.
I’m okay with my phone taking a couple of hours to charge up overnight, but there are days when I’m busy or traveling, and I’d rather not be tied to a wall outlet. If I’m in a rush to get out the door and only have 30 minutes to top up my Pixel, I must get the most out of that time, and that’s where finding a charger that can handle 18V/2A became essential to me.
The Baseus EnerCore CJ11 wall charger to the rescue
... continue reading