Because, my dear Watson, the car moves faster, so obviously the charger does, too. Elementary, my good friend.
Phone will charge faster with a larger charging current. Charging current depends on voltage, so your home charger likely has a higher voltage and therefore a higher charging current.
no it cannot charge a computer. a phone battery does not have enough power to charge a computer. maybe it can it the phone battery has a bigger capacity than the computer (which is imposibble)
The charger with the 900ma output will charge the battery faster than the charger with a 500ma output. The phone with the 900mah battery will last longer between charges than that of the 500mah battery.
I wouldn't imagine it would. If it's a decent charger it should regulate the current, regardless of input voltage. But if it's cheapo, then it's likely it will charge faster with the car running, rather than being off.
no
Unplug it from the computer and use a charger with higher amperage. For example if the standard charger uses a 5 V 1 Amp charger than you use a 5 V 2 Amp that will charge twice as fast but you may run the risk of overheating the cell phone. Find out from the phone manufacturer if the phone can sustain higher current.
It runs about 30miles faster than a house cat.
they sell solar phone chargers, but if it's less than 4x4 inches i wouldn't buy it because it won't provide enough power to charge it
2 ports USB charger (1A). I was surprised at how much faster it recharged my phone than using my laptop port.
No, it won't. Basically, plugs are one-way streets. Electricity frow out of them, but you can't "charge the power company." So the phone can charge, but if the power goes out, and it's still plugged in, it won't discharge any faster than normal, since the power has no where to go except to power the phone.
Reaction times with no phone should (in theory) always be faster than reaction times with a phone
No.