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Baseus EnerCore CJ11 review: 67W pixel-fast, clutter-free

John Melendez
Last updated: September 13, 2025 12:07 pm
By John Melendez
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For the pixel pro owner who loathes cable spaghetti, the Baseus EnerCore CJ11 finds the sweet spot. It’s a diminutive 67W wall charger with GaN technology that includes two C-type ports and is stored together with its retractable USB-C lead inside. It support the fast-charging profile that the Pixel 9 Pro XL and 10 Pro XL are picky about, which is how it’s able to deliver the full ~37W those phones can draw via USB Power Delivery with PPS. In the real world, that translates to quicker top-ups and less spaghetti on your outlet.

Table of Contents
  • The Pixel PPS puzzle: 18V/2A or no dice
  • Ports, cable and pocketable build
  • Measured results: Pixel-perfect 37W
  • Multi-Device Balance and Laptop Charging
  • Clutter cured: the retractable-cable advantage
  • Price, competitors, and value
  • Verdict: the obvious choice for Pixel power users

The Pixel PPS puzzle: 18V/2A or no dice

Google’s high-end Pixels support a fast-charging method that differs from what other flagship phones do. The Pixel has implemented usbsmartdualrole responsible for coordinating the voltage switch via PD, and consequently doesn’t need the 9VSPP rail as devices like Samsung’s Ultra do. Instead of using a common 9V PPS rail, Pixels target around 18V at 2A (about to be ~36-37W). PPS allows for precision voltage adjustment and the USB Implementers Forum says chargers can do so in fine steps, but not all bricks are exposing an 18V step. That’s why a lot of “fast” chargers top out Pixels at ~27W (9V/3A), which saves them dollars on the paper bill but costs you time at the wall.

Baseus EnerCore CJ11 67W USB-C charger, fast and clutter-free charging setup

In independent testing and in community measurements, such as those from ChargerLAB and several reviewer teardowns, Pixel Pro phones consistently bargain for higher voltage and lower current to meet best-case draw. The CJ11 is one of the few little chargers I’ve run across that just dishes out that 18V/2A PPS combo no matter what output you’re on.

Ports, cable and pocketable build

The hardware is satisfyingly simple: two upfront USB-C ports and a retractable USB-C cable that extends to about 0.8m (you get folding prongs on the US version) with fixed pins for EU editions. It’s smaller than a lot of bricks rated for 65–70W thanks to GaN parts, and the lead that pulls out is the main event — pull, plug in your computer or device, charge up, retract. No cable trailing off the power strip, no searching for “the” lead.

All three outputs are individually rated to 67W, or up to 67W shared when more than one device is plugged in. It’s that single-sentence spec that makes the CJ11 unusual: The built-in cable isn’t an afterthought, it’s a potential full-bore solution to the Pixel’s demands just like either USB-C port.

Measured results: Pixel-perfect 37W

For my PPS testing I used a Satechi USB-C power meter and a Power-Z analyzer to validate performance from sub-20% on PPS. The charger, for its part once it got going and I wasn’t plopping more phones in, settled on ~18V and ~2A which is around 35-38W at the phone end of things – exactly what a recent Pixel Pro expects for its most rapid wired fill-up. That consistency is important: whether I grab the integrated lead or a separate cable, I know that I don’t have to worry about which port is the “fast” one.

Real-world impact? When you’re working with a mere 25-30 minutes before you dash off, the CJ11’s full PPS profile can get you a comparatively heftier battery bump than the more everyday-adapters’ 27W fallback. It won’t compete with the crazy 80-120W systems some manufacturers sell, but for Pixels this is as good as USB-C charging is going to get.

Baseus EnerCore CJ11 67W USB-C power bank with fast charging and clutter-free design

Multi-Device Balance and Laptop Charging

Plugging in two phones or a phone and laptop the CJ11 does as it should. In my testing, that allowed it to maintain a robust 45W feed to an ultraportable laptop while knocking the Pixel down to a range of 9V/2.3–2.6A (around the low-20s watts)—a sensible, non-destructive compromise. That’s the sort of load management certain dual-port chargers fumble, particularly those that hard-prioritize a Pixel’s higher-voltage request and starve other toys.

Now for laptops and 67W is fine for ultraportables as well as most of the 13-inch class. A MacBook Air-class laptop topped off just shy of the adapter’s ceiling, floating in the mid to high 60-watt range mode given state of battery. Even some heavier 14–16-inch workstations that need 90–140W to charge will be able to do so, but won’t necessarily hit full speed—adjust your expectations accordingly if you’re cutting video or on the road compiling large sets of code.

Clutter cured: the retractable-cable advantage

The in-lens cable is a larger quality-of-life improvement than you might think initially. Dock a Pixel for a wire blast, retract the lead and the mess is gone. You leave one port open for a watch puck or specialty cable, and you can even leave a wireless stand consistently connected to the other USB-C. But for hotel nights and coffee shop sessions, it’s a small superpower to have a known-good PPS cable built in.

Reliability caveat: retractable mechanisms may be a great long-term wear spot. The CJ11 seems sturdy, and GaN chargers tend to be less hot and more efficient (sometimes higher than 90 percent at moderate loads, vendor-confirmed and lab test results show), but if you’re hard on cables, handle the reel with care.

Price, competitors, and value

With an MSRP of some $59.99 and what we see as common discounts into the $40s, the CJ11 does undercut many brand name 60–70W bricks that ship without a cable. Some of the official dual-port chargers in this same wattage tier also don’t have the 18V PPS rail that Pixels crave or fumble power sharing under mixed loads. If you’re not a Pixel user, the CJ11 is still solid—phones that need 45W PD (read: some Android flagships) or lightweight laptops are covered—but it’s Pixel owners who benefit most.

Verdict: the obvious choice for Pixel power users

It’s surprisingly rare to find an accessory that fixes two problems at once, but with the Baseus EnerCore CJ11: it hits 18V/2A PPS on each output that you can juice all your laptops at once, and it tidies up your charging station with a retractable full-speed cable. Toss in competent load balancing, pocketable GaN hardware and fair pricing, and it’s an easy recommendation for Pixel-toting travelers and tidy-desk obsessives alike. The only reason to skip it is if you require 90W+ for a power-gobbling lappy, or are allergic to retracting mechanisms. For everyone else, this is the Pixel charger to get.

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