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Reviews

Review: Monster iCharger

Last updated: May 16, 2021 9:39 am UTC
By Jeremy Horwitz
Review: Monster iCharger

Pros:  Pleasantly designed LED charge indicator and decent price.


Cons: Slightly large Dock Connector plug may not fit comfortably with certain iPod cases, but you?ll likely be able to work around this.

Review: Monster iCharger

Over the last several years, one company rapidly became synonymous with premium-priced, bling bling audio and video accessories – the sorts of parts people would find connecting their brand new home theater components when they told a Best Buy or Circuit City salesperson to spare no expense. Whether it was $59.95 for Monster Cable’s gold-tipped Xbox cables when Microsoft’s reference version sold for $19.95, or $49.95 for “gas-injected dielectric” FireWire cables that could be had for $3.99 as no-frills generics, we’ll admit to having been somewhat skeptical of the premium products based on their prices alone in the past.


But we’ve recently had the opportunity to put a number of Monster’s iPod accessories through their paces, and we were pleasantly surprised by a number of them. Many of the products compared favorably in price with other companies’ accessories, and worked at least as well. The results below speak for themselves.

Three Different Chargers from One Company

Get ready for a brain teaser. You’ve seen our reviews of Belkin’s Auto Kit for iPod, SiK’s imp Car Kit, and Dension’s ICE-Link auto solution, all of which include car chargers. Add to the mix Monster Cable’s three separate car chargers, each with a confusing name, and then try to figure out which is best for your needs.



Monster iCarCharger: (Left) Monster’s iCarCharger has a slightly smaller male Dock Connector than the company’s ULPC, but you’ll probably still need to stretch your case to connect to an iPod. (Right) Belkin’s male Dock Connector is closer to the thin profile of the Apple reference Dock Connector, and fits without a problem.

Monster’s most deluxe charger is called – on Monster’s web site, at least – the Ultra-Low Profile Charger (ULPC) for iPod with Dock Connection, and as the name suggests, it only works with the newest iPods.


But the name omits at least two important details. First, it doesn’t tell you that the ULPC includes a 3.5mm female audio jack, which it does. And second, it neglects to mention that Monster makes two other chargers that are actually even lower-profile – for those who care. (Third, unlike the web site, the ULPC comes in a package with a different name: iCharger.)

The iCarCharger for iPod is not only a slightly smaller device, all parts considered, but it’s also lower-priced. Unlike the ULPC, iCarCharger leaves out the 3.5mm female audio jack, which makes the Dock Connector plug at the end of its cable smaller than the ULPC’s. But there’s a hitch. You can only get the iCarCharger in a package with two other Monster peripherals – the iCase Travel Pack, and the iSplitter stereo headphone adapter.


Here’s where the confusion comes in.

Monster also makes a third charger which the web site and many stores call the iCharger. This sells for $29.95, lacks the audio jack, and is the lowest-profile of the bunch for one reason: rather than a large Dock Connector plug, it uses a small Firewire adapter to connect to old iPods. As bizarre as this will sound, since this product’s name is so similar to the second name for the ULPC, you might want to verify whether you’re getting the “FireWire iCharger” or the “Dock Connector iCharger” for yourself before ordering one of the devices.


So in summary, if you have an old iPod, you’ll consider the iCharger, but if you have a new iPod, consider the iCarCharger or the Ultra-Low Profile Charger, which just happens to have the least low profile version of the Dock Connector, an identical lighter socket plug, and an occasionally different name. Whew.

Slick Looks and Power

All three of these chargers have an identical male lighter socket plug, which is primarily black with a single painted silver ring on the front surface. Inside the ring is a pleasantly viewable LED light that indicates power and battery status. Larger, yet not as intrusive as we would have guessed initially based on Belkin’s smaller (and easily forgettable) light’s size, Monster’s LED glows red when rapidly charging, amber when trickling, and green when providing power but not charging.

Even though Belkin’s Auto Kit has a smooth, iPod-matching white plug for the lighter socket, we preferred Monster’s smaller, cleaner black piece.


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