The official USB Implementers Forum standards for USB Type-C connector usage do have provisions for creation of USB Type-C cables that only support USB 2.0. So you can have a USB Type-C cable that is correctly designed and manufactured and fully within spec and passes USB-IF certification and carries the official USB logo, but only supports USB
USB-C to USB-A cables can support up to USB 3.2 10Gbps if they have the extra wires. Without the extra wires, you typically get the basic 40Mbps transfer speed of USB 2.0. That means using a USB-CThe 3 wires are Vbus, GND, and CC1. From the picture it looks like the blue wire is CC1. Can't tell what the other wires are, going to need to test them. They should default to 5v, which should allow you to test polarity. USB Power Delivery (PD) is a single-wire protocol which communicates over CC1. What I'm going to do to repair my charger is2. A USB Type C receptacle — what you would be plugging your modified cable into — is prohibited from supplying power until certain conditions are met. This is necessary to prevent damage from two devices supplying power being connected to each other with a C to C cable. XNt8m. 460 937 841 963 89 323 191 919