i have one of these usb chargers:
its connected to a SAE cable with inline fuse (7.5) that is in turn, connected directly to my battery (my bike is a ducati scrambler if that matters)
I've had this setup for over a year (and even longer on my old bike) with no problems.
this afternoon, i plug my iphone 6s into the charger and set it in my ram mount. as i put my helmet on, i noticed smoking coming out of the USB port area! (at least i'm pretty sure i remember it as such. very small chance it was coming from the charging port on my iphone but i dont' think so).
i unplugged it immediately. but now my phone doesnt charge at all. no response when plugging any cord into it.
my first thought is that maybe the fuse on the SAE connector was fried. but i popped out the blade fuse and tested it with a multimeter and it seems to be just fine.
the usb charger itself is supposed to have "5V/3.1A output with quick disconnect and over-current protection, CE & ROHS certified" according to the product page.
i cleaned out the charging port on my iphone and turns out there was a bunch of lint in there. but i don't think that would cause such a high level issue?
i've since completely disconnected the usb charger from my battery just in case.
anyone know what may have gone wrong?

its connected to a SAE cable with inline fuse (7.5) that is in turn, connected directly to my battery (my bike is a ducati scrambler if that matters)
I've had this setup for over a year (and even longer on my old bike) with no problems.
this afternoon, i plug my iphone 6s into the charger and set it in my ram mount. as i put my helmet on, i noticed smoking coming out of the USB port area! (at least i'm pretty sure i remember it as such. very small chance it was coming from the charging port on my iphone but i dont' think so).
i unplugged it immediately. but now my phone doesnt charge at all. no response when plugging any cord into it.
my first thought is that maybe the fuse on the SAE connector was fried. but i popped out the blade fuse and tested it with a multimeter and it seems to be just fine.
the usb charger itself is supposed to have "5V/3.1A output with quick disconnect and over-current protection, CE & ROHS certified" according to the product page.
i cleaned out the charging port on my iphone and turns out there was a bunch of lint in there. but i don't think that would cause such a high level issue?
i've since completely disconnected the usb charger from my battery just in case.
anyone know what may have gone wrong?