[Q] Do i need battery calibration or is it a myth? - Huawei Ideos X5 U8800

I flashed a new rom and in cwm, there is no wipe battery options.
- Can i do battery calibration with market applications?
- I always use usb charging. Should i use usb while doing calibration?

IMHO battery calibration is almost mith. Still you can use applications from market and see for yourself is battery suffers any improvement. But callibration is almost same charging from 0% to 100%.
Why do u need usb when phones have fully charge? :laugh: Just do that thing

Because wall charge is far away and usb charging is making battery less hotter, the half ampere of wall charge. So i think it makes battery live longer.
To make battery %0, should i power on a lot of times after power off itself? And there are some apps that use a lot ofthings to drain battery fast. ARe they suitable for those?

Because wall charge is far away and usb charging is making battery less hotter, the half ampere of wall charge. So i think it makes battery live longer.
To make battery %0, should i power on a lot of times after power off itself? And there are some apps that use a lot ofthings to drain battery fast. ARe they suitable for those?

Cursed Chico said:
Because wall charge is far away and usb charging is making battery less hotter, the half ampere of wall charge. So i think it makes battery live longer.
To make battery %0, should i power on a lot of times after power off itself? And there are some apps that use a lot ofthings to drain battery fast. ARe they suitable for those?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok. No just turn on phone one more time after he shutdown first time. You can listen music or watch videos. But don't stress that much battery doesn't like to go out 0% :silly:

dark_vader said:
Ok. No just turn on phone one more time after he shutdown first time. You can listen music or watch videos. But don't stress that much battery doesn't like to go out 0% :silly:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
YEsterday i used app, it deleted battery and i used normal usage today. I froze autostart and greeinfy and juice defender application for this first time. IT went about 10 hours. The mobile data was always on. I did not awake phone too much.
To %89, it went very fast again. Then it slowed. From %50 %60 to %30 40 it again fast. Then it jumped %14 to %5. The last %5 lasted very long. ABout maybe 45 minutes. I dont understand my battery. Then i opened 2-3 times to finish battery after shuttingh.
Now its power is off and it is charing ac. In screen i cant see the level of battery so i will wait 3-4 hours. Then will open. Maybe i can wait untilmornning, 7-8 hours because i can sleep.
IS it anything wrong i did_

Related

got htc hd2 2days ago had to charge 4times

hi all i have had to charge this phone so much its kinda doin my head in, last night i charged it and took it off at 6pm fully done and my 11pm after taking approx 30pics + 4vids(4min long each) it was down to very low life.
so i chargeed the battery fully again, and this time from 8am ~ 10am today my battery is at 77% i have done sofar
*backlight set @ 30%
*hspda ON
*Weather, facebook download every 1 hour;
*1call, 5min
*3 SMS got, 5 SMS sent
*1hours playing with phone (general settings)
*took 10 photos
*took 1 vid 3min long
from 100% to 77%,
Simple, turn off 3G. On regular GSM my phone was at 37% after 12 hours with at least 30min talking, lots of browsing, emails, texting, and 30 minutes GPS.
Simple, turn off 3G. On regular GSM my phone was at 37% after 12 hours with at least 30min talking, lots of browsing, emails, texting, and 30 minutes GPS.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
did u run with 3g/hspda on before and did it improve alot or not, as i use net alot and really nead hspda
TBH I doubt you are fully charging in 2 hours. The iPhone is the same, fully charging is not till the meter says 100%, that is more likely 80%.
The battery meter may also need calibrating. Personally I would drain the battery dry by running videos etc, and then charge it back up and leave it charging overnight.
Gajet said:
TBH I doubt you are fully charging in 2 hours. The iPhone is the same, fully charging is not till the meter says 100%, that is more likely 80%.
The battery meter may also need calibrating. Personally I would drain the battery dry by running videos etc, and then charge it back up and leave it charging overnight.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i charge it alot longer till green light came on not two hours matey, it took two hours to lose that much life lol
ps. i will run a satnav a few hours should run life down and then recharge
My battery was draining fast too. I realised it was because it would stay connected to my data (mobile web for O2 in my case) and never disconnect. I only clicked on the notification bar and saw i was connected to my data for over 1 hour and half. That is a big battery drain. Don't switch to gsm mode - that would suck. What is the point of having such a high end phone and use it in gsm mode?
All I can suggest to you for the time being (until someone figures out how to have data connections auto disconnect after a couple of minutes) is to disable auto downloads for the following:
facebook, weather, mail, stocks, time sync, twitter etc.
You now have to check manually these items. Sucks i know but only way for me to not stay connected to data and drain my friggin battery
That happens to me too..I have everything set to update manually! No internet time no twitter,weather etc..And no other apps!!! And it still connecting by itself and stays this way for hours till i notice it!! Any ideas of what does it try to update??
(dont tell me the obvious ones!!)
My battery was draining fast too. I realised it was because it would stay connected to my data (mobile web for O2 in my case) and never disconnect. I only clicked on the notification bar and saw i was connected to my data for over 1 hour and half. That is a big battery drain. Don't switch to gsm mode - that would suck. What is the point of having such a high end phone and use it in gsm mode?
All I can suggest to you for the time being (until someone figures out how to have data connections auto disconnect after a couple of minutes) is to disable auto downloads for the following:
facebook, weather, mail, stocks, time sync, twitter etc.
You now have to check manually these items. Sucks i know but only way for me to not stay connected to data and drain my friggin battery
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ok sounds like a good plan matey, im currently playing a video over and over to kill my battery 0% then im going to charge from no power while phones turned off, 5% life left lol....common...
i keep getting message battery low may lose data is this true will i lose data on my fone?
on the old PDA's if you drained the battery ( <1% or something like that ) your data can be gone, its like performing a hard-reset... don't know how it is now though... propably its safe, or it turns off before 0%
br3nt said:
on the old PDA's if you drained the battery ( <1% or something like that ) your data can be gone, its like performing a hard-reset... don't know how it is now though... propably its safe, or it turns off before 0%
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You don't have to worry about that any more. A different type of memory is used. You can even take the battery out and leave it for days and all your programs and data are still there.
ok people i completely deaded the battery till it wouldnt turn on and started it charging at 15:43, its now 17:00 and still showing orange led light so i will keep checking every 15min to find out...
1) how long to charge from total flatnesss
2) how long battery last tomorrow on full charge from now to when it conks out again
will keep you updated
just for information: HD2 has a battery that needn't get totally depleted to get the full charging cycle like on older battery packs. On the contrary, the battery suffers when completely discharged. It is recommended not to leave it till the phone dies, this reduces the battery life. Charge it whenever possible. I have mine in active dock when driving in car, as well as when in office. I know the battery life could be better but well...
dusanko said:
just for information: HD2 has a battery that needn't get totally depleted to get the full charging cycle like on older battery packs. On the contrary, the battery suffers when completely discharged. It is recommended not to leave it till the phone dies, this reduces the battery life. Charge it whenever possible. I have mine in active dock when driving in car, as well as when in office. I know the battery life could be better but well...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i dont mean to say ur lieing or anything but do u ave evidence of this, as so many have told me to totally deplete the battery every time, in a few forums around the net
DAMIEN123_666 said:
*took 1 vid 3min long
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I would imagine video recording puts quite a strain on the battery.
Also don't forget that gorgeously massive screen runs from a 1200mAh-ish battery. I have the Xperia X1, with a 1500mAh battery. When I get the HD2 I can't help but feel there just won't be enough juice to go around.
Lower battery capacity + bigger screen = ever-so-slight reduction in battery.
I wonder whether captive or resistive screens take more power?
I'm using wi-fi at home for all data and the battery is lasting forever!
Strongly recommend tying this - see if it works for you?
ok all i have the full charge time of the battery, from complete flaness 0% life to full charge 100% life time taken
start 15:43 ~ finish 18:12 = TOTAL 3:19min.
now i will take note of all i do on the device and post results tomorrow or the next day if im lucky and it last that long lol
DAMIEN123_666 said:
start 15:43 ~ finish 18:12 = TOTAL 3:19min
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Also the way you charge your battery affects the charge time.
Example:
- Charging through phone using stock charger
- Charging through phone using third-party charger
- Charging using a short USB connection
- Charging using a long USB connection
- Charging through phone with phone off
- Charging through phone with phone on
- Charging through official external battery charger
- Charging through third-party external battery charger
Sometimes stock accessories are slower, others, not so. Some manufacturers refer to a "power charge", for example some Sony Walkmans. For that to work though the phone / device has to be off. Thats how they get those 3min = 3hr charge times.
DAMIEN123_666 said:
ok all i have the full charge time of the battery, from complete flaness 0% life to full charge 100% life time taken
start 15:43 ~ finish 18:12 = TOTAL 3:19min.
now i will take note of all i do on the device and post results tomorrow or the next day if im lucky and it last that long lol
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Erm that's not what I advised. The aim was to re-calibrate the battery meter. All you have done is wait till the batery meter says 100%, whether in reality it's 80%, 75% or whatever. A full overnight charge would have guaranteed that 100% = 100%.
I don't see what you've done other than continue to use it the same as you already were.
I said I doubt you can get 100% in 2 hours, 3:19 isn't much more.
DAMIEN123_666 said:
i dont mean to say ur lieing or anything but do u ave evidence of this, as so many have told me to totally deplete the battery every time, in a few forums around the net
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No he's right, completely draining the battery isn't good and shouldn't be done too often. regularly topping the battery up is the way to go.
Gajet said:
Erm that's not what I advised. The aim was to re-calibrate the battery meter. All you have done is wait till the batery meter says 100%, whether in reality it's 80%, 75% or whatever. A full overnight charge would have guaranteed that 100% = 100%.
I don't see what you've done other than continue to use it the same as you already were.
I said I doubt you can get 100% in 2 hours, 3:19 isn't much more.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
hi i plan to monitor usage till battery drops dead and then tomorrow night or the net if im lucky i will redo the recharge test over night

Nexus One Battery Charging

Greetings all, I was wondering if anyone else has noticed that their battery doesn't charge to full when using the wall charger or USB? I have LiPo chargers from RC cars and I have used one to discharge and fully charge the battery to 1400mah and found that the phone seems to have much better battery life than when charged with wall charger / USB.
When charged with the external ("direct") battery charger, I can get to 4211mv whereas normally with the wall/usb it only goes to 4173mv max. From what I know of LiPo/LiIon batteries, they need to get to their max charge voltage (~4200mv) or so and stay there for some time to get full charge.
I have noticed that my phone has terrible battery life when compared to my Touch HD which used to get 20hrs+ of full use on 3G/HSDPA, same usage pattern with push e-mail and I can't even get 12hrs with the Nexus One before the battery runs right down. And I thought the Touch HD had bad battery life!
Any help / feedback would be most appreciated. Thanks!
It's interesting I see this as today has been a very odd battery day. I woke up and unplugged it at exactly 5am. For 7 minutes I checked e-mails and twitter and it had dropped 3%!!! By 8am I was down to 82% (ride in to work, listening to music for 25 mins, thats about all) I was thinking this was getting silly. It's now 5pm here and I'm still at 61%?!?! So, over the first 3 hours it went 6%ph, since then it's done 2.3%... that's the best I've ever got from it.
Could this be related? It's not really fully charged, even though it shows 100%, drops very quickly and then when it returns to where it perhaps should be (around 80%) it acts as normal?
What is a LiPo charger and how can I use one to charge my Nexus battery?
http://blog.quantifly.com/?p=2
iMAX B6 is what I have been using. I have another heavier duty one but this one is good enough for the battery. I have a generic battery charger thing which I got from China which holds the battery while the other unit charges it. Right now as I write this, my phone has been on for 1hr 25minutes after being charged with the charger, I have used the browser for 10minutes, on 3G, downloading things etc. and it is still on 4211mv and 100% charge.
Curious if this is an issue with the onboard battery microchip, or the radio/firmware. Does anyone know where to source an original replacement battery (non-generic replacement)?
The batteries in these smart phones makes no sense. The other day, I charged the phone overnight using USB, and the next day, I was at 97% after 3.5 hrs. Then, another day, with basically the same usage, I'm down to 85% after 3.5 hrs. No rhyme or reason. I wish someone could explain it.
I also wish someone could make a battery that lasts for 48 hours on normal use
"Drops very quicky"
same here but ive had this 'problems' since stock firmware. its not CM related.
I also noticed that its dropping from 100 to 80ish very fast when starting many apps in the morning for example. Like stopping airplane mode, starting some apps and opening browser. stays at 80ish for some hours then
xPatriicK said:
"Drops very quicky"
same here but ive had this 'problems' since stock firmware. its not CM related.
I also noticed that its dropping from 100 to 80ish very fast when starting many apps in the morning for example. Like stopping airplane mode, starting some apps and opening browser. stays at 80ish for some hours then
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yep. That was the same thing with my Pre. It would never stay at 100% for more than a few minutes, and then it would plummet into the 80's, and then it would be okay.
Battery Antics
I purposely left the phone not to charge last night from about 1AM - and I woke up (around 9:30AM) with it at 99% charge still. Used it for a bit and it dropped to 89% and now it's 1:06PM and it dropped to 75% with calls, web browsing and some other stuff. Previous days to this it would be at 75% after just 2-3 hours!
I also noticed that the phone didn't download any e-mails overnight (since there's no "scheduling" for peak/offpeak like in WM I assumed this shouldn't happen?) which may account for the minimal discharge.
All in all very strange, seems like I am not the only one with these problems - maybe I'll try get another battery and see what happens!
The thing about the battery in a smart phone is that it has a micro chip in it, and the phone reads info from it to give us the battery meter(this is true of any phone, actually)... your LiPo charger reads charge in a similar manner, only it doesn't talk with the batteries chip, instead it does it's own thing(I will spare the details)
With this in mind, what you want to do to get the most out of your battery is get the chip in the battery, and in turn the "circuit" it completes with the phone properly calibrated. To do this, you want to run the phone's battery down until it turns itself off. Do a battery pull and let it sit for a little bit (at least 30 seconds, I usually wait several minutes)... then, put the battery back in, and turn the phone on. One of two things will happen, it will either power off before fully booting, or if it does not you will want to use the phone until it powers off again.
At this point, pull the battery again and let it sit out of the phone for a bit again. Then put it back in, and without trying to power the phone on, put it on the charger and leave it on the charger until it is fully charged "green light comes on" plus a couple hours.(best to leave it on the charger overnight) At this point, take it off the charger, and then turn the phone.
This will properly set the low point and the high point for the battery stats. Do not do this a lot, it is bad for a LiIon battery to be "deep cycled", which this comes really close to doing. Ultimately, the phone is not going to charge the battery as high as a LiPo charger will, nor will it discharge it as low, because unlike an RC car's batteries that are used for rapid discharge, these batteries are designed and used in a slow long term discharge.
Thanks, I'll try that myself
Do you run any risk of damaging the battery when charging with a LiPo?
How to Make Your Cell Phone Battery Last Longer when you need it the most
Tips: How to Make Your Cell Phone Battery Last Longer when you need it the most:
1. Always try to drain your battery or wait till its 15% or below then charge your phone. Its very important to turn the phone off before you plug it to charge. This help maximizing your battery charge.
2. Stop searching for a signal. When you are in an area with poor or no signal, your phone will constantly look for a better connection, and will use up all your power doing so.
3. Switch off the vibrate function on your phone, and use just the ring tone instead.
4. Turn off your phone's back light.
5. Avoid using unnecessary features. If you know it will be a while before your phone’s next charge, don’t use the camera or connect to the Internet. Flash photography can drain your battery especially quickly.
6. Keep calls short. This is obvious, but how many times have you heard someone on their mobile phone say, "I think my battery’s dying," and then continue their conversation for several minutes? Sometimes, the dying battery is just an excuse to get off the phone (and a good one, at that), but if you really need to conserve the battery, limit your talk time.
7. Turn off Bluetooth. It will drain your battery very quickly.
8. Same goes for WIFI, GPS, and infrared capabilities, if your phone has these features built in. Keep them off; save more power.
9. Use GSM - Using your phone in 3G / Dual Mode will drain the battery quicker than if you just use GSM mode - have a look at your phones spec and you'll see it will quote two different battery life times - normally 50% more for pure GSM use.
Very Important:
Anyone purchase a new phone. Its best DO NOT USE the phone with the little remaining power the battery has. It is best that you put the battery in the phone and turn off the phone and change for minimum of 5-6 hours.
The 1st charge for the battery is very important for lithium ion battery. Leaving the phone off will give the full maximize charge the battery can take. Normal when phone shows charge complete by integrator light or on the screen means its 95% complete. To complete the 100% charge you need additional 1-2 hours after the full charge integrator show. Having the phone off also help keep the charge. A phone that is on and charging will never get that 100% charge because there is alway a little battery being drained just because the phone is one even if its plugged in to a charger.
If you see your battery is not giving the same performance what it use to. You can try this method at least 3-4 times for 1 week and follow up every other month. Meaning turn the phone off and charge it every night. It is best if you can drain the battery to 15% or less before charging the phone.
nuc70st said:
Tips: How to Make Your Cell Phone Battery Last Longer when you need it the most:
1. Always try to drain your battery or wait till its 15% or below then charge your phone. Its very important to turn the phone off before you plug it to charge. This help maximizing your battery charge.
2. Stop searching for a signal. When you are in an area with poor or no signal, your phone will constantly look for a better connection, and will use up all your power doing so.
3. Switch off the vibrate function on your phone, and use just the ring tone instead.
4. Turn off your phone's back light.
5. Avoid using unnecessary features. If you know it will be a while before your phone’s next charge, don’t use the camera or connect to the Internet. Flash photography can drain your battery especially quickly.
6. Keep calls short. This is obvious, but how many times have you heard someone on their mobile phone say, "I think my battery’s dying," and then continue their conversation for several minutes? Sometimes, the dying battery is just an excuse to get off the phone (and a good one, at that), but if you really need to conserve the battery, limit your talk time.
7. Turn off Bluetooth. It will drain your battery very quickly.
8. Same goes for WIFI, GPS, and infrared capabilities, if your phone has these features built in. Keep them off; save more power.
9. Use GSM - Using your phone in 3G / Dual Mode will drain the battery quicker than if you just use GSM mode - have a look at your phones spec and you'll see it will quote two different battery life times - normally 50% more for pure GSM use.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
10. Keep the phone off, it'll not drain the battery at all!
So one person says don't let it drop down low very often, the next person says let it drop to 15% all the time...
Personally I've heard not to let it drop low more often these days. The old 'let it decharge regularly' was talked about a lot 4 or 5 years ago... no?
nuc70st said:
Tips: How to Make Your Cell Phone Battery Last Longer when you need it the most:
1. Always try to drain your battery or wait till its 15% or below then charge your phone. Its very important to turn the phone off before you plug it to charge. This help maximizing your battery charge.
2. Stop searching for a signal. When you are in an area with poor or no signal, your phone will constantly look for a better connection, and will use up all your power doing so.
3. Switch off the vibrate function on your phone, and use just the ring tone instead.
4. Turn off your phone's back light.
5. Avoid using unnecessary features. If you know it will be a while before your phone’s next charge, don’t use the camera or connect to the Internet. Flash photography can drain your battery especially quickly.
6. Keep calls short. This is obvious, but how many times have you heard someone on their mobile phone say, "I think my battery’s dying," and then continue their conversation for several minutes? Sometimes, the dying battery is just an excuse to get off the phone (and a good one, at that), but if you really need to conserve the battery, limit your talk time.
7. Turn off Bluetooth. It will drain your battery very quickly.
8. Same goes for WIFI, GPS, and infrared capabilities, if your phone has these features built in. Keep them off; save more power.
9. Use GSM - Using your phone in 3G / Dual Mode will drain the battery quicker than if you just use GSM mode - have a look at your phones spec and you'll see it will quote two different battery life times - normally 50% more for pure GSM use.
Very Important:
Anyone purchase a new phone. Its best DO NOT USE the phone with the little remaining power the battery has. It is best that you put the battery in the phone and turn off the phone and change for minimum of 5-6 hours.
The 1st charge for the battery is very important for lithium ion battery. Leaving the phone off will give the full maximize charge the battery can take. Normal when phone shows charge complete by integrator light or on the screen means its 95% complete. To complete the 100% charge you need additional 1-2 hours after the full charge integrator show. Having the phone off also help keep the charge. A phone that is on and charging will never get that 100% charge because there is alway a little battery being drained just because the phone is one even if its plugged in to a charger.
If you see your battery is not giving the same performance what it use to. You can try this method at least 3-4 times for 1 week and follow up every other month. Meaning turn the phone off and charge it every night. It is best if you can drain the battery to 15% or less before charging the phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think you didn't understand a LI-ION battery!!!
1. completely false
2. I've a mobilephone also I wan't to use it!!!
3. Maybe... Have you tested it with a ampere meter?
4. A black display is always a good idea!
5. Why not buying a Nokia 3210 ?
6. Better: Don't use it for call.
7. Correct! (If you don't use a headset)
8. See Pt. 5
9. See Pt. 5
A few facts:
- a new lithium-ion pack does not need cycling through charging and discharging
- Limit the time at which the battery stays at 4.20/cell. Prolonged high voltage promotes corrosion, especially at elevated temperatures.
- 3.92V/cell is the best upper voltage threshold for cobalt-based lithium-ion
- The 1st charge is no different to the 5th or the 50th charge. Stickers instructing to charge the battery for 8 hours or more for the first time may be a leftover from the nickel battery days.
Whole article on: batteryuniversity.com/partone-12.htm (by Cadex Electronic Inc.)
jahmann82 said:
I think you didn't understand a LI-ION battery!!!
1. completely false
2. I've a mobilephone also I wan't to use it!!!
3. Maybe... Have you tested it with a ampere meter?
4. A black display is always a good idea!
5. Why not buying a Nokia 3210 ?
6. Better: Don't use it for call.
7. Correct! (If you don't use a headset)
8. See Pt. 5
9. See Pt. 5
A few facts:
- a new lithium-ion pack does not need cycling through charging and discharging
- Limit the time at which the battery stays at 4.20/cell. Prolonged high voltage promotes corrosion, especially at elevated temperatures.
- 3.92V/cell is the best upper voltage threshold for cobalt-based lithium-ion
- The 1st charge is no different to the 5th or the 50th charge. Stickers instructing to charge the battery for 8 hours or more for the first time may be a leftover from the nickel battery days.
Whole article on: batteryuniversity.com/partone-12.htm (by Cadex Electronic Inc.)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I second this as well. The tips given by nuc70st is only applicable in the old days with nickel based batteries (Ni-cd and Ni-MH), which for the past 5 years mobile phones have in general stopped using and have shifted to lithium varieties. Nickel Cadium and a smaller extent Nickel Metal Hydride suffer from "memory effect" so it was important to deep cycle the batteries to maintain its capacity.
Lithium batteries in contrast should be treated in the opposite. You should keep it charged up whenever possible, and fast discharging (draining its charge as fast as possible) actually does more harm than good. Most mobile phones don't discharge it fast enough for it to be problem, but plugging a lithium battery in a purpose made discharger is still a no-no.
I dont know if anybody else can try this with their N1 but I have recently noticed that when my battery does its initial.. drop to 95% before you can wonder what happened, I can charge it with the phone on and the green light stays on, implying that the phone is fully charged.
Then I turn the phone off and charge it, and the red light quickly comes on and allows another hour? of charging before the green light will re-appear.
I think i'll be trying leaving my phone on and on charge overnight and then turning it off while I get ready in the morning and don't necessarily need it.
The green light comes on before the battery is fully charged
AndyCr15 said:
So one person says don't let it drop down low very often, the next person says let it drop to 15% all the time...
Personally I've heard not to let it drop low more often these days. The old 'let it decharge regularly' was talked about a lot 4 or 5 years ago... no?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm right and the other guy is dead wrong. Deep cycling was better for nickel metal hydride batteries, because it helped delay the memory effect.
No such issue for Li-ion batteries, plus charging makes Li-ion batteries HOT, which isn't particularly good for the battery. So numerous charges leads to less exposure to prolonged heating.
nuc70st said:
Tips: How to Make Your Cell Phone Battery Last Longer when you need it the most:
1. Always try to drain your battery or wait till its 15% or below then charge your phone. Its very important to turn the phone off before you plug it to charge. This help maximizing your battery charge.
2. Stop searching for a signal. When you are in an area with poor or no signal, your phone will constantly look for a better connection, and will use up all your power doing so.
3. Switch off the vibrate function on your phone, and use just the ring tone instead.
4. Turn off your phone's back light.
5. Avoid using unnecessary features. If you know it will be a while before your phone’s next charge, don’t use the camera or connect to the Internet. Flash photography can drain your battery especially quickly.
6. Keep calls short. This is obvious, but how many times have you heard someone on their mobile phone say, "I think my battery’s dying," and then continue their conversation for several minutes? Sometimes, the dying battery is just an excuse to get off the phone (and a good one, at that), but if you really need to conserve the battery, limit your talk time.
7. Turn off Bluetooth. It will drain your battery very quickly.
8. Same goes for WIFI, GPS, and infrared capabilities, if your phone has these features built in. Keep them off; save more power.
9. Use GSM - Using your phone in 3G / Dual Mode will drain the battery quicker than if you just use GSM mode - have a look at your phones spec and you'll see it will quote two different battery life times - normally 50% more for pure GSM use.
all very good tips, but its just funny that to save battery life we cant use ours phones as they where intended for us to use them. I need dilithium crystals.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
mikesm1234 said:
all very good tips
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh dear. Have you read this thread?
No, they are not good tips...
Rusty! said:
The green light comes on before the battery is fully charged
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I noticed that just last night! Are you supposed to keep charging it until its 100% or stop it from charging when the green light turns on?
Cheers,
M

Evo Battery with 1.47 OTA Massive FAIL!

Since applying the 1.47... OTA, I can literally watch the battery drop minute by minute while the phoe is active.
Within the first 1 minute of removing the phone from the charger the Battery Status Pro reports the charge droping from 100% to 97%. That's a 3% drop in 60 seconds.
Within the first 3 minutes of active use BSP reports the battery drops to 93% charge. That's 7% loss in less than 200 seconds of use.
Now I'm not saying BSP is 100% accuerate but I expect it's not too far off.
Battery life with the Evo has never been phenominal but this seems rather extreem. The drop seems far faster now than when running the 1.32 release. And... while I am in a 4G enabled market, this is with 4G disabled and the phone running purely on 3G with no flickr, twiter, facebook or other feed widgets running and autosync disabled for all of them.
When I look at Battery Use under settings / About Phone / Battery the Android System is by far the largest user of battery, nearly twice the next closest user which is Cell standby.
Am I the only person experiencing this?
The phone was doing this before the 1.47 OTA, it's a problem with charging the battery in the phone. It does not charge properly for some reason and it will drop all the way down into the 80's within an hour of unplugging it. If you get an external battery charger and use it to charge the battery the phone will stay on 100% for an hour or more...
Have you removed the HTC people widget from home screen? The day I removed that was the beginning of decent battery life. Also try turning off the phone when charging - seems to work better that way.
I would try charging to 100%, unplug, wipe the battery, plug it back in again until the light turns green and try again and report back.
Sent from my PC36100 using XDA App
I wondered if it was the powered off portion of that battery trick that was doing it. Hmmm. I'll have to watch. Is there any link/source on the idea that the phone itself is not working so well at charging?
Out of that voodoo on the getting better battery life the only thing I could come up with was...-charges better when off, - you need to charge for a bit while on to reset the battery indicator, - and charge a bit while off to top it up.
So I was leaning toward it being a charging thing and not a battery thing...would like to see any technicals though and not just my guessing.
People widget has been long gone.
I gave the charge it with the phone powered off thing a try. The device was down around 80% charged when I powered it off and plugged it in. In about 5 minutes the charge indicator turned from amber to green as if it were fully charged.
I can't believe that the battery charged 20% in 5 minutes.
This leads me to believe that the first response is correct. The battery simply isn't charging fully in the phone. I believe I'll look for an external battery charger and give it a try. See if it makes a difference.
frankenstein\ said:
People widget has been long gone.
I gave the charge it with the phone powered off thing a try. The device was down around 80% charged when I powered it off and plugged it in. In about 5 minutes the charge indicator turned from amber to green as if it were fully charged.
I can't believe that the battery charged 20% in 5 minutes.
This leads me to believe that the first response is correct. The battery simply isn't charging fully in the phone. I believe I'll look for an external battery charger and give it a try. See if it makes a difference.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Seriously, try full-charge, wiping your battery data and then shutting it off and 'topping it off' and reevaluate the situation.
EDIT: The "topping it off" thing is all voo-doo as far as I'm concerned. I just do it to be safe, though I'm pretty sure it's ineffective.
I screw with my phone so much, so much flashing/restoring back and forth while on charge, between
charge, car charger, USB charge at work, wall charge, flashing again, kernel swap, restore back again...etc etc etc...that if I don't wipe my battery once I hit a full charge there is no way I can trust that meter to do anything more than change colors. I do it every few days when I notice the meter isn't being trustworthy.
If this doesn't work for you I'd say you probably have a bunk cell in your battery, and failing that your phone just might not be charging well.
Also, charge with the wall and not USB. USB takes forever. And 20% in 5 minutes isn't TOO far off if you are plugged into the wall and getting full-power charge. Maybe 10-12ish minutes, unless you were timing it very specifically....
I just got my bricked replacement. Here is the data from a 100% charged battery usage up time 18:13 .. Awake time 15:27 the battery is at 87%
funny im getting 20 + hours a charge after the OTA
with heavy usage

[Q] Excessive battery draining

I have some issues related to the battery. Not sure if they are related.
About half the time, the battery drains itself. The machine does appear to turn off, but a day later, the battery is empty.
This does not always happen, sometimes I can use it for days.
Also: sometimes after charging and unplugging from the computer, the charge light does not go off.
I have replaced the battery two times already, but that does not help.
What can cause this?
You can try flashing another ROM, some drain your battery faster
Normal usage may last you a day or 1.5 day
Well, what is "usage". Even when it does nothing it just drains. It didn't do that when it was new, and as I said, it doesn't do it all the time. Sometimes it works even after a week, sometimes it is dead after a day.
Your UNI has a short circuit, this is the reason that the battery is drainning, maybe you use a over voltage charger morre than 5 Volts and crap the charge center circuit, sorry man your UNI is sick and soon death.

Broken battery?

Hi!
I'm suffering from a strange battery behavior lately: This morning, after 9 hours charging, I woke up to a 75% full battery, when usually, it should get 100% charge overnight. Previously, I had an accidental power off by power depletion, some hours ago.
Now, I'm trying to charge the phone but it seems to charge way too slow.
Finally, I decided to power it off and let it charge without any possible drainage. In the moment I powered it off, I was prompted with the battery icon displaying 96% charged...??!?!?!?
I don't know if either the battery is broken, the rom is reporting it wrong or what.
I usually play Ingress, which drains the battery like crazy, and I'm usually browsing the internet and reading twitter on my phone, so, at the beginning I thought I just needed to keep my hands off the phone for a while and let it charge, but after that overnigt 75% charge incident... I don't know what to think.
ROM is Carbon ROM KK, kernel is AK without any tweaks, no undervolting or anything... any advice?
GFXi0N said:
Hi!
I'm suffering from a strange battery behavior lately: This morning, after 9 hours charging, I woke up to a 75% full battery, when usually, it should get 100% charge overnight. Previously, I had an accidental power off by power depletion, some hours ago.
Now, I'm trying to charge the phone but it seems to charge way too slow.
Finally, I decided to power it off and let it charge without any possible drainage. In the moment I powered it off, I was prompted with the battery icon displaying 96% charged...??!?!?!?
I don't know if either the battery is broken, the rom is reporting it wrong or what.
I usually play Ingress, which drains the battery like crazy, and I'm usually browsing the internet and reading twitter on my phone, so, at the beginning I thought I just needed to keep my hands off the phone for a while and let it charge, but after that overnigt 75% charge incident... I don't know what to think.
ROM is Carbon ROM KK, kernel is AK without any tweaks, no undervolting or anything... any advice?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Don't over charge.
Yes, I have the bad habit of being unable to see my phone drop the battery level under 60%. At my job, I always leave it on a qi charger, regardless of it being full or empty. Perhaps I have to take the habit of letting it drain until 30% or so, and start charging then.
Other thing I can do is limit the charge level top, tweaking the kernel setting via synapse..... Could that be a good thing?
After starting the phone, the battery level seems to be OK. It's 87% now and it's draining quite slow, compared to before. I guess I'll have to start treating my battery better.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk
Some update: the phone was bought on March 2013,but the battery has a build date of December 2013. I think the guys that repaired the phone swapped the battery for another one and left me with a defective one.

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