Downsides of oneplus two????? - OnePlus 2 Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

I am about to buy on2 and i read a lot about that fingerprint sensor being slow compared to other nexus devices . Is is true ?
And what are the other downsides of this phone?
How would you rate it?
Design(in hand feel)
Display
Camera
Reception / call
Performance
Software
Battery life
And i am currently using Oneplus one which i think it's awesome. I wanna know if it is worth the upgrade?
Sent from my A0001 using Tapatalk

Design(in hand feel) Feels very premium and well build
Display It's okay, nothing spectacular. Could be me since i have OLED everywhere else.
Camera Pretty good. Altough i would have favored a 16mp sensor like the LG
Reception / call Best i ever had. Reception is really good and sound quality is amazing.
Performance Could use some tweaks on the software related side of things.. Should be all fixed with Marshmallow update
Software See my point at performance.
Battery life Stock. 3h SOT. Boeffla kernel: 5-6h SOT.
Another minor complaint is the vibrator. It's slow and noisy and doesnt vibrate well(just like the OPO). I do like the phone though.

paultje162 said:
Design(in hand feel) Feels very premium and well build
Display It's okay, nothing spectacular. Could be me since i have OLED everywhere else.
Camera Pretty good. Altough i would have favored a 16mp sensor like the LG
Reception / call Best i ever had. Reception is really good and sound quality is amazing.
Performance Could use some tweaks on the software related side of things.. Should be all fixed with Marshmallow update
Software See my point at performance.
Battery life Stock. 3h SOT. Boeffla kernel: 5-6h SOT.
Another minor complaint is the vibrator. It's slow and noisy and doesnt vibrate well(just like the OPO). I do like the phone though.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What about the fingerprint sensor?
Sent from my A0001 using Tapatalk

xrock8 said:
What about the fingerprint sensor?
Sent from my A0001 using Tapatalk
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Click to collapse
Works very good, the "weak" point could be the lack of NFC. But for me its not a problem. I had a nexus 5 for two years and I never use it.
Sent from my ONE A2005 using Tapatalk

The two weakest points of the phone really are battery life (at least when running stock OOS) and the stupid Snapdragon 810, which really is a useless piece of crap that unnecessarily limits the phone's performance to a point where it gets ridiculous ...

xrock8 said:
What about the fingerprint sensor?
Sent from my A0001 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Fingerprint scanner is quick and responsive. It died on me once but OnePlus had my phone replaced within a week.
Verstuurd vanaf mijn D6503 met Tapatalk

With the new update i m getting sot 4.5 hrs on stock rooted and bootloader locked.. Just use the phone as a phone and u see good results..
Sent from my ONE A2003 using Tapatalk

Today i read the oneplus 2 review on anandtech, after reading that i am really disappointed that how oneplus limits the power of Snapdragon 810. They made this phone a quadcore device.

sushant6786 said:
Today i read the oneplus 2 review on anandtech, after reading that i am really disappointed that how oneplus limits the power of Snapdragon 810. They made this phone a quadcore device.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's not OP's fault. It's Snapdragon's. You effectively can't use it as an 8 core CPU because it will overheat quickly. Unless you throttle its frequency significantly.
So I guess we have to see the SD810 more as a medium fast 4 to 6 core processor that can, when needed, be ramped up to a fast 8 core CPU for a short amount of time (and by short I mean no longer than approx. 15 minutes, after which it will get too hot to keep all its cores at max. speed.)
Also, it's perfectly legitimate to shut down cores when they're not needed, as this will save battery. I usually have my phone running on only four cores for most apps, and even that is generous.

vonotny said:
It's not OP's fault. It's Snapdragon's. You effectively can't use it as an 8 core CPU because it will overheat quickly. Unless you throttle its frequency significantly.
So I guess we have to see the SD810 more as a medium fast 4 to 6 core processor that can, when needed, be ramped up to a fast 8 core CPU for a short amount of time (and by short I mean no longer than approx. 15 minutes, after which it will get too hot to keep all its cores at max. speed.)
Also, it's perfectly legitimate to shut down cores when they're not needed, as this will save battery. I usually have my phone running on only four cores for most apps, and even that is generous.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I guess i am okay with my bamboo edition oneplus one ?
Doesn't seem to be much of an upgrade from my Oneplus one anyway.
Sent from my A0001 using Tapatalk

vonotny said:
It's not OP's fault. It's Snapdragon's. You effectively can't use it as an 8 core CPU because it will overheat quickly. Unless you throttle its frequency significantly.
So I guess we have to see the SD810 more as a medium fast 4 to 6 core processor that can, when needed, be ramped up to a fast 8 core CPU for a short amount of time (and by short I mean no longer than approx. 15 minutes, after which it will get too hot to keep all its cores at max. speed.)
Also, it's perfectly legitimate to shut down cores when they're not needed, as this will save battery. I usually have my phone running on only four cores for most apps, and even that is generous.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am not much in to technical details cause i am from a different field but this thing is bothering me.

OTG Doesn't work
have tried all kind of OTG cables and none of them work with OPT. HOWEVER all the OTG cables work with my OPO... such a shame omg....

sushant6786 said:
I am not much in to technical details cause i am from a different field but this thing is bothering me.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ah, yes Flash the Boeffla kernel and you can make full-time use of all four A57 cores if you so wish.

Related

Did anyone manage to have 40hrs++ battery lifetime?

Dear People,
I am posting this out of big ENVY from my friend's story of his iPh*** 4 battery life with 40hrs ++ of usage (social network on, moderate usage, data always on, bla bla bla) and he still got 20% left of his battery!!!
I was just wondering did anyone managed to experience 40hrs ++ of battery lifetime? My best achievement with my nexus s battery life is
1 day 3 hrs with
MIUI Rom JB 2.8.17
Marmite Kernel 4.3
SmartassV2/deadline
100/1000
Automatic brightness on
Could we EVER achieved 40hrs ++ battery lifetime??? Since Iph*** 4 has practically same specs with Nexus S
It has 1Ghz procs, 512mb ram, 1500mah battery, bla bla bla
Any comments?
A very big advantage of the iphone is the very dim (to my opinion) screen backlight. If you change that to default 1 min instead of 20 on a custom rom, and then change your auto brightness values as well to lower ones your lifetime should increase alot. At least mine does. Also I use Llama to close mobile data after 5 minutes of sleep and then instantly turn it on on unlock. Anyway..we will never be able to win versus apple at some things. They have one operating system made for one device. We got one operating system for like..1 milion devices? That's the same story of console vs pc games.
andrei.voinea93 said:
A very big advantage of the iphone is the very dim (to my opinion) screen backlight. If you change that to default 1 min instead of 20 on a custom rom, and then change your auto brightness values as well to lower ones your lifetime should increase alot. At least mine does. Also I use Llama to close mobile data after 5 minutes of sleep and then instantly turn it on on unlock. Anyway..we will never be able to win versus apple at some things. They have one operating system made for one device. We got one operating system for like..1 milion devices? That's the same story of console vs pc games.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Never used iOS devices before...So they have those kind of things hey..
I agree with you with the point that their OS was made for one device, while us is for millions
Thanks for the comment
I've been getting pretty excellent battery life lately, will put up a screen shot but got almost 52hrs battery life with wifi and 3g on until it got to about 15% with about 2h 24m screen on time, although this was pretty light usage to be fair.
Using codename 3.3.2 with standard kernal, I turned NFC off and this seemed to help massively although I've also heard the new Maps app has solved some battery drain so not sure which has contributed the most.
cptblubear said:
I've been getting pretty excellent battery life lately, will put up a screen shot but got almost 52hrs battery life with wifi and 3g on until it got to about 15% with about 2h 24m screen on time, although this was pretty light usage to be fair.
Using codename 3.3.2 with standard kernal, I turned NFC off and this seemed to help massively although I've also heard the new Maps app has solved some battery drain so not sure which has contributed the most.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
52hrs?????? Cant wait for your screenshots man!
You may think the specs are the same, but the hw in the iPhone and power management is still superior. They get a push notification, even while the 3g radio is in idle and almost off (in which it saves more power). It's hard for Android to optimize the power management specially because of that many hardware variations, it's not only the CPU that counts.
madd0g said:
You may think the specs are the same, but the hw in the iPhone and power management is still superior. They get a push notification, even while the 3g radio is in idle and almost off (in which it saves more power). It's hard for Android to optimize the power management specially because of that many hardware variations, it's not only the CPU that counts.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, thats good to know, but since its the software differences (meaning coding and stuff), surely (i assume and hope) that we could also applied it (somehow) in our devices through tweaks, can we?
IMHO not much is possible since this is older hardware already and a question for how long will Google bother with it. It might be alot of work needed and you gain some insignificant amount of savings.
Would be nice to see some kind of power management tweaks in coming version of Android though.
well its halfly because android works differently and half way because of the hardware.
yes, the hardware is similar, but the nexus screen takes up more power, the processor is not very efficient, and nfc takes up power... also, the 3g radios are honestly HORRIBLE on the nexus s and that might have something to do with it.
but, the software side does make a major impact. iPhones do not multitask like android, which saves power on slower devices like the iphone 4. thats only half of it though, for instance, the iphone 4S has much worse battery life than the nexus s (by far). ROMs make a big difference also, I am very picky when choosing a ROM- if it doesnt have great battery life then I immediately replace it by another ROM that does.
I get on average about 16-20hours pretty consistantly if you are wondering, and I am OK with that as long as it makes it to the end of the day... I wake at 3:30 and normally it does. My advice is to experiment with different ROMs, I would suggest some, but I use an S 4G...
I don't really believe it. My friend has an iPhone and he uses it quit a bit and seems to have to keep it plugged in as much as I keep my phone. I think he said he usually gets about 8 hrs out of it. And the screen is pretty dull compared to mine so that might make a difference to
Sent from my Nexus S 4G using xda app-developers app
The iPhone screen is a lot smaller too and that's a big tradeoff.
I always get a chuckle at the iHerd people I see on the bus holding their tiny screen 6 inches in front of their face so they can read it.
If battery life is really a concern get a couple of spare batteries and a charger.
Sent from my Crespo using xda premium
heccubusxda said:
The iPhone screen is a lot smaller too and that's a big tradeoff.
I always get a chuckle at the iHerd people I see on the bus holding their tiny screen 6 inches in front of their face so they can read it.
If battery life is really a concern get a couple of spare batteries and a charger.
Sent from my Crespo using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Or an extended battery...
Sent from my Nexus S 4G using xda app-developers app
heccubusxda said:
The iPhone screen is a lot smaller too and that's a big tradeoff.
I always get a chuckle at the iHerd people I see on the bus holding their tiny screen 6 inches in front of their face so they can read it.
If battery life is really a concern get a couple of spare batteries and a charger.
Sent from my Crespo using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thats a good point too, smaller screen
Use this as yours to shut him up apples wack i got this oc to 1400 on stock with air kernel 186
Sent from my Nexus S using xda premium
nucleor1989 said:
Use this as yours to shut him up apples wack i got this oc to 1400 on stock with air kernel 186
Sent from my Nexus S using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Whoaaaah! What rom and settings? Awesome!
Sent from my SGH-T959V using xda app-developers app
Data was on all the time ? Ive got 33 hrs once but this is insane
I have achieved 50 hours on cna ... yes codename android but dang I forgot to take a screenshot of it I didn't have data on that time though
Sent from my Nexus S using xda premium
Lasting 40+ hours is easy if you don't use the phone much...
The screenshot was taken on a long weekend a while ago. I was busy during the weekend and didn't use my phone much apart from listening to music for no more than 2 hours.
Si_NZ said:
Lasting 40+ hours is easy if you don't use the phone much...
The screenshot was taken on a long weekend a while ago. I was busy during the weekend and didn't use my phone much apart from listening to music for no more than 2 hours.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thats true, but from the iphone their data was on all the time, mid moderate usage.
But, just like some people said, power managwment chip, the os, makes big differences
Sent from my SGH-T959V using xda app-developers app

[Q] upgrading from nexus s to nexus 4

at the moment i've got a nexus s and am seriously considering moving on to a nexus 4, i was wondering if anybody else has made the same move as i would like to know how is the battery life on the n4 compared to the ns. i assume it will be worse but i'm hoping it isn't that much of a difference. thanks
insane youth said:
at the moment i've got a nexus s and am seriously considering moving on to a nexus 4, i was wondering if anybody else has made the same move as i would like to know how is the battery life on the n4 compared to the ns. i assume it will be worse but i'm hoping it isn't that much of a difference. thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
made the switch about a week ago. for me the battery life is definitely better. take note that the nexus s only had a 1500mah battery. the phone is a bit big but im quickly getting used to the size. this phone is also lag free.
thing that bothers me is that the phone gets really hot. mine hits 43 degrees celcius when playing games. im thinking of rooting to undervolt it.
The N4 is slightly more power hungry i would say but it is nothing a custom rom cant fix.
my previous device was a Nexus S. I made the switch when the S started to lag/freeze real bad and the battery started draining rapidly. I'm not one to switch devices every year but I'm glad I waited for the N4. Performance is buttery smooth, screen size is awesome, and battery life is excellent. Only minor gripe is that after rooting, it seems my phone sucks up more juice..but could be an isolated incident.
praveenmarkandu said:
made the switch about a week ago. for me the battery life is definitely better. take note that the nexus s only had a 1500mah battery. the phone is a bit big but im quickly getting used to the size. this phone is also lag free.
thing that bothers me is that the phone gets really hot. mine hits 43 degrees celcius when playing games. im thinking of rooting to undervolt it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
43 degrees is not hot... I'm not sure if you're talking case temp or die temp but put it in perspective - the SandyBridge quad core in my desktop PC doesn't throttle 'till 97 degrees C and the ATI GPU in the same system is similar (not that I'd let them get that hot, but Intel and ATI call it 'safe') Obviously this varies from chip to chip, and a CPU running at 80 degrees C is going to make a tablet or phone pretty difficult to hold on to but I'd imagine the limits they've defined are more about protecting the user and the battery (Li-Ion batteries don't like getting hot...) than the SoC itself. Also, the power consumption of a silicon transistor is directly proportional to its temperature, voltage and switching speed. If you let the device get too hot, battery life would go south quite rapidly.
Without undervolting, the Tegra 3 in my Nexus 7 will hit 70+ under simultaneous GPU/CPU load and this is how Google/Asus/NVidia shipped it, so seriously... Don't worry. I don't have an app that can monitor temps on the N4 and neither do I want to know so I'm not about to start fishing about for thermals in sysfs, although I'm sure it's cooler with a 200mV CPU undervolt than stock
I once peered into a rack owned by a client of mine to see one of the servers with a bright red flashing light on it... I asked the guys "how long has this been happening?!" - 4 years of running under high CPU loads at 90 degrees with a ceased fan wasn't enough to kill it, I doubt much will.
ok thanks for the replies was a bit worried that the battery life would be considerable worse but you've set my mind at ease, nexus 4 here i come :good:
insane youth said:
ok thanks for the replies was a bit worried that the battery life would be considerable worse but you've set my mind at ease, nexus 4 here i come :good:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
With the right ROM and kernel, the Nexus 4 is giving me the best battery life of any Android phone I've yet owned. Admittedly, it was just light browsing and youtube-watching, but I got 7 hours screen-on through my last charge cycle... Which is double what I got out of my One X with the same kind of usage!
You won't regret it Just don't put it down on even slightly slanted glossy surfaces with no case covering it... LG appear to have invented the perpetual motion phone!
Azurael said:
With the right ROM and kernel, the Nexus 4 is giving me the best battery life of any Android phone I've yet owned. Admittedly, it was just light browsing and youtube-watching, but I got 7 hours screen-on through my last charge cycle... Which is double what I got out of my One X with the same kind of usage!
You won't regret it Just don't put it down on even slightly slanted glossy surfaces with no case covering it... LG appear to have invented the perpetual motion phone!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wow, still can't quite reach seven hours. Most I've had is about six and a half.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 2
Made the jump myself about a week ago, my Nexus S was starting to lag quite badly and reboot itself a lot. Nexus 4 is leaps and bounds better, no lag, love the screen and battery life seems a little better but not much to be honest, might try rooting and see if it makes a difference with a custom kernal. Very pleased with it overall. Only thing I dislike is the lack of a removable battery and lack of sd card slot but will have to live with it.

[Q] battery life comparison exynos vs snapdragon?

Are there any comparisons of the two cpus available on the s4 when it comes to battery life? Thats the only reason for me to try to get an exynos version if its shows to be better in that respect.
Yeah, that's a good question I want to know the answer too, there are many people having testing devices but they are too hungry about testing the damn processor and gpu instead testing properly the battery life. -_-
demlasjr said:
Yeah, that's a good question I want to know the answer too, there are many people having testing devices but they are too hungry about testing the damn processor and gpu instead testing properly the battery life. -_-
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lord knows battery Life is very important to me.
the guy that's testing whatever people tell him to test said that when his battery got down to 30% it lasted like 3 hours with max brightness and benchmarks running
frankyy714 said:
the guy that's testing whatever people tell him to test said that when his battery got down to 30% it lasted like 3 hours with max brightness and benchmarks running
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
With wich cpu? Also no comparison to the other version mentioned here.
I'm not convinced, even with S3 you can spend all the battery juice in 3 hours if you want. To do a proper test you need to leave the device doing the same job like an Snapdragon S4 during the same time.
Sent from my GT-I9300 using Tapatalk 2
Octa has a longer battery life than SD600.
That's why samsung used 8 cores technology.
And by the way the 5inch HD screen saves power too for both version
Sent from my GT-I9300 using xda app-developers app
HMJ-q8 said:
Octa has a longer battery life than SD600.
That's why samsung used 8 cores technology.
And by the way the 5inch HD screen saves power too for both version
Sent from my GT-I9300 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thaty what one hears, yes.
However I would like some actual test reports - for instance how long does the phone last for web browsing, for video playback and on standby?
I would like to see actual numbers.
As for the screen:
It is said to use 25% less power compared to previous amoled display generations. However that 25% value is something we have to trust samsung on I think, at least I have not seen any actual tests on power consuption of the display alone and it's probably not easy to test.
The way they have managed the display to consume less power is to use use phosphorescent instead of fluorescent green diodes, which use way less power. Until now they could not produce the green ones with an acceptable lifetime. The red ones have already been phosphorescent, and the blue one are still fluorescent since they are hardest to produce.
See here for some further details: http://www.phonearena.com/news/Sams...een-PHOLED-screen-tech-but-what-is-it_id40715
Hironimo said:
Thaty what one hears, yes.
However I would like some actual test reports - for instance how long does the phone last for web browsing, for video playback and on standby?
I would like to see actual numbers.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This. This so many times over.
So many people are parroting the "Exynos will have better battery life" thing but this really remains to be seen.
If the better battery life is in exchange for crippled A7 performance at inconvenient moments then it's useless. If better battery life isn't available for when you're using intensive apps then it's also useless.

❄ The LG G4 TEMPERATURE THREAD ❄

We all know why LG choose 808 over 810, now let's see the results of their choice:
Here we'll talk about the G4 operating temperature.
Try to indicate your ambient temperature, model, display brightness, app(s) used, your cpu utilization (I use cool Tool for it), and of course temperature (for that purpose I use Cpu Temp wich basically reads bms sensor of Cpu-z in overlay, and Cpu-z itself) ;
Remember to distinguish battery temperature from cpu sensors temperature and if using cpuz remember that temperatures are very sensitive to time so measure it only while performing the task wanted.
Keep it as scientific as possible
*I forgot to mention that CpuZ has an erroneous C to F conversion. So keep it in °C to be accurate
There is an intersting heat comparison HERE on Android Central to begin with
Good idea. Do note that CPU-Z seems to have a bug where it converts temperatures incorrectly from C into F, in the Thermal tab. From what I've seen, CPU-Z should be set to display in C, not F, if you want accurate readings.
To see the issue, check the temps, including in the Battery tab, then in the Thermal tab. For me, in C, the Thermal tab numbers seem reasonable, and the "battery" line in Thermal is close to the temp shown in the Battery tab. But change the units to F, and the Thermal tab suddenly reads the battery, and everything else, too-high by about 30F. The temperatures are not converting properly from C to F, the displayed C and F values are not equivalent. This conversion issue appears using CPU-Z on my last phone, as well.
So if posting CPU-Z temps from the Thermal tab, I'd suggest setting it to C, not F.
Thanks, I forgot to mention it, added
What's the point of this thread? This isn't a PC, it's not like we can do anything about the temps.
kyle1867 said:
What's the point of this thread? This isn't a PC, it's not like we can do anything about the temps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is where you are wrong. It's called we can hard mod the phone for better temps.
Total newbie question, is the temperature you're feeling on the hand the one from the CPU, or the one from the battery, which is closer to the hand?
DeadPotato said:
Total newbie question, is the temperature you're feeling on the hand the one from the CPU, or the one from the battery, which is closer to the hand?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It should be the battery because I notice my phone getting warm pretty often and I have a widget for battery temperature which tends to go up to around 38 °C often. I didn't check CPU temperatures but I don't think the CPU is heating up too much.
82 F - sitting on the desk doing nothing but looking pretty. VZW, brightness at 0% and Auto.
All these freaking temperature problems will be resolved in a few months when the freezing winter arrive xdddddddddddddf
Sent from my LG G4 H815 USA 4G LTE TMO
MrSteelX said:
That is where you are wrong. It's called we can hard mod the phone for better temps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lol, no, you can't.
At least LG choosing 808 instead of 810 due to hear issue was the right choice.
https://youtu.be/HltGLYZLySs
Take a look at a link above, SD810 might have upper hands during cooled state but that changes quickly throttling down below SD808 specs. SD810 potentials are pretty much obsolete and probably will never run on full more than 5 minutes.
SD808 is holding its speed even running hot. So I wouldn't really worry about hear part for this phone. But I'm with some users here. Few software updates will iron out some heating problems.
Sent from my LG-H811 using XDA Free mobile app
I've noticed that phone is getting hot when charging even if the phone is in standby. I'm getting around 40-44c.
t68kv said:
I've noticed that phone is getting hot when charging even if the phone is in standby. I'm getting around 40-44c.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's low for charging honestly if your referring to cpu temp. Most phone cpu temps stay around 25-35 idling and mid 40s when just doing simple scrolling and small tasks. 60-70c is fairly normal on heavier tasks and games. Kernels usually don't even start throttling until the cpu gets in the70-80c (generally most start shutting down cores at 80).
That being said, my G4 is one of the coolest running phones that I've messed around with. CPU-Z usually says that I'm in the low 40s even on some heavier tasks. I know that my Note 4 gets much warmer, much faster. Heavy web browsing for example will have my N4 in the upper 50s low 60s. The G4 stays pretty stable in the upper 40s low 50s. I'm happy they chose the processor that they did honestly. Stays pretty cool compared to the competition.
you can even mine cryptocurrency on this beast for hours on a normal (here normal) 27-30°C ambient temperature, and the battery gets to 44°C and the CPU gets into the 50s.
This phone has one of the BEST thermal management I've ever seen. I was a nexus 4 user, so you can see how much i was struggling.
Sent from my LG-H815 using Tapatalk
Thank you all
Please add which sensor are you referring to and with wich app you use to read sensors
sharpehenry said:
At least LG choosing 808 instead of 810 due to hear issue was the right choice.
https://youtu.be/HltGLYZLySs
Take a look at a link above, SD810 might have upper hands during cooled state but that changes quickly throttling down below SD808 specs. SD810 potentials are pretty much obsolete and probably will never run on full more than 5 minutes.
SD808 is holding its speed even running hot. So I wouldn't really worry about hear part for this phone. But I'm with some users here. Few software updates will iron out some heating problems.
Sent from my LG-H811 using XDA Free mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't pretend to be rude, but that information is outdated and inaccurate. I don't know how the other manufacturers are doing with the 810 to be honest, the Z3+ is sort of new and I've been checking the threads but there's too early to judge so far, it happens that I do have an HTC One M9 up to date, stock and unrooted and I've noticed several improvements through updates. Considering my daily usage I didn't feel this was matching with what I experience in real life, so I decided to redo the test on the video. I ran AnTuTu benchmark 64 bits version 4 times in a row, and left an average of a minute (sometimes less, once was a bit more cause I took the wrong screenshot) between tests. The attachments were uploaded in chronological order, you can also guide for the hour displayed from the device.
Now besides the video only runs 4 times, I did notice it was holding every couple of tests and then decreases, so I decided to run one more for the sake of pure testing and check throttling behavior, and surprisingly the fifth run gave me an increase on the score instead of lowering it further.
I didn't find a dedicated benchmark thread on the G4 forum, unless LG had improved a lot the 808, and based on the several benchmark results you'll find across the internet, including the ones in that video, looks like even throttling snapdragon 810 holds as an 808 in worst case scenario.
About heating problems, if I'm providing a success case scenario with a more troublesome chip like the 810 is, I'm completely sure the 808 will be fixed in time
phone gets crazy hot when running Periscope
it even shows that hot temp message / stops charging
try broadcasting for 5 mins
Intersting comparison between M9, S6, G4, Droid Turbo heat dissipation HERE
Periscope heats up the phone like crazy!
I too have had issues with the device getting very hot on the top half of the screen. Tried a couple of factory resets but it didn't help. Even reset one more time and kept it stock after a few hours same problem. Took it to the AT&T store and of course it was behaving fine. Luckily the rep knew me and accepted I knew what I was talking about. Swapping mine for one first thing this morning when their new shipment comes in. Will update if issue persists or not.
Wish I would have done it 3 days ago. Might have been snagged another battery and leather case lol.
Sent from my LG-V495 using XDA Free mobile app

Every nexus 6p WILL GET IN BOOTLOOP?

I have a question, I had nexus 6p once, and it does get in bootloop and die without solutions.
Now i'm about to buy another, and Im afraid do get this issue again.
i dont wanna lose money again.
I've had two. One got the red light of death. The other is still ok.
Sent from my ONEPLUS A6003 using Tapatalk
My Nexus 6P is still working fine, no bootloop of death or early shutdowns, bought it in November 2015.
Harry Pothead said:
My Nexus 6P is still working fine, no bootloop of death or early shutdowns, bought it in November 2015.
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have some possibility to prevent or predict what nexus will get this problem?
I recently bought a used 6P. It was manufactured in Nov 2015, and judging by the battery degradation (shutdown at 10-20%, SOC was about 2-3 hours at best, it would heat up quite a lot under normal usage, etc) I can guess that that the phone was used quite a lot, so heavy usage will probably not result in bootloop of death. After changing the battery, things got A LOT better - barely warm even when running Asphalt 9, SOT is about 4-5 hours and no more dying at 15%.
My guess would be that the battery has nothing to do with bootloop, as many people seem to believe.
An interesting thing that I noticed is that the 4 Cortex-A57 processors that are supposed to run at 2 GHz are actually running at ~1.56 GHz, while the other 4 A53s are running at 1.55 GHz, like they're supposed to. In order to fix a bootloop'd 6P you have to disable these 4 big processors so... ??? My theory is that this big cluster is causing the bootloop, and to *prevent* this bootloop you would have to underclock them to max 1.6 GHz.
Now, the big mistery is WHY is my phone underclocked, I'm pretty sure the previous owner didn't do it, as the phone is not even rooted.
If you buy a used one, I'd strongly recommend a new battery. It's easy to do yourself, just pay attention to the instructions. I recommend ifixit's batt.
Otherwise, just stay away. If you do buy, just install a kernel that will let you run the big core at 1.5, that way you get no shutdowns
skullzhunter said:
I recently bought a used 6P. It was manufactured in Nov 2015, and judging by the battery degradation (shutdown at 10-20%, SOC was about 2-3 hours at best, it would heat up quite a lot under normal usage, etc) I can guess that that the phone was used quite a lot, so heavy usage will probably not result in bootloop of death. After changing the battery, things got A LOT better - barely warm even when running Asphalt 9, SOT is about 4-5 hours and no more dying at 15%.
My guess would be that the battery has nothing to do with bootloop, as many people seem to believe.
An interesting thing that I noticed is that the 4 Cortex-A57 processors that are supposed to run at 2 GHz are actually running at ~1.56 GHz, while the other 4 A53s are running at 1.55 GHz, like they're supposed to. In order to fix a bootloop'd 6P you have to disable these 4 big processors so... [emoji848][emoji848][emoji848] My theory is that this big cluster is causing the bootloop, and to *prevent* this bootloop you would have to underclock them to max 1.6 GHz.
Now, the big mistery is WHY is my phone underclocked, I'm pretty sure the previous owner didn't do it, as the phone is not even rooted.
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What are you using to measure the CPU frequencies? Just because it's not that speed when you look at it doesn't mean it's not running at that speed. Are you using an app that's keeping a log of what speeds are in use?
The max speed will be listed at what it can currently go to. It will be all over the map and is not a good indicator of what to look for.
Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk
skullzhunter said:
I recently bought a used 6P. It was manufactured in Nov 2015, and judging by the battery degradation (shutdown at 10-20%, SOC was about 2-3 hours at best, it would heat up quite a lot under normal usage, etc) I can guess that that the phone was used quite a lot, so heavy usage will probably not result in bootloop of death. After changing the battery, things got A LOT better - barely warm even when running Asphalt 9, SOT is about 4-5 hours and no more dying at 15%.
My guess would be that the battery has nothing to do with bootloop, as many people seem to believe.
An interesting thing that I noticed is that the 4 Cortex-A57 processors that are supposed to run at 2 GHz are actually running at ~1.56 GHz, while the other 4 A53s are running at 1.55 GHz, like they're supposed to. In order to fix a bootloop'd 6P you have to disable these 4 big processors so... ??? My theory is that this big cluster is causing the bootloop, and to *prevent* this bootloop you would have to underclock them to max 1.6 GHz.
Now, the big mistery is WHY is my phone underclocked, I'm pretty sure the previous owner didn't do it, as the phone is not even rooted.
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Click to collapse
Basically, since the 4 cores fix is mostly temporary and most nexus 6p still die soon or late after this fix, I don't think it is the issue... For me bad soldering, as the bad soldering that caused lots of lg phones in this period, including the nexus 5x, to die of bootloop is the issue of our nexus 6p.

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