is accubattery accurate? - Samsung Galaxy S10+ Questions & Answers

I have a tmobile galaxy s10+ snap dragon and I noticed the battery drain is really bad. So after having it for 3 days I checked out accubattery and it says I have 4% wear already.

Hmmm...

Mine only shows 3900 mah for the estimated capacity on the health screen... I'm pretty mad about this. Only thing I can figure is it hasn't been completely depleted yet, the lowest I've taken it is about 15%. So maybe they bias more charge capacity for the last 5-10% to help prevent people from having their phones die kind of like how cars will often have 20-30 miles left once the range falls to 0...
Or I got a bad phone or samsung lied.....

BranC85 said:
Mine only shows 3900 mah for the estimated capacity on the health screen... I'm pretty mad about this. Only thing I can figure is it hasn't been completely depleted yet, the lowest I've taken it is about 15%. So maybe they bias more charge capacity for the last 5-10% to help prevent people from having their phones die kind of like how cars will often have 20-30 miles left once the range falls to 0...
Or I got a bad phone or samsung lied.....
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I completely agree I am starting to wonder if I have been lied to or they have a reserve battery or something.
Also I have dropped 13% battery in 4 hrs of phone being idle at full signal..

5% of your battery is kept for recharge reserve, Android has no access to it, it's handled by the firmware and Accubattery obviously thinks your battery is consumed since it counts 200mAh is missing, that's completely normal and they should update their app to keep that in mind.

Youre saying every phone does this though, not just samsung keeping it from bottoming out? Because on my pixel I never observed that shortage when it was brand new either.

Also as an update if you go to settings and read battery info they say 4100 Mah is not guaranteed (Samsung's support sent me there)

Related

hd2 battery is killing me literally!!

i spoke to htc about the abysmal battery life, they say that there could be extended batteries in the near future, with a new back cover (with the back sticking out)
i dont mind charging it every day but
everytime i do something basic, for couple of minutes, it goes down by 1 percent, everything is turned off, gsm 2g mode, etc.
anyway the guy at htc said its due to the massive screen, this is what drains majority of the juice,
For what this device has and what it can do the battery life is pretty good, if you just use it for a few random pics, bit of browsing, bit of music and a few calls you should get a days use, if you sit there for ages messing with it its gonna drain.
Im pleased with it myself, apart from the bugs, but waiting......
It's killing you literally? Step away man!
I find the battery life on-par with other smart phones I've owned. I use a desktop cradle (well should soon be using a desktop cradle) and an active holder in the car, so I find the battery keeps up OK with a typical day's use for me. The biggest battery killer is when the screen is on full brightness so I find essential to have the phone on power when I'm using the satnav.
I had really high hopes for this thread when I read the title. Needless to say, I'm pretty disappointed.
Where's the death I was promised?
Die and prove it.
mox123 said:
i spoke to htc about the abysmal battery life, they say that there could be extended batteries in the near future, with a new back cover (with the back sticking out)
i dont mind charging it every day but
everytime i do something basic, for couple of minutes, it goes down by 1 percent, everything is turned off, gsm 2g mode, etc.
anyway the guy at htc said its due to the massive screen, this is what drains majority of the juice,
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
To be fair most smartphones drain their batteries pretty damned quickly. Disconnect your data connection when you're not using it and bluetooth too. OK so you won't get weather updates but you'll save battery life. Just charge it nightly and buy a car charger if you really drain that sucker!
Wow, I think battery life is good considering the screen, better than I expected.
Currently, with screen set to 70% brightness, push email on 0800-1800 with hourly retrieval outside those hours, hourly weather/Twitter update, automatic Quick-GPS almanac data update, I last all day (~0700 to 2300), and still with about 20-30% headroom with the following use:
Push email as per above settings
50 minutes GPS tracking
50 minutes bluetooth on (heart rate monitor)
1-2 hours listening to music
Around 1-2 hours high-drain use (screen on, using cellular data/WiFi/GPS - for example browsing/app use/gaming/watching video)
30-40 SMS
15 minutes calls
One simple little trick that I learnt some time ago to preserve battery life is ..........turn down the brightness of the screen display. The brighter it is the more juice gets used.
Get the screen to turn itself off after, say, 30 secs of use. That also helps.
The rest, such as killing off data connections when not in use, etc, you already know.
It never ceases to surprise me at the number of negative comments re battery life. The impression I am left with is that if the battery does not last at least 2 months between charges, even though it is being hammered to within an inch of it's life, then that makes the battery performance rubbish. Anyone ever heard of a battery charger?
It's a really easy to use piece of kit that comes with your device that can be plugged in at night when you are asleep, leaving your device fresh for the morning.
Amazing.
WB
What the heck do you expect from such a phone? The energy management is kinda good and it's the display that kills battery life. You have to get use to it. At least my Touch HD seems to last much longer, but I would never change back.
If you watch a video your battery capacity drops quickly. I estimated 4,3-4,5h of HW-acc WVGA video and 3,5h with a non-HW-acc VGA video. Not that much but it really looks fantastic.
My Solution for this problem is: second battery, extended battery and/or load the battery whereever u can. My normal usage drains 30% of the battery a day, so I get 3 days of normal usage (I'm not an excessive handy user). The standby duration is with 300h not that good, but yeah that means still 12,5 days of standby if I calculated correctly.
The point is, that the phone is that good that I'm attracted to play with it and then the battery life tends to last just a day or less.
I bought a second battery (~22€) just for longer rides. I think it's ok.
mox123 said:
i spoke to htc about the abysmal battery life, they say that there could be extended batteries in the near future, with a new back cover (with the back sticking out)
i dont mind charging it every day but
everytime i do something basic, for couple of minutes, it goes down by 1 percent, everything is turned off, gsm 2g mode, etc.
anyway the guy at htc said its due to the massive screen, this is what drains majority of the juice,
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
EEK!, don't come on this forum and complain about the HD2! not allowed. this is now the official HD2 Appreciation society, don't ya know.
I recommend instead you buy some lube oil, massage it into the device, light some candles, play a bit of Barry White, and all will be well.
Then come on this site and reassure all the sensitive souls here that it is indeed the Holy Grail of mobiles and admit you are a Troll for finding a fault with it, and daring to ask about why it does not preform as it says on the tin.
And final advice...In the words of legendary Basil Fawlty... Don't mention the War !..or in this case, the Keyboard!!, I mentioned it once...and thought I got away with it..but no.
hawrai68 said:
EEK!, don't come on this forum and complain about the HD2! not allowed. this is now the official HD2 Appreciation society, don't ya know.
I recommend instead you buy some lube oil, massage it into the device, light some candles, play a bit of Barry White, and all will be well.
Then come on this site and reassure all the sensitive souls here that it is indeed the Holy Grail of mobiles and admit you are a Troll for finding a fault with it, and daring to ask about why it does not preform as it says on the tin.
And final advice...In the words of legendary Basil Fawlty... Don't mention the War !..or in this case, the Keyboard!!, I mentioned it once...and thought I got away with it..but no.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nice one.
NetDwarf said:
What the heck do you expect from such a phone? The energy management is kinda good and it's the display that kills battery life. You have to get use to it. At least my Touch HD seems to last much longer, but I would never change back.
If you watch a video your battery capacity drops quickly. I estimated 4,3-4,5h of HW-acc WVGA video and 3,5h with a non-HW-acc VGA video. Not that much but it really looks fantastic.
My Solution for this problem is: second battery, extended battery and/or load the battery whereever u can. My normal usage drains 30% of the battery a day, so I get 3 days of normal usage (I'm not an excessive handy user). The standby duration is with 300h not that good, but yeah that means still 12,5 days of standby if I calculated correctly.
The point is, that the phone is that good that I'm attracted to play with it and then the battery life tends to last just a day or less.
I bought a second battery (~22€) just for longer rides. I think it's ok.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Exactly !!
1000 Mhz this bugger does.
And really its more then just a phone. with the battery cunsumption like wise.
But they told me one thing,,. something that Noone does
When you get the HD2. Its battery got 20% juice init.
Thats not for fun of the company (prolly sanyo) was laizy and dint bother to fill em 100%.
You have to charge the battery 6 to 12 hours and to peeking at your new jewel.
And i know Noone ever does that. But it ensures batterylife and eficiency
Here is the article >>
Initialize a new battery. New batteries should be fully charged before their first use to obtain maximum capacity.
Nickel-based batteries should be charged for 16 hours initially and run through 2-4 full charge/full discharge cycles, while lithium ion batteries should be charged for about 5-6 hours.
Ignore the phone telling you that the battery is full--this is normal but is not accurate if the battery is not initialized.
#DO NOT fully discharge a lithium-ion battery!
Unlike Ni-Cd batteries, lithium-ion batteries' life is shortened every time you fully discharge them.
Instead, charge them when the battery meter shows one bar left.
Lithium-ion batteries, like most rechargeable batteries have a set amount of chargers in them.[1]
2Keep the battery cool.
Your battery will last longest if used near room temperature, and nothing wears on a battery like extended exposure to high temperatures. While you can’t control the weather, you can avoid leaving your phone in a hot car or in direct sunlight, and you don’t have to carry your phone in your pocket, where your body heat will raise its temperature.
In addition, check the battery while it’s charging. If it seems excessively hot, your charger may be malfunctioning.
3Charge your battery correctly, in accordance with its type. Most newer cell phones have lithium-ion batteries, while older ones generally have nickel-based batteries. Read the label on the back of the battery or in the technical specifications in the manual to determine which yours is.
Nickel-based batteries (either NiCd or NiMH) DO NOT generally suffer from a misunderstood phenomenon known as the "memory effect." As described in Wikipedia and many expert sources,[2] the term "memory effect" has been widely mythologized to describe any and all deterioration of NiCd (and other battery chemistries), in many cases misleading consumers into further shortening the lives of the batteries through over-discharging to "recondition" them.[3]
[This section formerly read: If you charge the battery partially enough times, eventually the battery "forgets" that it can charge fully. A nickel-based battery suffering from memory effect can be reconditioned, which requires the battery to be completely discharged, then completely recharged (sometimes several times). The appropriate length of time between reconditionings varies. A good rule to follow for nickel-battery cell-phones is to discharge them completely once every two to three weeks, and only when you have a charger available. [4] ]
Lithium ion batteries can be preserved by careful charging and avoiding storing them at full charge.[5] They do not require "reconditioning."
Regardless of the battery type, use only a charger rated for your battery, and discontinue use of a charger that causes the battery to heat up excessively.
Enonoid said:
Exactly !!
1000 Mhz this bugger does.
And really its more then just a phone. with the battery cunsumption like wise.
But they told me one thing,,. something that Noone does
When you get the HD2. Its battery got 20% juice init.
Thats not for fun of the company (prolly sanyo) was laizy and dint bother to fill em 100%.
You have to charge the battery 6 to 12 hours and to peeking at your new jewel.
And i know Noone ever does that. But it ensures batterylife and eficiency
Here is the article >>
Initialize a new battery. New batteries should be fully charged before their first use to obtain maximum capacity.
Nickel-based batteries should be charged for 16 hours initially and run through 2-4 full charge/full discharge cycles, while lithium ion batteries should be charged for about 5-6 hours.
Ignore the phone telling you that the battery is full--this is normal but is not accurate if the battery is not initialized.
#DO NOT fully discharge a lithium-ion battery!
Unlike Ni-Cd batteries, lithium-ion batteries' life is shortened every time you fully discharge them.
Instead, charge them when the battery meter shows one bar left.
Lithium-ion batteries, like most rechargeable batteries have a set amount of chargers in them.[1]
2Keep the battery cool.
Your battery will last longest if used near room temperature, and nothing wears on a battery like extended exposure to high temperatures. While you can’t control the weather, you can avoid leaving your phone in a hot car or in direct sunlight, and you don’t have to carry your phone in your pocket, where your body heat will raise its temperature.
In addition, check the battery while it’s charging. If it seems excessively hot, your charger may be malfunctioning.
3Charge your battery correctly, in accordance with its type. Most newer cell phones have lithium-ion batteries, while older ones generally have nickel-based batteries. Read the label on the back of the battery or in the technical specifications in the manual to determine which yours is.
Nickel-based batteries (either NiCd or NiMH) DO NOT generally suffer from a misunderstood phenomenon known as the "memory effect." As described in Wikipedia and many expert sources,[2] the term "memory effect" has been widely mythologized to describe any and all deterioration of NiCd (and other battery chemistries), in many cases misleading consumers into further shortening the lives of the batteries through over-discharging to "recondition" them.[3]
[This section formerly read: If you charge the battery partially enough times, eventually the battery "forgets" that it can charge fully. A nickel-based battery suffering from memory effect can be reconditioned, which requires the battery to be completely discharged, then completely recharged (sometimes several times). The appropriate length of time between reconditionings varies. A good rule to follow for nickel-battery cell-phones is to discharge them completely once every two to three weeks, and only when you have a charger available. [4] ]
Lithium ion batteries can be preserved by careful charging and avoiding storing them at full charge.[5] They do not require "reconditioning."
Regardless of the battery type, use only a charger rated for your battery, and discontinue use of a charger that causes the battery to heat up excessively.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's a shame most powerful mobiles heat up like nobody's business whilst on full chat these days.....there's no chance of keeping the batteries cool! Still, it's an expendable item and at least you can buy a replacement.....none of this iPhone 'sealed' tin rubbish.
while i find the battery life reasonable with the features this phone has (read screen size, processor speed), it will be nice to get the CPU throttling app another thread is discussing. don't need that 1000MHz running everytime i pick the phone.
On the same notes, how can i check if automatic screen brightness is kicking in?
here4info said:
how can i check if automatic screen brightness is kicking in?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Stick the phone under a bright light such as a desk lamp and cover the light sensor with a piece of paper.
here4info said:
while i find the battery life reasonable with the features this phone has (read screen size, processor speed), it will be nice to get the CPU throttling app another thread is discussing. don't need that 1000MHz running everytime i pick the phone.
On the same notes, how can i check if automatic screen brightness is kicking in?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It certainly isn't running when I boot my phone up....hardly gives an impression of speed.
mox123 said:
i spoke to htc about the abysmal battery life, they say that there could be extended batteries in the near future, with a new back cover (with the back sticking out)
i dont mind charging it every day but
everytime i do something basic, for couple of minutes, it goes down by 1 percent, everything is turned off, gsm 2g mode, etc.
anyway the guy at htc said its due to the massive screen, this is what drains majority of the juice,
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
are you the first wm phone user? Do you have good experience with phones that has so much specs? Do you use wifi and browse with phone very heavily? If you do, it is really normal that the battery will drain. My Touch HD does the same, it can last a day or 2 or drain like water not more than half a day, it depends on your usage. Try to get a second battery, or even the third one like I do, what is a big deal? It is completely normal.
I don't have a lot complaints on this phone as it meets most of my requirements.about the battery, I seriously don't think it is that bad. for example if you have a car with 1500 horse power and expect it to have or rather 30-40 mpg, don't think it is possible. try to use your local gas station (in this case your friendly charger) more often.move on with your life please.
c4Lvin said:
I don't have a lot complaints on this phone as it meets most of my requirements.about the battery, I seriously don't think it is that bad. for example if you have a car with 1500 horse power and expect it to have or rather 30-40 mpg, don't think it is possible. try to use your local gas station (in this case your friendly charger) more often.move on with your life please.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That might be a little difficult because this battery problem is killing him, LITERALLY

Battery charged itself !!

I checked my battery monitor widget today am noticed something very strange. It showed me 40% charged when I was sure it was only 35% charged before I went bed! WTF did it charge itself? As you can see from the screenshots the phone was not on charge and was awake for most of the night which has never happened before. I have not installed any new apps in the last few days I have never seen this before on any of my android phones over the years. After 1 month of using the note this is the first glitch i've noticed (if it is a glitch). I am on stock LA4.
Anyone have any ideas as to why this happened?
I'm not complaining ( wish it happened every night!) just curious.
I have noticed the same strange thing with ICS.
did you try pinching your arm?
/Jeriz
It is probably/maybe your battery stats that was not exactly "right" and might "recalibrate" your battery stats to the true value.
The simplest answer is always the true one: It is having trouble reading your battery right. Happens with mine too sometimes.
LOL I had the same thing happened to me.
First day with my note. And so far I am loving it.(despite colour rendering issues , and a very lagging stock keyboard)
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium
Maybe the phones are evolving and learning to use the sensor on the Front to charge itself lol
Sent from my Galaxy Note
This has happened to me several times already since the Galaxy S days.. sometimes after a reboot the battery looses 50% and slowly charges back up its quite funny and strange, never happened to my note though.
What do you think happens if some of the services is not needed anymore and stopes relaying,the battery % estimation will go up.
georgios73 said:
I checked my battery monitor widget today am noticed something very strange. It showed me 40% charged when I was sure it was only 35% charged before I went bed! WTF did it charge itself? As you can see from the screenshots the phone was not on charge and was awake for most of the night which has never happened before. I have not installed any new apps in the last few days I have never seen this before on any of my android phones over the years. After 1 month of using the note this is the first glitch i've noticed (if it is a glitch). I am on stock LA4.
Anyone have any ideas as to why this happened?
I'm not complaining ( wish it happened every night!) just curious.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Mine charged itself too.
Went from 30% to 50% when I was out.
I thought it has some solar panel hidden beneath.
hagba said:
What do you think happens if some of the services is not needed anymore and stopes relaying,the battery % estimation will go up.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wtf are you talking about? That's not any kind of estimate of lifetime, that's a report on amount of energy left. And in this case, specifically, a bug in it's reading.
Livewings said:
Mine charged itself too.
Went from 30% to 50% when I was out.
I thought it has some solar panel hidden beneath.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That one a good idea. Smartphone company should consider to put it in every phone in future..lol
Sent from my GT-N7000 using XDA App
When I saw this thread, I immediately opened my battery stats only to see this:
lulz
Viamonte said:
Wtf are you talking about? That's not any kind of estimate of lifetime, that's a report on amount of energy left. And in this case, specifically, a bug in it's reading.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You need to review your facts make a bit more research, the report is based on the fact that how many apps and services are you using,say if the wifi is on, it will show you certain %, however if you turn it off will report you that it has increased, depending on the running apps and services how much battery is left, my laptop does it all the time,unless you are living in pre Smart Battery Meter era.
I have to agree that if the % relies on the voltage (as I am sure it must do to some extent, but I am only guessing), stopping heavy services will allow the voltage to increase and the app may see that as a gain.
Alternatively we have discovered Samsung's secret OTA charging method! This explains why some phones have terrible battery life, they are being sucked dry by nearby 'Vampire Notes'!
Now, if we could just work out how we could charge all Notes by sucking iPhones dry ....
turshija said:
When I saw this thread, I immediately opened my battery stats only to see this:
lulz
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Mega wtf. :O
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium
Battery is trolling
The Galaxy Note battery is a three terminals battery. So I think that the % state of charge of this battery is directly calculated from its output voltage.
The voltage decrease as the charge decrease, so it is possible to evaluate the residual charge in the battery.This is not a very precise method but it is quite simple to implement.
After a high current drain there is what is called a ''voltage recovery'', the battery voltage increase slowly a little bit as the current is stopped. So you may think that the battery get back energy, but unfortunately it is only an artifact.
Yesterday I showed you all how my battery indicated that it had charged itself.
So guess what folks today when I checked the complete opposite happened!!
Again as you can see it went from 48% just before I went to sleep only to wake up to a dead phone (switched off). Upon rebooting it showed only 9% !!
Now I can cope with it going up but going down is not good.
Hope its not a hardware problem and just a faulty battery.
lets see what happens tomorrow maybe it will explode!
I'm an EE (election engineering) student. Michel_7 is right. Lithium ion batteries experience a voltage sag during high current draws. Afterwards there is some rebound, both as the battery cools if over temp, and with a period of lower activity. This is in part due to the fact that batteries have internal resistance, and as they supply power, they also dissipate some internally. This is of squared proportion to the current drawn. IE current^2 * resistance. Battery resistance constant, so the more power the phone uses, the more the battery does. This is what heats up the battery.
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium

Phone shut off at 32% and only charged 7% in 1h30m with fast charge

I work 8 hour shifts and my 6P on Pure Nexus lasts through the shift with ~30% when I get home.
I was listening to music through Bluetooth and when I turned off my headset around 5 hours into my shift, my phone shut off and wouldn't turn on. I was in and out of the freezer, so I thought it was the cold. I got home, turned it on and plugged it in and saw it had 32% left.
An 1h30m of charging and it only charged 7% which is really unusual and is the first time.
I have AccuBattery Pro and it is saying it's going to take 10 more hours to fully charge using fast charge. Android lockscreen says "Charging rapidly. 12 hours until full."
Also in AccuBattery, although my design capacity for the battery is 3450 mah, it normally says estimated capacity is 2200, but is now saying I have over 5000 mah in capacity.
When unplugged, it has a screen on discharge rate of 50-70%/h when the average is 23%/h.
Is the battery dying? I thought it would gradually decrease in capacity and not suddenly change overnight.
When my battery bug hit..it just hit. No warning signs or anything. I was crapping out anywhere from 60%-10% and everywhere in between. I bit the bullet and RMAed for a new battery (they gave me a new screen too for whatever reason) Before i sent it in my Accubattery stats were saying i was at 75% capacity and now ive been at 100% capacity since i got it back and i can happily go from 100%-0% like its supposed to.
Although your situation does sound unique its almost certain you'll need a battery replacement.. or try a new ROM and see if it keeps happening.
Wickidmasshole said:
When my battery bug hit..it just hit. No warning signs or anything. I was crapping out anywhere from 60%-10% and everywhere in between. I bit the bullet and RMAed for a new battery (they gave me a new screen too for whatever reason) Before i sent it in my Accubattery stats were saying i was at 75% capacity and now ive been at 100% capacity since i got it back and i can happily go from 100%-0% like its supposed to.
Although your situation does sound unique its almost certain you'll need a battery replacement.. or try a new ROM and see if it keeps happening.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unfortunately, I got my phone from Rogers around November 2015. I don't even know what they can do about it. It's been averaging about 14%/h charging which is about 1/3 the speed. I've been using the same ROM for several weeks with no issues and haven't installed anything new lately other than app updates. I can try upgrading Pure Nexus, but it seems like they have a power menu bug at the moment.
Do you think your charger could be broken?
Wickidmasshole said:
Do you think your charger could be broken?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My wife has a 6P also. I was trying her charger and it's the same thing. I've rebooted twice. It's still draining at least about twice the normal average when disconnected.
So it's roughly draining at about twice the normal speed without doing anything and charging at a third the normal speed.
I seriously can't afford to replace it. I regret choosing a phone without replaceable batteries and will not do that again, which means no Pixel phones. At least I still have my Galaxy Note 3 which still works.
if i were you id backup the entire phone (or whatever is importannt to you) to my computer and download the J factory image and do a fresh clean flash and pray that it clears out whatever is going on. Sucks to start fresh, but worth a shot
Wickidmasshole said:
if i were you id backup the entire phone (or whatever is importannt to you) to my computer and download the J factory image and do a fresh clean flash and pray that it clears out whatever is going on. Sucks to start fresh, but worth a shot
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I use FolderSync to backup my phone nightly to my NAS server.
The slow charging speed may be due to high cpu temperature. It was hovering around 40° for whatever reason. I set it down on a cold granite window sill and the temperature dropped to 35° and was charging at twice the speed, but still slower (1000mah vs 1550mah from before). I've been holding it for a while and the temperature is again going back up with charge speed slowing. Again, I've never had this happen before.
Thanks again, I'll probably restore the phone and bring it to Rogers later this week to see what they say.

Nexus 6P Replaced battery health

Hi all,
Recently I have exchanged a battery at a local service provider, battery they showed before installation seemed as legit as they come and after replacement phone felt way more agile especially at a lower battery charge levels. So I was happy until I started investigating poor SoT that I thought at the time was due to the Oreo update. After some time, resets and reinstalls it feels like the system is as healthy as it can be for now, but Accubattery shows 83% health at 2,853 mAh out of designed 3,450 mAh. That is only after few charge cycles, but I am still worried that it might a permanent battery hardware issue. Right now at latest Oreo build with elementalx kernel running a wingoku gov profile I get around 3 to 3,5 hours of SoT with little use, over night after 100% charge phone looses around 10% percent by the time I wake up.
If anyone has any insight into similar issues and can confirm Accubattery health stats credibility I would really appreciate.
nnaryshkin said:
......but Accubattery shows 83% health at 2,853 mAh out of designed 3,450 mAh. That is only after few charge cycles, but I am still worried that it might a permanent battery hardware issue.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry, but you got a bad replacement battery. It happens. Although it just provides an estimated value, I've found Accubattery to be a very solid indicator on the phones I've used it on. Since your battery is barely above 80% it takes the guesswork out of the equation. The battery capacity estimate converges quickly to a value after only about 3-4 charges. That's it. It's not something else with the phone. It is the battery itself. There are literally dozens of threads discussing which batteries are good replacements and from which sources. Buy one of those and your problem will be solved. There are some Accubattery haters out there, but I guarantee based on what you are saying, your battery is a dud. With a fresh, high quality battery you should be seeing very high 90's to low 100's. Yes higher than 100% because some batteries sold actually have a higher capacity than rated. Try to get one of those.
Thank you for a reply.
At this point I guess I will just have to live with it until I buy a new phone, I only decided to give this one another go since I love it and do not see anything on the market now that would appeal to me as much as 6P did at purchase. But I do not want to spend more money and time on this, just wanted to make sure this is not a software issue. Software I can tweak, but battery replacement yet again is too much.

AccuBattery says my battery health is ~90% :-/

Now the question is, can anyone install AccuBattery and let me know after a couple of charges (needs to be charges larger than 50%) what your battery health says it is?
I expect your response to be delayed by days obviously, but if you can confirm below that you are doing it I will appreciate it.
I'm starting to think that I got a lemon, the SOT is obviously different from anyone else but this is the first time that AccuBattery tells me that my battery health is less than 100% on a new phone, and when I get less SOT on such phones AccuBattery correctly confirms my suspicion every time (sample size 5 phones).
For visibility of everyone, hence the question, I want to see if this normal for this phone or just a defective battery.
Jose-MXL said:
Now the question is, can anyone install AccuBattery and let me know after a couple of charges (needs to be charges larger than 50%) what your battery health says it is?
I expect your response to be delayed by days obviously, but if you can confirm below that you are doing it I will appreciate it.
I'm starting to think that I got a lemon, the SOT is obviously different from anyone else but this is the first time that AccuBattery tells me that my battery health is less than 100% on a new phone, and when I get less SOT on such phones AccuBattery correctly confirms my suspicion every time (sample size 5 phones).
For visibility of everyone, hence the question, I want to see if this normal for this phone or just a defective battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'll do it.
Curious myself to see whats up with the battery situation
coolmaster121 said:
I'll do it.
Curious myself to see whats up with the battery situation
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you very much!
Jose-MXL said:
Now the question is, can anyone install AccuBattery and let me know after a couple of charges (needs to be charges larger than 50%) what your battery health says it is?
I expect your response to be delayed by days obviously, but if you can confirm below that you are doing it I will appreciate it.
I'm starting to think that I got a lemon, the SOT is obviously different from anyone else but this is the first time that AccuBattery tells me that my battery health is less than 100% on a new phone, and when I get less SOT on such phones AccuBattery correctly confirms my suspicion every time (sample size 5 phones).
For visibility of everyone, hence the question, I want to see if this normal for this phone or just a defective battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I got the same thing with the OP 6, the battery capacity mah was 2933 instead 3300, 6t says 3378 instead of 3700. I don't believe it's accurate. Just did my first full charge charge after I got it Monday. Battery seems solid. Ampere says Max Capacity 3700
Says 3388
But my battery is solid
Will test with a device soon and see if it is accurate or not!
93% here. 3,437 out of 3,700 based on 7 sessions with 174% charged for a total of 5,981 mah total. I received the device on the 2nd.
Here's mine. I got mine yesterday.
same here - 3450mah by accubattery. my 5t shows 86% 2850 actually.
pixel 3 (not xl) - show 99% as specified =\.
is that means 1+ lies to us?
I was literally just looking at mine last night. Gotta say I'm a little confused... No way a 4 week old phone should go from 3700mAh down to 2915mAh capacity...
Mine is down to 3300. Either AccuBattery needs an update for the new OS, or the background battery optimization is playing with AccuBatter readings?
Or maybe we are getting weaker batteries but I hope this is not the case.
most of us seem to be around 94% give or take. Maybe it's the app, maybe something else. As long as we are getting those awesome SOT times everything is good and we should not worry too much.
I have been using Accubattery since my Oneplus 5. On my brand new Oneplus 5, Onplus 6, and Oneplus 6T - they all started out from day 1 at about 93%.
Either the batteries are starting out a bit lower, or Accubattery isn't accurate.
My note 9 was always less with accubattery too
This same exact issue was reported with the 5T here: https://forum.xda-developers.com/oneplus-5t/help/battery-health-accubattery-t3735499
The application is not accurate.
Edit: Sorry about the necro...I was looking into this issue and was glad to find someone talking about it and wanted to contribute.
New phone and mine says:
Mine says 89%
4906/5500 mAh
Based on 6 sessions with 283% charged for 13883 mAh total.
I was kinda wondering how accurate it was too...I know it has to use some kind of modeling, instead of measurements, to get those numbers...but I was kinda expecting it to be more accurate...apropos of nothing I guess.
I stop charging around 85% (missing a couple times and 100%ing overnight), but other than that, I dont push it hard.
I had the same issue..
charge your phone one time up to 100% and then leave it on charger an additional hour. you will see, your battery health goes up to 96-97%.
Ignore these stupid apps that measures your battery health. They can't do it in a reliable way anyway.
As a bonus if you don't worry about this false information you'll live 5 years longer, good or bad, you decide.
Tbh I given up on my battery health for my 6T. A phone is suppose to be used. Just trickle charge it (Charge it bit by bit). Avoid charging over 90%. It doesn't matter if your battery health is low or not. If your battery life sucks two years later, you can just go to Oneplus support and replace the battery. It may cost more than a replacement battery, but it guarantees that the battery is new (not a year old) and you don't damage your phone. Sorted

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