Battery Not Charging - Tilt, TyTN II, MDA Vario III Android Development

I just installed Android on my HTC TYTN II (super elcair -> recommended by tutorial).
My phone warned me about the battery dying so i put it on charge and battery animation is spinning and the lock screen says its charging, but its been stuck at 15% for the last 30 minutes. I tried restarting, and that doesnt change anything.
Should i be worried? if the battery dies, and wont charge, theres no way i can charge this battery.

have you installed the super eclair on your nand? if so try reinstalling a newer version or in my oppinion try myn donut (way better)

Battery issues on new installs are very common, the cause is simple. android does not yet know the battery capacity, so it cannot calculate the true battery charge, simply leave it on charge overnight, every night, it will get more accurate once android learns your battery

Related

[Q] Froyo - can't fully charge my battery

Since I've updated to froyo I can't fully charge my battery. Since I'm charging it over night, on the mornings I get random percentages, but always not 100% - sometimes 91%, 94%, 95%, etc. I saw other posts with such behavior, but I did not find the reason for this.
I've tried full discharge, as much as it is possible since on below 5-6% the phone automatically shuts down. I've tried on the morning unplug it, then plug it again after 5-10 minutes, but no gain.
PS. just to note that the battery life is a lot better with Froyo. Part of it is maybe because I do not have so much battery sucking apps like before, but still.

[Q] Weird battery discharge

Hi fellas..
Maybe you've noticed the messages I've sent to Unofficial BravoS thread of Coolexe's (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1200517&page=51) which is the ROM I use.
The issue is, the battery discharges rapidly. Actually, if you check mV values, it doesn't discharge rapidly, but if you look at percentages, there is a huge inconsistency. I used Battery Monitor Widget to log the battery performances last night, and saw these horrible results:
Code:
2011/09/19|04:59:49|-515mA|37%|3581mV|40.2ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|05:00:51|-465mA|36%|3576mV|40.2ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|05:01:49|-460mA|36%|3576mV|40.2ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|05:02:50|-462mA|35%|3517mV|40.2ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|05:03:49|-477mA|35%|3517mV|40.2ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|05:04:50|-471mA|34%|3449mV|40.3ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|05:06:06|-478mA|0%|3415mV|40.5ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|05:06:08|-478mA|0%|3415mV|40.5ºC|1|0
These are the last lines of the log, before the phone shuts down. As you can see, the phone gone to 0% from 34% in one minute! No low battery warnings or whatsoever..
Funny thing is, this doesn't happen in StarBurst ROM (which is a Froyo based one). Do you reckon this is a GingerBread issue or something? I saw some other people complaining about their phone shutting down at 20% as well.
So, what do you suggest?
when you look at the voltage there isnt that much drain, so its only a displaying problem
wipe battery stats and maybe recalibrate the battery
but first one should fix it
cheers
ps: i just checked, my desire is at 18% with 3.693mV, now you see the differance
crendot said:
when you look at the voltage there isnt that much drain, so its only a displaying problem
wipe battery stats and maybe recalibrate the battery
but first one should fix it
cheers
ps: i just checked, my desire is at 18% with 3.693mV, now you see the differance
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is what I've done so far:
Drained battery to 0% (log above) and charged it a little bit while powered off (like 20%). Turned on the phone, and obtained those logs (last lines only):
Code:
2011/09/19|14:41:25|-268mA|10%|3644mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:42:25|-267mA|10%|3644mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:43:25|-270mA|10%|3644mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:44:25|-269mA|9%|3644mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:45:25|-267mA|9%|3644mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:46:25|-268mA|9%|3644mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:47:25|-266mA|8%|3644mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:48:25|-267mA|8%|3644mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:49:25|-269mA|7%|3640mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:50:25|-267mA|7%|3640mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:51:25|-266mA|7%|3640mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:52:25|-267mA|7%|3640mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:53:25|-267mA|6%|3640mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:54:25|-267mA|6%|3640mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:55:25|-267mA|5%|3635mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:56:25|-266mA|5%|3635mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:57:25|-267mA|5%|3635mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:58:25|-268mA|5%|3635mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|14:59:25|-268mA|4%|3630mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|15:00:25|-319mA|4%|3630mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|15:01:25|-268mA|4%|3630mV|38.0ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|15:02:25|-270mA|3%|3610mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|15:03:25|-269mA|3%|3610mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|15:04:25|-270mA|2%|3586mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|15:05:25|-273mA|2%|3586mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|15:06:25|-273mA|2%|3586mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|15:07:25|-273mA|2%|3586mV|38.1ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|15:08:25|-289mA|1%|3513mV|38.3ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|15:09:25|-290mA|1%|3513mV|38.3ºC|1|0
2011/09/19|15:09:51|-290mA|0%|3464mV|38.3ºC|1|0
It seems more "smooth" discharge now. Right now, I'm charging my phone off; going to turn on phone once it reaches "green light" with charger on, and plug it off once phone booted. Maybe then, it can know what's maximum and minimum.
So far, I tried to charge my phone to full and erase batterystats.bin but, as you can see at the first post, it didn't work well.. On the other hand, the phone charged-discharged only once in this ROM, you think it could be better if I've given a "second chance"?
i dont know much about that "battery calibrating" and reseting stuff, you have to search in the forum
only thing i want to say is, dont do that deep drains!
recharge at least 5%! you kill your battery, lithium-ion batterys get serious damage from deep drains
crendot said:
i dont know much about that "battery calibrating" and reseting stuff, you have to search in the forum
only thing i want to say is, dont do that deep drains!
recharge at least 5%! you kill your battery, lithium-ion batterys get serious damage from deep drains
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I know, but when phone thinks it's 30% and not warn me, how can I do it?
In order to calibrate the battery meter - FYI the battery itself cannot be calibrated, as Li-Ion batteries have a very low memory compared to old Ni-Cd etc. batteries - you have to go through the following procedure:
1) charge the battery to 100%;
2) let the battery discharge until the phone shuts itself down;
3) plug the wall charger into the phone, boot the phone up then charge the battery to 100% without interruptions.
If the above procedure does not yield the expected results, you can try fully charging the phone (LED showing green) with it completely turned off (after completely draining it). Again, the charging procedure should not be interrupted.
Source: personal experience - had to do this twice after installing new ROMs, as the phone was shutting down at ~14% (working like a charm now).
Regarding the matter of battery wear because of complete discharges, Li-Ion batteries do indeed have a lower cycle count than old-school batteries, but the standard charge/discharge number a Li-Ion battery can take is ~350, so you can't damage the battery pack by doing a full cycle per month (required to keep the battery meter accurate).
Good luck!
TVTV said:
In order to calibrate the battery meter - FYI the battery itself cannot be calibrated, as Li-Ion batteries have a very low memory compared to old Ni-Cd etc. batteries - you have to go through the following procedure:
1) charge the battery to 100%;
2) let the battery discharge until the phone shuts itself down;
3) plug the wall charger into the phone, boot the phone up then charge the battery to 100% without interruptions.
If the above procedure does not yield the expected results, you can try fully charging the phone (LED showing green) with it completely turned off (after completely draining it). Again, the charging procedure should not be interrupted.
Source: personal experience - had to do this twice after installing new ROMs, as the phone was shutting down at ~14% (working like a charm now).
Regarding the matter of battery wear because of complete discharges, Li-Ion batteries do indeed have a lower cycle count than old-school batteries, but the standard charge/discharge number a Li-Ion battery can take is ~350, so you can't damage the battery pack by doing a full cycle per month (required to keep the battery meter accurate).
Good luck!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for your answer...
Today I realized that it my concern was a quick one. Today, I discharged battery to 0 percent, plugged the AC charger while it's OFF and charged it for around 2h22m until Led-green-full; then turned on the phone with charger plugged and plugged it off just after the boot process. After that, I let the phone to discharge (I helped it a little )
I actually saw "Plug your charger" warning this time, and according to Bat. Mon. Widget, it gone down until 13%! If I do compare the mV values with the old ones, I can see that somehow the phone does learn which mV value correspond to which percentage better.
Even though it gone from 13% to 0% in two minutes, it's at least better than 30% to 0%.. Also, when I check the readings after I plugged in, I saw that percentage-voltage matching is slightly higher, showing that the phone now shows lower percentage for the same voltage - which shows that it learns percentage better.
After one or two charge-discharge cycle, I think it'll learn absolute 0
BTW; the battery says 3.4V 1400mAh and my maximum voltage is 4160mV (100%) and minimum is 3415mV (0%). Are these values normal, you think?
PS: What I'd recommend from anyone who loves flashing ROMs as much as I do is: AFTER YOU FLASHED A NEW ROM, CHARGE YOUR BATTERY TO FULL (100%) AND ERASE THE BATTERY STATS. AFTER THIS, NEVER, I SAY, NEVER ERASE YOUR BATTERY STATS FOR LONG TIME IN ORDER FOR YOUR PHONE TO LEARN STATS BETTER! Erase after long time, say 3 months for wear effects to be accounted, but well, I think you should be fine even after you don't do this
Maybe you did already know that, but, well, I learned it hard way
EDIT: Phone shutdown at 13% after this, but I think it'll do better in time..
Can't Calibrate the Widget
I am having a similar issue with my htc aria. Problem is that it gets to about 78% and then won't go any higher. It even shows (in Battery Monitor Widget)
"Discharging" and "AC plugged". I have let it sit plenty long enough to be fully charged and then completely discharged it (until it shut itself down, which was not 0%) and recharged until it reaches 78% again and stops charging. I'm guessing it is so far out of whack that it says I'm at 78% but I am really at 100%.
The widget says to charge to 100% and then drain completely to 0% to calibrate. I can't do either from what I can tell. So what to do?
theGanymedes said:
Today, I discharged battery to 0 percent, plugged the AC charger while it's OFF and charged it for around 2h22m until Led-green-full; then turned on the phone with charger plugged and plugged it off just after the boot process.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Quick tip - let the phone charge for another hour or so after the light goes green (when charging it while powered off). I've read that the light goes green at about 95%. It takes another hour for the phone to really charge to 100%. That's because Li-Ion batteries use two stages to charge: a fast one and a slow one. More details here.
Glad i could help.
P.S. - It also took me two complete charge/discharge cycles to fully calibrate my battery meter after switching from FroYo to Gingerbread.
@vkyjackie - Try fully charging the phone while powered off. If it still doesn't fully charge (LED green), then you might have an issue with either the battery pack or the wall charger.

[Q] Battery weird %. Broken?

Whenver i flash a new rom, i make it a point to use BatteryCaliberation from Market.
Though since the last couple of times, I have noticed a weird thing.
Whenever i let the battery charge, it stays on a particular % for too long,
in my case (most of the times), its 60% or 72%. And then directly jumps to 100%. (this 100% is confirmed by the mV in BatteryCaliberation.
And while discharging, it goes to 0%. Then when i remove the battery and power on, it shows 2% (Although one time , it went to 20% )
Is my battery broken and should i replace it? (It has been giving me crappy battery life too)
i've got this, always charges up to 70-80% and stays there for a while, then jumps to 100%, changing roms, calibrating battery doesn't fix it.
Always wondered why it happened, I assume it's to do with the battery but not sure if faulty or not, hopefully someone can shed a bit of light...
First guys The battery calibration has been shown to be pointless and useless. Dont bother doing it. Next if you ever do bring a battery to pure 0% then it will bot boot at all. The issue could be many things. From a bad battery to just the way your device charges. As long as it last a decent amount of time then you may be able to rule out the battery being bad. I wouldnt worry about it unless you see the battery discharging really really fast.
Try to go into recovery and wipe battery stats, and then discharge it to 0 % until it won't turn on and fully charge it 0 ma on current widget. it happened to me many times and this is how i fixed it (old problem on hd2 on android nand)

[Q] Battery level detection issues with HTC One M8 (Sprint)

A few weeks ago I rooted my phone with the latest version of TWRP and installed Liquid Smooth as my OS. I haven't had any problems with it until today, when it died (as expected, since I did not charge it for a few days) and I began to charge it from 0%. I began to charge it and noticed that it charges ridiculously slow even from a wall outlet. The bigger problem is that the OS detects a different battery level as the recovery tool. For example, I can leave my OS booted up while charging for 30 minutes and it will display something like 20% battery. Then if I shut it off the battery icon and the recovery tool (TWRP) will display anything ranging from 0-20%. It is random, too. One second it could be 15%, then next time I reboot it might say 5%. The problem then is that when I boot up the OS, it uses the percentage that the recovery tool displays. So if I shut off the phone when the battery displayed 30%, then next time I boot it up it will display the battery number from the recovery tool (anything from 0-30%). I have been charging and rebooting my phone for an hour now and it should say something like 60% but it only reads 21%. Is there any way to fix this? What happens when my battery really reaches 100% but my phone keeps charging it because it thinks it is lower? Is this dangerous? Any help would be appreciated.

Low battery health after replacement

Hi! My old battery was inefficient (45% health at AccuBattery) and it swelled so I decided to replace that one. Everything goes easy because it wasn't my first battery replacement in this phone but just after replacement I noticed that the new battery is draining fast also. I was operating on MIUI 12 by Xiaomi.eu, so I decided to rollback to Stock ROM with MIUI 11. I flashed it with MiFlasher (With full wipe). But still new battery was draining fast (51% health) in AccuBattery. Then I want to make sure if this new battery is actually new, so I bought another battery, but this time from other company with good rating and replace it. And this do nothing because the newest battery phone is using only with around 50%. I tried to recalibrate battery once, I drain phone to 0%. And then I want to charge it to 100% without turning it on, but it turns on automatically and it gives no effect.
What should I do now?
Only one right way is to measure battery capacity with special charger. Something like this.
Drain battery to 0%, turn phone off, connect through device, and charge to 100%.

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