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Hi all,
I am puzzled by my problem. I am using Virtuous 2.7 + King's BFS kernel #4.
My phone battery will drop quickly from 100% to 92% right after unplugged from the power cord. By quickly, I meant I did not use the phone, killed all tasks, and battery will drop to 92% literally in minutes.
Bump charging, wiping battery stats, wiping dalvik cache, killing all tasks are not helping at all. I don't have SetCPU, but someone in the forum mentioned they have SetCPU, and it is not helping either.
Is anyone having this problem? Does anyone have any idea on how to solve this?
Please help.
Thank you!!!
chillmeow said:
Hi all,
I am puzzled by my problem. I am using Virtuous 2.7 + King's BFS kernel #4.
My phone battery will drop quickly from 100% to 92% right after unplugged from the power cord. By quickly, I meant I did not use the phone, killed all tasks, and battery will drop to 92% literally in minutes.
Bump charging, wiping battery stats, wiping dalvik cache, killing all tasks are not helping at all. I don't have SetCPU, but someone in the forum mentioned they have SetCPU, and it is not helping either.
Is anyone having this problem? Does anyone have any idea on how to solve this?
Please help.
Thank you!!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I spoke to RMK as well as others about this in IRC, doesn't look like anything we can do, deep in the HTC code I guess.
I have the same issue using SkyRaider 3.1. Battery is 100% then after 5-10 minutes drops down to low 90s. It bothered me at first but after several days of moderate to heavy use and still having almost 50% battery left at the end of the day, I just figured it was some kind of bug when reading the battery level at the beginning. How is your battery life overall? If it's like mine, then i wouldn't worry too much about it as long as it's lasting longer. I'm using the 1750mAh battery from Sedio.
I was having the exact same problems until I went back to stock everything and bump charged. Took the OTA for 2.2, rooted, custom recovery, bump charged, wiped stats and cache and now I'm good to go. I usually dont think crap like this works but it made a huge difference in battery life and stopped the 100-90% problems I was having.
KB
I found this on EVO forum, but I don't know how his solution works. I personally don't think this would be the solution.
http://ip208-100-42-21.static.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=704272
I am using the 1500 mAh battery.
My battery life is uptime around 24 hours and awake time around 6-9 hours depending on usage.
so you're not having the issue anymore, after going back to stock (non rooted) with the official OTA 2.2?
KB Smoka said:
I was having the exact same problems until I went back to stock everything and bump charged. Took the OTA for 2.2, rooted, custom recovery, bump charged, wiped stats and cache and now I'm good to go. I usually dont think crap like this works but it made a huge difference in battery life and stopped the 100-90% problems I was having.
KB
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
KB Smoka, so you don't have this problem anymore?
Do you think format the phone and wipe all the data will help?
Have anyone tried formating the phone?
I've searched and found that the cause is the phone saying the battery is charged fully when its not basically so to fix this after it goes to 100% while the phone is one then u should turn it off and let it charge fully from there
Sent from my ADR6300 using XDA App
superchilpil said:
I've searched and found that the cause is the phone saying the battery is charged fully when its not basically so to fix this after it goes to 100% while the phone is one then u should turn it off and let it charge fully from there
Sent from my ADR6300 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I did bump charge this phone, but it still drops like crazy.
I'll try this out tonight.
Thanks!
Is this a once time fix thing or do you have to do it every time you charge?
bump charging 4 or 5 times in a row (basically bump as many times as you need to to get it to where the light turns green withing a minute of 2 or plugging it in again) and then wiping battery stats solved this for me... kinda.. i still have to bump twice, but after that it'll stay at 100 for a good while and work it's way down normally, no jumping 10% down..
superchilpil said:
I've searched and found that the cause is the phone saying the battery is charged fully when its not basically so to fix this after it goes to 100% while the phone is one then u should turn it off and let it charge fully from there
Sent from my ADR6300 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is bump charging. Something htc is unable or unwilling to fix.
The issue has been known for a while and you have to 'bump charge' every time to avoid the 5-10% drop.
Here's their response about fixing the "bump charge".
"Dear **********,
I understand you would like to know if an update has be released to help get a full charge on your battery without having to bump charge it. At this time we have no information about any updates being released to help resolve this issue on your device. If an update is released for your device you will receive a notification on your device that an update is available.
To send a reply to this message or let me know I have successfully answered your question log in to our ContactUs site using your email address and your ticket number ************.
Sincerely,
Victor
HTC"
melophat said:
bump charging 4 or 5 times in a row (basically bump as many times as you need to to get it to where the light turns green withing a minute of 2 or plugging it in again) and then wiping battery stats solved this for me... kinda.. i still have to bump twice, but after that it'll stay at 100 for a good while and work it's way down normally, no jumping 10% down..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Do you bump charge every single time you charge right now? It's pain in the butt if I have to bump charge everyday.
Yup every day. 4 or 5 times is way overkill though. Just charge phone until green, turn off (don't need to unplug), wait until it turns green then do the plug/unplug one more time.
ufvj217 said:
so you're not having the issue anymore, after going back to stock (non rooted) with the official OTA 2.2?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Went to stock (official OTA), rooted, custom recovery, bump charged, reset stats and cache and I'm good now.
I charged it to "full" while it was powered on. Once the light turned green I turned the phone off, charged again until the light turned green. Took about 25 minutes. Powered up in recovery wiped battery and cache and now I'm good. The key is after doing all this you have to let the phone completely die.
If you're wiping your battery stats after a bump charge, you will have this problem every time you don't bump charge.
If you wipe your battery stats after it goes green without a bump charge, you won't have this problem.
This is because the software thinks the bump charged battery levels equal 100% charge. A bump charge adds approximately 10 percent of charge.
Formatting your phone or any software changes won't actually do anything other than wipe your battery stats while your phone is not at bump charge levels.
vantagejuan said:
If you're wiping your battery stats after a bump charge, you will have this problem every time you don't bump charge.
If you wipe your battery stats after it goes green without a bump charge, you won't have this problem.
This is because the software thinks the bump charged battery levels equal 100% charge. A bump charge adds approximately 10 percent of charge.
Formatting your phone or any software changes won't actually do anything other than wipe your battery stats while your phone is not at bump charge levels.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'll try this instead! I don't want to bump charge everyday! It's too troublesome.
chillmeow said:
Hi all,
I am puzzled by my problem. I am using Virtuous 2.7 + King's BFS kernel #4.
My phone battery will drop quickly from 100% to 92% right after unplugged from the power cord. By quickly, I meant I did not use the phone, killed all tasks, and battery will drop to 92% literally in minutes.
Bump charging, wiping battery stats, wiping dalvik cache, killing all tasks are not helping at all. I don't have SetCPU, but someone in the forum mentioned they have SetCPU, and it is not helping either.
Is anyone having this problem? Does anyone have any idea on how to solve this?
Please help.
Thank you!!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The reason this happens is because the battery gets charged fully to 100%, and then is allowed to slowly drain back to 90% (or so) before it's charged back to 100% again. This is how Lithium batteries are charged.
Try this: charge the battery to 100%, and immediately disconnect it after it's full. Notice how the battery doesn't drop to the low 90's immediately.
The reason "bump charging" appears to work is because there is no drain on the battery, since the phone is off. It goes to 100% and stops.
There's nothing we can do code-wise to fix this; it's just how the battery technology works. Keeping it fully charged at 100% while on would damage the charging capacity of our phones.
Btw.. wrong forum.
Solutions in search of a problem
Let me preface this by saying that I’m not an electrical engineer, or any sort of expert on phone hardware, but I think a couple issues are being confused. I’ve seen many posts about this battery “problem” here and elsewhere and an important point is being missed. People are confusing what the battery is actually doing with what the phone SAYS the battery is doing. They are NOT the same thing. The battery is a physical device and it will do what it’s going to do.
Battery life is a function of battery quality, initial state of charge, and demand. If you want the battery to last longer, look at ways of reducing demand. What applications are in use? How long is the screen on? What brightness level? Overclocking and undervolting settings? All these will affect ACTUAL battery life.
At lot of the “solutions” discussed have nothing to do with conserving energy use, but have everything to do with messing with how the phone REPORTS the state of charge. A good example is the issue of the initial drop reported by many users during the first few minutes after unplugging the charger. I see this on my own phone. If the phone is “taught” that 100% charge is when it is totally crammed with juice and plugged in as well, it’s not surprising that there is a good bit of voltage drop (+/- 10%?) right after unplugging. Does this mean there is a problem? NO! It’s just the battery doing what batteries do. A lot of the suggestions about wiping battery stats and such have nothing to do with saving energy. They are ways of fiddling with how the phone REPORTS its condition under various circumstances.
My advice: if you are happy with how your battery lasts, over the course of a day or so, then learn to relax, crack open a cold brew, and revel in just what a great phone the Incredible is. If your battery isn’t lasting as long as you need it to, then look at ways to save power or get a larger capacity battery. Tweaking the battery meter function is simply a feel-good exercise and won’t get you any actual improved performance. END OF RANT.
I can confirm that my gf's phone and my good buddies phone(both were never rooted) have never had a problem with the phone charging up slow first off(both phones charge about 1% per minute). And since they accepted the OTA, have not had the problem of charging to 100% and quickly jumping down to 90%. For instance, the other day my buddy charged his phone while on to 100%, played a game for about 2 minutes and closed it, battery was at 99%. Now I have tried and continually try every possible solution to my battery dying quick and charging slow, but am realizing that this must just be the cost of customizing my phone to my liking. And at least for the moment, a stock 2.2 DINC is just not an option for me.
larsrya8 said:
The reason this happens is because the battery gets charged fully to 100%, and then is allowed to slowly drain back to 90% (or so) before it's charged back to 100% again. This is how Lithium batteries are charged.
Try this: charge the battery to 100%, and immediately disconnect it after it's full. Notice how the battery doesn't drop to the low 90's immediately.
The reason "bump charging" appears to work is because there is no drain on the battery, since the phone is off. It goes to 100% and stops.
There's nothing we can do code-wise to fix this; it's just how the battery technology works. Keeping it fully charged at 100% while on would damage the charging capacity of our phones.
Btw.. wrong forum.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry that I posted in the wrong forum. I thought this is related to the kernel or ROM I am using (Which is development right????).
Not to question your knowledge about the "battery technology", but why is it only happening to certain people? Nowadays most device are using Li-ion battery, why this phenomenon do not occur to all devices?
OK, so I searched how to re-calibrate the battery of the Epic 4G Touch after a ROM flash and I get about 10 different answers.
If anyone knows the correct, tried, and tested way to do this I would love to know and maybe it could be a sticky?
Easiest way is the tried and true method of charging to 100%, wiping battery stats, using the phone until it dies, charge up to 100% before turning it on, turn it on un-plug re-plug charger, charge to 100% and go
I use a battery calibrator app after charging to 100% there are several in the market
tramane said:
Easiest way is the tried and true method of charging to 100%, wiping battery stats, using the phone until it dies, charge up to 100% before turning it on, turn it on un-plug re-plug charger, charge to 100% and go
I use a battery calibrator app after charging to 100% there are several in the market
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
According to some people who are a lot smarter, or at least know much more about this stuff than me, says this does nothing on Galaxy S class phones. Here's a link to a thread that provides a calibration method, but even Entropy states that this method isn't even necessary for most people.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1312273
I re-flashed my ROM last night (Runny Extreme Surprise.) Before this, I had no issues what so ever.
Now my battery seems to refuse to charge past 35%. After flashing the ROM and setting up a few minor apps, I drained the battery to 0%, charged the phone while off via AC (not USB) for about 5 hours and it still didn't get to the green light to say it's fully charged. I booted it up to see where it's at and it's at 35% and now seems to refuse to charge any further.
I tried this again, also deleting the battstats file (Just to be absolutelyyy sure) and got the same result.
Interestingly enough (i'm not sure if it's relevant), the phone says its current battery voltage is 4179mV, which is around the same it usually reports when it's been fully charged at 100% in the past.
Does anyone have any idea what may be going on here?
Go into recovery and check what percentage you have there. If it reports 100%, download the rom again and reflash.
Sent from a dream.
Teichopsia said:
Go into recovery and check what percentage you have there. If it reports 100%, download the rom again and reflash.
Sent from a dream.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It also reports 35% in recovery.
Any clue what that may indicate?
Denavar said:
It also reports 35% in recovery.
Any clue what that may indicate?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No idea. Perhaps the battery is failing? How old is it?
You can also try a few troubleshooting steps. Test another battery in your cell, different charger and so on.
Edit: test with a different stable GB rom for good measure. I doubt it's that but you never know.
Sent from a dream.
Charging on my stock rom bootloader unlocked htc wildfire s takes about 5hrs from 10p to 100p. I used a wall charger. Is it normal or should i do something,
Cant find the answer after searching
Guide this NOOB please
subinho said:
Charging on my stock rom bootloader unlocked htc wildfire s takes about 5hrs from 10p to 100p. I used a wall charger. Is it normal or should i do something,
Cant find the answer after searching
Guide this NOOB please
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've noticed that on my phone it will charge to about 90% and no further sometimes even if charging for 3 days.. But when I reboot it it gives me the actual percentage battery life. Try rebooting after charging it for an hour or 2, and see if the percentage suddenly jumps up. If not then you just need to get a new charger.
Try this and see if it helps.
>Drain the battery completely, till the point it shuts off.
>Take out battery.
>Charge the phone till 100% while it's switched off.
>Boot into recovery. Wipe the battery stats.
>Unplug the charger and boot.
I read somewhere that it's advisable to charge the phone when it reaches below 20% and continuously till 100% (without disconnection). Each disconnection means a new cycle of the battery which degrades the life.
99Aaron99 said:
I've noticed that on my phone it will charge to about 90% and no further sometimes even if charging for 3 days.. But when I reboot it it gives me the actual percentage battery life. Try rebooting after charging it for an hour or 2, and see if the percentage suddenly jumps up. If not then you just need to get a new charger.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yup, exactly. when i restart the phone at 70 or 80% suddenly jumps up to 100p fully charged
sukhjit321 said:
Try this and see if it helps.
>Drain the battery completely, till the point it shuts off.
>Take out battery.
>Charge the phone till 100% while it's switched off.
>Boot into recovery. Wipe the battery stats.
>Unplug the charger and boot.
I read somewhere that it's advisable to charge the phone when it reaches below 20% and continuously till 100% (without disconnection). Each disconnection means a new cycle of the battery which degrades the life.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
@sukhjit yup me too read the same and i recharge my phone below 20p
And will give a try to your first method, but could you suggest me a recovery - any custom recovery possible in an s-on bootloader unlocked, rooted wildfire s.
Thank you in advance
sukhjit321 said:
Try this and see if it helps.
>Drain the battery completely, till the point it shuts off.
>Take out battery.
>Charge the phone till 100% while it's switched off.
>Boot into recovery. Wipe the battery stats.
>Unplug the charger and boot.
I read somewhere that it's advisable to charge the phone when it reaches below 20% and continuously till 100% (without disconnection). Each disconnection means a new cycle of the battery which degrades the life.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
And as you told, i have turned off autosync, disabled automatic brightness, animation, wifi, gprs
subinho said:
@sukhjit yup me too read the same and i recharge my phone below 20p
And will give a try to your first method, but could you suggest me a recovery - any custom recovery possible in an s-on bootloader unlocked, rooted wildfire s.
Thank you in advance
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I Use CWM 5.0.2.8...
sukhjit321 said:
Try this and see if it helps.
>Drain the battery completely, till the point it shuts off.
>Take out battery.
>Charge the phone till 100% while it's switched off.
>Boot into recovery. Wipe the battery stats.
>Unplug the charger and boot.
I read somewhere that it's advisable to charge the phone when it reaches below 20% and continuously till 100% (without disconnection). Each disconnection means a new cycle of the battery which degrades the life.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
@sukhjit, Did the same... No difference
I checked the battery information while charging. Jumps to 4228mv then charges slowly. If I disconnect the charger and reconnect then the voltage drops to a value, and again jumps to 4220mv after a 2-3pc rise in battery charge.. then charges slowly taking about 5 hrs for full charge. What should I do??
subinho said:
@sukhjit, Did the same... No difference
I checked the battery information while charging. Jumps to 4228mv then charges slowly. If I disconnect the charger and reconnect then the voltage drops to a value, and again jumps to 4220mv after a 2-3pc rise in battery charge.. then charges slowly taking about 5 hrs for full charge. What should I do??
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You could try replacing the battery! If this doesn't help most probably the battery is at fault. If any friend or family has a htc phone with same battery, you can ask for a one day exchange and find out if it's the battery or phone.
---------- Post added at 05:27 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:26 PM ----------
Also Are you using original htc charger? Charging from PC takes a lot longer as PC supplies less voltage to the phone.
Hi, i wanna know whats the best way to wipe my nitro and whats the order
i usually do it like this:
1. wipe factory reset
2. wipe cache
3 wipe datvilk
and thats it
i saw many option like wipe battery statts and fix permission so when i have to do that?
thanks in advance!
radhames562 said:
Hi, i wanna know whats the best way to wipe my nitro and whats the order
i usually do it like this:
1. wipe factory reset
2. wipe cache
3 wipe datvilk
and thats it
i saw many option like wipe battery statts and fix permission so when i have to do that?
thanks in advance!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is the right way to wipe your phone... Battery stats wiping is done when you want to re calibrate the battery (mostly done with battery life isnt that good as experienced by other users)
salimbaba said:
That is the right way to wipe your phone... Battery stats wiping is done when you want to re calibrate the battery (mostly done with battery life isnt that good as experienced by other users)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
From what I understand, calibrating the battery does little to no good; and wiping battery stats should just reset the battery consumption stats. Same thing as a full charge does I believe.
lordcheeto03 said:
From what I understand, calibrating the battery does little to no good; and wiping battery stats should just reset the battery consumption stats. Same thing as a full charge does I believe.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i believe that is a myth created because people wipe battery stats but don't perform the rest of the steps for calibration.
You are supposed to wipe battery stats when the battery has a full charge.
then you let it completely die.
then you charge it back to 100%
when im doing mine to make the process fast, i just wait till a night where my phone is fully charged, then i go into CWM and wipe the battery stats. then i boot up the phone and open a long movie file (2-3) hours preferably. this will drain your battery fast. I run the movie file and restart it when it ends until the phone dies (dont turn it off at 1% let it die).
this is where the calibration comes in. when your phone is not calibrated right you will notice it sits at 1% for 15-20 minutes even while playing a movie. once the phone dies.
i plug it into the charger and let it charge with the phone OFF, overnight. this will allow it to trickle charge to maximum charge. when you wake up in the morning your phone is fully calibrated. you will notice that it will actually stay at 100% for a few minutes after boot. this means its calibrated properly. (if you have an old battery it might not sit at 100% long, but it should atleast read 100% when the phone is booted. a poorly calibrated battery will read somewhere between 95%-98% after booting up from a full charge.
at least this is my experience with it.
i have done this alot because i used to have to use 3 batteries and calibrate them all. I ended up throwing out one because it was never holding a proper charge and i use my 2nd best battery for backup now and i stick with the one that holds the best charge.
*edit* a side note the one that doesn't hold a charge is because i had the phone in the sun one day and it overheated. overheating is the worst thing for a li-on battery (or most batteries at that).
side note: if battery calibration was a myth then every phone manufacturer wouldn't have warnings about how to perform 1st charge. remember they always tell you, let the phone fully die, then fully charge it while off. They tell you that becuase it is part of properly setting the battery stats.
I am not an expert on all this but i have read a bunch of threads by experts, and the proof is in the pudding... my battery life has steadily increased since i started following that advice.
---------- Post added at 08:38 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:30 PM ----------
i believe people say calibration doesn't work becuase they wipe their battery stats then they dont let it die properly. This is actually counter productive and tricking your phone into thinking your battery is dead before it is. then people actually get worse batterly life and conclude that wiping stats doesn't do anything. also if you didn't fully charge it would trick your phone into stopping a charge early (because overcharge causes battery damage).
improperly done you would end up with a battery that does not fully charge and tells you its dead before it actually is.
^ not an ideal situation.
KronicSkillz said:
i believe that is a myth created because people wipe battery stats but don't perform the rest of the steps for calibration.
You are supposed to wipe battery stats when the battery has a full charge.
then you let it completely die.
then you charge it back to 100%
when im doing mine to make the process fast, i just wait till a night where my phone is fully charged, then i go into CWM and wipe the battery stats. then i boot up the phone and open a long movie file (2-3) hours preferably. this will drain your battery fast. I run the movie file and restart it when it ends until the phone dies (dont turn it off at 1% let it die).
this is where the calibration comes in. when your phone is not calibrated right you will notice it sits at 1% for 15-20 minutes even while playing a movie. once the phone dies.
i plug it into the charger and let it charge with the phone OFF, overnight. this will allow it to trickle charge to maximum charge. when you wake up in the morning your phone is fully calibrated. you will notice that it will actually stay at 100% for a few minutes after boot. this means its calibrated properly. (if you have an old battery it might not sit at 100% long, but it should atleast read 100% when the phone is booted. a poorly calibrated battery will read somewhere between 95%-98% after booting up from a full charge.
at least this is my experience with it.
i have done this alot because i used to have to use 3 batteries and calibrate them all. I ended up throwing out one because it was never holding a proper charge and i use my 2nd best battery for backup now and i stick with the one that holds the best charge.
*edit* a side note the one that doesn't hold a charge is because i had the phone in the sun one day and it overheated. overheating is the worst thing for a li-on battery (or most batteries at that).
side note: if battery calibration was a myth then every phone manufacturer wouldn't have warnings about how to perform 1st charge. remember they always tell you, let the phone fully die, then fully charge it while off. They tell you that becuase it is part of properly setting the battery stats.
I am not an expert on all this but i have read a bunch of threads by experts, and the proof is in the pudding... my battery life has steadily increased since i started following that advice.
---------- Post added at 08:38 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:30 PM ----------
i believe people say calibration doesn't work becuase they wipe their battery stats then they dont let it die properly. This is actually counter productive and tricking your phone into thinking your battery is dead before it is. then people actually get worse batterly life and conclude that wiping stats doesn't do anything. also if you didn't fully charge it would trick your phone into stopping a charge early (because overcharge causes battery damage).
improperly done you would end up with a battery that does not fully charge and tells you its dead before it actually is.
^ not an ideal situation.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I was just putting that out there. I personally have attempted calibrating my battery like you say to do; calibrate on full charge, drain all the way, then fully charge while powered off... I haven't noticed any benefits whatsoever. I've always been able to charge to 100% and I assume that with my chronic ROM flashing and bad charging habits that if it were required, I would have noticed some kind of negative issues by now. CM9/ICS is still better on battery than CM10 or any of its variants could ever dream to be. I got my Nitro in December of '11 and I've been abusing my battery with reckless abandon ever since...
lordcheeto03 said:
I was just putting that out there. I personally have attempted calibrating my battery like you say to do; calibrate on full charge, drain all the way, then fully charge while powered off... I haven't noticed any benefits whatsoever. I've always been able to charge to 100% and I assume that with my chronic ROM flashing and bad charging habits that if it were required, I would have noticed some kind of negative issues by now. CM9/ICS is still better on battery than CM10 or any of its variants could ever dream to be. I got my Nitro in December of '11 and I've been abusing my battery with reckless abandon ever since...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
...... these batteries are actually supposed to work better over time for a few years and i know cm10 is bad on battery whats your point...
KronicSkillz said:
...... these batteries are actually supposed to work better over time for a few years and i know cm10 is bad on battery whats your point...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lay off the Kronic, man and follow the story. But seriously; you were saying that the thought that battery calibration doesn't do anything is only because most people don't follow the proper procedure. I was just pointing out that I abuse my battery to no ends and have only ever calibrated it once or twice using that procedure and have yet to see any ill effects from my rampant disregard for the battery without semi-regular calibrations; and that I never noticed any effect whatsoever from the calibrations. Just carrying on a discussion; or are forums not meant for that?
I would add wipe /system to that list, since we re talking about FULL wipe.
Oh and yea ... wipe battery stats is the least of your concern, i keep reading it doesnt do anything ... also tried doing it manually by removing the battery (its a whole procedure in a post i read) and i didnt see any difference, well obviously it will never affect the way your ROM reacts or works, even for the battery %.
just1nsama said:
I would add wipe /system to that list, since we re talking about FULL wipe.
Oh and yea ... wipe battery stats is the least of your concern, i keep reading it doesnt do anything ... also tried doing it manually by removing the battery (its a whole procedure in a post i read) and i didnt see any difference, well obviously it will never affect the way your ROM reacts or works, even for the battery %.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How i sipe te system?
radhames562 said:
How i sipe te system?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Depending on what recovery you use:
CWM: Mount and storage > format system (or wipe system, same thing)
TWRP: WIPE > System
*****
So in order, FULL WIPE: Factory reset (wipe data), wipe cache, wipe dalvik cache, wipe system
just1nsama said:
Depending on what recovery you use:
CWM: Mount and storage > format system (or wipe system, same thing)
TWRP: WIPE > System
*****
So in order, FULL WIPE: Factory reset (wipe data), wipe cache, wipe dalvik cache, wipe system
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you! I gonna start doing it like this nos on
Even google engineer said that wipe battery stats did nothing at all, however, I do have some luck with battery calibration on other devices, and the difference is noticeable.
P930 seems to be fairly accurate on battery indicator and I haven't done a calibration yet.
the real question is are google engineer's experts on ni-mh batteries or software developement, that is the question the guide i read about it was written by a battery expert, while its possible they were just blowing smoke i have a hard time believing it does nothing. What would be more believable is that most batteries don't need calibration if they were properly calibrated on first use. All i know is i had 3 batteries going in and out of my phone for a few months and when i started doing calibration i got 4+ hours of extra battery life. It may have just been because i was swapping batteries that the calibration was messed, my only point was that if a battery does need calibration that is the method i've found that works. if it doesn't need calibration then calibration will do nothing, that is most likely why everyone says it does nothing because MOST batteries don't need calibration as that google engineer probably knows these phones and batteries do a decent job of staying calibrated. but you also can't say calibration is a myth because the facts are every battery manufacturer has a huge warning on how to properly first charge a batter (same thing as calibrate) upon first use of the phone. I would imagine they have these warnings so that people don't need to worry about calibration later. I don't know im not a battery expert, but i do know logic when i see it.
This is the G+ post by the Google engineer
https://plus.google.com/app/basic/stream/z13dgb0rksywh3muq222fzkqnwfgdbgrk04
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