I have this problem since i'm using custom roms, but it happened just a few times, so i wanted to know why. My phone says e.g there's 27% left but then it it says battery empty and turns off, used insertcoin nightly,stable and now Runnymede AIO
. Is there any way to get the real percentage shown? I already wiped battery stats..
Maybe you should calibrate your battery, wiping batery stats only is not always enough.
Here: myhtcdesire.com/tutorials/how-to-improve-your-battery-life-calibration-tutorial
or here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=755903
If it says 27% then goes off that definitely needs calibrating. Often its about 15% which is actually when the desire turns itself off to protect the battery
rootSU said:
If it says 27% then goes off that definitely needs calibrating. Often its about 15% which is actually when the desire turns itself off to protect the battery
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I could hardly imagine such solution would be implemented in such untidy manner. All gb sense roms have that, yet aosp turns off at 1% as it should.
SwiftKeyed from my HTC Desire using XDA App.
Before setting up new Roma need to do full вайп including and batteries.
Try. if not yet the Council will help Ladies! is done through recovery.
(apologize for bad English)
---------- Post added at 05:54 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:43 PM ----------
Calibration of the battery precise, the instruction:
1. We unload the accumulator up to 0 % (while itself it will not be switched off), having started video, or other ways.
2. We take out the accumulator from a handheld computer, we wait about one minute, we insert back (we do not include the device!!).
4. We put on зарядку. I shall repeat, the device is not included! (network з.у. 220В).
5. We leave to be charged up to a full level (the red indicator will be replaced on green, usually it is hour 3 on time).
6. After зарядки we take out the accumulator, NOT including a handheld computer and we wait about one minute.
7. We insert back. Now it is possible to include!
P.S. Sometimes at performance of this procedure the indicator maybe green it is primary at зарядке, all the same three hours it is charged, then the device I include, I charge while the indicator with red does not become green, I take out the battery, I wait minute, I insert аккум into a handheld computer. We unload the accumulator up to 0 % (while itself it will not be switched off), having started video, or other ways.
Mmmmmm this send interesting and rather typical for you.
https://plus.google.com/u/0/105051985738280261832/posts/FV3LVtdVxPT
Sent with Desire.
you do wipe battery in clockmod
[email protected] said:
you do wipe battery in clockmod
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Click to collapse
You didn't read the post above yours, did you?
You got 10 posts. Now stop posting next to no sense information and get your grip.
I can confirm that the phone should shut off around 15% battery. This happened consistently to me running Oxygen 2.3.2.
Calibrate the battery HTC Desire
(Via USB will not work-do from charging a ROOT and
recovery modificirovanoe)
1. charge the body until the green signal diode.
2. disconnect the charging and shut down the body.
3. connect the charger and charge the vyklûčennomu body before the Green diode.
4. Oklûčit′ charge, include body load to the end, turn off and then charge to green diode.5. disconnect the charger,
, not including the body down the back button (or press the volume down) and press the power (enter in recovery), do wipe battery stats.6. Restart
.
Related
Apologies for another not charging thread, i have tried searching for a similar issue but no luck.
I put my DHD to charge as usual last night at around 40%, the charge LED lit up and the battery icon was showing that i am charging.
When i woke this morning, the charge LED and battery icon were still showing that i should be charging yet the phone now only has 33% battery, so clearly hadnt charged. I checked current widget and when the LED and icon show charging i only seem to be getting anywhere between a reading of 40mA and 270mA. With an occasional 300-400mA reading.
I seem to be able to intermittently get the phone to charge and the batt icon to rise by a percent or two but then it seems to stop again. As i am in work at the moment i am having to charge via USB from my PC. Therefore i am currently unable to try another micro USB charger and see if it is indeed the charger or the phone.
Has anyone else had a similar issue, says it charging but it not??
Or anyone have any ideas of a solution??
If it matters i am currently using LeeDrOiD HD V3.3.1 GB. Id rather not have to return it to HTC as i am unsure of how to return the phone to default easily so it could be repaired on warranty.
Thanks in advance,
James
Firstly, download CurrentWidget, set refresh to 15 seconds, and make sure you set it to display battery voltage. If it is showing around 4200mV, it is charged, and you have a problem with the battery gauge.
To double check, turn off your phone, and see if the light goes green at 100%.
Boot back up, just to see if a reset fixes it.
If not, reboot into recovery, and wipe battery stats (or do it properly, turn off, wait until light is green, wait another hour, then boot into recovery and wipe battery stats).
Turn back on, and see if the problem is sorted.
Sent from my Desire HD using Tapatalk
hello mates,
I have rooted my htc desire and installed redux 1.2 ROM(gingerbread) with a ManU kernel...When charging the LED changes to green precisely at 90% (which i dont have a major problem with as it will go all the way to 100% if kept on charge)..also the phone will die at 10-15% of battery...I have read other threads regarding this same problem and am wondering if its a calibration error or is the problem with gingerbread ROMs as someone pointed out...Otherwise the battery is fine...and gives me a decent 1-2 days of use with moderate usage...its jus the problem abt the 15% n going dead which is a lil troublesome as the fone has died on me many a time for that last important msg, call or IM...any help appreciated...cheers..
That's not really a problem. The green LED at 90% is normal for android (try to fix it with battery calibration, helps sometimes) and the shutdown at 10-15% is also normal. Just take the last one how it is, all batteries are different. Some phones shut down at 5%, others at 20%.
Please use the Q&A Forum for questions Thanks
Moving to Q&A
noticed this on ICS dev rom too but also had it on my old G1
wipe cache,battery stats try diffrent kernel
stupidflanders1 said:
hello mates,
I have rooted my htc desire and installed redux 1.2 ROM(gingerbread) with a ManU kernel...When charging the LED changes to green precisely at 90% (which i dont have a major problem with as it will go all the way to 100% if kept on charge)..also the phone will die at 10-15% of battery...I have read other threads regarding this same problem and am wondering if its a calibration error or is the problem with gingerbread ROMs as someone pointed out...Otherwise the battery is fine...and gives me a decent 1-2 days of use with moderate usage...its jus the problem abt the 15% n going dead which is a lil troublesome as the fone has died on me many a time for that last important msg, call or IM...any help appreciated...cheers..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You should try calibrating your battery for the 10-15% dying problem.
And as for the 90% LED changing to green, all AOSP ROMs do that, so no worries there
What worked for me was charging it while the phone is on, when the LED turns green, power it off and charge it again till it turns green.
Repeat this twice and then reboot.
galdel said:
What worked for me was charging it while the phone is on, when the LED turns green, power it off and charge it again till it turns green.
Repeat this twice and then reboot.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is to calibrate the battery. Some people find it useful to run a program called BatteryRepair, in my case I noticed a clear improvement on battery performance.
To avoid calibration problems with the battery, remember to unplug your phone when you flash a new rom!
Tapatalking
Turning off at 15% of battery with Supernova 2.4 ROM
I am using Supernova Xtreme 2.4.0.0 ROM, and my phone turns off at 15% of battery. My battery is freshly calibrated and this problem did not occured with LeeDroid ROM and with the stock ROM neither. On the Droidzon page I have found some info in FAQ section, which says the following:
Question: Recently I let my battery go completely flat. When I switched my handset back on I was bombarded with forced close messages.
This has been reported once previously, but could not be reproduced under Sibere’s extensive testing under similiar conditions. For the same reason, unfortunately, we dont have a solution too. The OS is supposed to prevent a complete drain, and to shutdown at 15% and then 5%. The shutdown at 5% is supposed to be forced too. If it shutdowns, then this issue shouldnt occur. Data2SD depends on a normal shutdown to prevent data corruption. Once Data corruption has occured due to untidy shutdown, data is not unmounted cleanly, and then the issue can recur on every subsequent boot, which would require a complete reinstall.
So it seems to be normal, connected to the ROM, and NOT connected to my battery (it is calibrated).
My question is (which goes to Droidzone firstly), what should I do, if I want to use this ROM, but I do not want it to turn off at 15% rather I want it to turn off my phone at 2%?
Sofokles_ said:
I am using Supernova Xtreme 2.4.0.0 ROM, and my phone turns off at 15% of battery. My battery is freshly calibrated and this problem did not occured with LeeDroid ROM and with the stock ROM neither. On the Droidzon page I have found some info in FAQ section, which says the following:
Question: Recently I let my battery go completely flat. When I switched my handset back on I was bombarded with forced close messages.
This has been reported once previously, but could not be reproduced under Sibere’s extensive testing under similiar conditions. For the same reason, unfortunately, we dont have a solution too. The OS is supposed to prevent a complete drain, and to shutdown at 15% and then 5%. The shutdown at 5% is supposed to be forced too. If it shutdowns, then this issue shouldnt occur. Data2SD depends on a normal shutdown to prevent data corruption. Once Data corruption has occured due to untidy shutdown, data is not unmounted cleanly, and then the issue can recur on every subsequent boot, which would require a complete reinstall.
So it seems to be normal, connected to the ROM, and NOT connected to my battery (it is calibrated).
My question is (which goes to Droidzone firstly), what should I do, if I want to use this ROM, but I do not want it to turn off at 15% rather I want it to turn off my phone at 2%?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm afraid this is not similiar to the issue in the FAQ. Your issue is that phone shutsdown at a level earlier than expected. The Data corruption issue is because the phone did not shutdown at the expected level and went down to as far as zero level of the battery, which resulted therefore in an untidy shutdown with no sync or clean unmount of data2sd partition, and hence ext4 errors. The 15% shutdown level is a normal soft shutdown prompt (which was missing in case of the issue reported by the user). The shutdown at 2% is the normal forced shutdown by OS.
As I said previously, your issue seems to be due to a poorly calibrated or defective battery, and it would help to do a calibration as per guides on XDA. If this fails, have the battery checked. To reiterate, it's not a rom issue and not something like a bug in the rom.
Thanks. So normally the phone with Supernova ROM should turn off at 15%. After that I have to be able to turn it on again, and use it till it drains to 2%, and shuts down finally.
For me it just shuts down at 15% and then when I switch it on and it boots up, the battery level shows 0% and it shuts down immediately.
Sofokles_ said:
Thanks. So normally the phone with Supernova ROM should turn off at 15%. After that I have to be able to turn it on again, and use it till it drains to 2%, and shuts down finally.
For me it just shuts down at 15% and then when I switch it on and it boots up, the battery level shows 0% and it shuts down immediately.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No, a normal rom would popup a warning at 15%, asking the user to shutdown. If he doesnt, it would continue, and then give additional warnings, and finally do a forced shutdown at 2%. If it shutsdown before that forcibly, it's something peculiar to your hardware.
Ooops, so Supernova ROM should behave exactly the same way as a stock ROM (or any other) does in terms of warnings and shutdows.
I might try to do something with battery calibration. Should I do it before or after flashing Supernova? Or it does not matter? If I flash a new ROM, does it delete battery logs or it stays as it was before flashing?
Sofokles_ said:
Ooops, so Supernova ROM should behave exactly the same way as a stock ROM (or any other) does in terms of warnings and shutdows.
I might try to do something with battery calibration. Should I do it before or after flashing Supernova? Or it does not matter? If I flash a new ROM, does it delete battery logs or it stays as it was before flashing?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Correct. For all intents and purposes, Supernova is exactly like a Stock rom. Difference is only in where internal apps are stored.
The so called calibration is just a file at /data, which means it will be wiped when you do a wipe for rom install.
[Update] Problem solved. I flashed UOT battery MOD after first boot (not before). Now it works perfectly.
A flashed the ROM again, did the battery calibration several times, but the phone keeps turning off at 15%. I checked battery voltages at different levels of battery, and I experienced that at 16% it is 3635 mV, then it turns off below 15%. When I turn it on, battery level is 0% and the voltage is 3390 mV, and when it is charged up to 1% it is 3723 mV, which is higher than it was at 16%. What is wrong here? Actually I use UOT kitchen battery MOD, can this confuse the system somehow?
Hello.
I have bought a used desire a couple of months ago, and one thing has been really bothering me.
I need to charge the device for like 12 hours via AC, to get it to 100% (yes, I have tried several chargers), and after that, the battery life is like ~12 hours if I use it only a little. I have also bought a spare HTC genuine battery, nothing changed. The warranty is not valid in my country, so that's not an option. Anyone have any suggestions?
I also have ordered a battery charger from ebay (that would charge a battery without the phone), I'll post when I receive it.
How long does it take the charger to get to 90%
Sent from my Desire using XDA App
It's about 10%/hour, and there is no difference what the percentage is.
Check battery health:
Type *#*'4636#*#* in dialer, > Battery information.
A full charge here takes ~ 3 hours. Till 90% nearly 2 hours, the rest 10% "need" the last hour.
Are you using a custom rom as some of these may drain battery FAST!
I'd check the running apps
reset phone to factory
if you are using clockworkmod recovery, then try clearing battery stats
---------- Post added at 01:09 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:01 PM ----------
oh, also try getting one of those $15 brand new batteries from eBay.
I got one, and it's been working like a charm for 3 months now
charges in less than 2.5 hours, and lasts for 1.5 days (average calls, SMS, music player...)
stormleader said:
then try clearing battery stats
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Some enlightenment for you.
What settings do you have for data connection? Wifi, sync etc
These can effect not only battery life but charge time also..
I use a custom ROM with juice defender ultimate..knocks the data off when the screen is off,, but with a sync'd check every 30 mins
Sent from my HTC Desire using XDA
erklat said:
Some enlightenment for you.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
lol thanks
You should do this procedure every time you replace the battery (tested working on HTC Desire GSM):
Advanced Battery Calibration (tested and verified on Oxygen + bravoGSM)
Intro:
This will actually calibrate your battery, unlike other methods out there. After calibration, empty will be at 0% not some arbitrary value like 18%. For added comfort, you can perform steps 1-5 until you are comfortable with the routine; on the first run stop at step 5, don’t plug in and watch where your battery dies to give you an idea of the time window available – then on the next run you will know when to plug in. This ensures a smooth and error-free routine. You don’t actually need to do this since the app will tell you when to plug in. Once you’ve done a dry run, plug in, charge for a few minutes until the phone doesn’t shut off when you disconnect the charger, and repeat the process.
Caveats:
When entering the values for the battery registers, pay particular attention that the entered values are the correct ones which are shown below. Failure to enter these values correctly could result in your battery being permanently bricked. You have been warned!
Pre-requisites:
• _thalamus kernel >= 2.6.35.14_r2 RC1 or CyanogenMod kernel.
• A functioning brain (ask your parents about this)
• Patience
• Jon Richards’ “Nexus One Battery Calibrator” application a.k.a. NOBCAP (available on android market), installed
• An almost dead battery (that is mis-reporting its capacity) with what you think is about ~2% remaining – i.e. if your battery dies at 18%, get ready at about 20%
• AC battery charger at the ready
Process:
1. Set your screen time-out to 10 minutes.
2. Run NOBCAP
a. If General tab displays fields but no values, kernel is wrong, see pre-requisites
b. If General tab displays fields filled with values, kernel is right, enable airplane mode on the phone
3. In NOBCAP, menu --> settings -->
a. Check: GPS polling, ACR adjustment, advanced options
b. UNcheck: Airplane and Wake lock. Go back.
4. Go to LearnPrep tab
a. Set age: 100% --> save
b. For
i. OEM batteries ; Set mAh: 1452 --> save
ii. Aftermarket batteries ; Set mAh: 1650 --> save
c. Register: 0x66
Value: a4 --> save
d. Register: 0x65
Value: 06 --> save
e. Register: 0x10
Value: 04 --> save
5. Go to LearnMode tab
6. Scroll down and Set Detect Learn Mode to ON.
7. When Real-Time Voltage (µV) <= 3201000, i.e. when the battery is “empty”, the app will prompt you to quickly plug in your charger.
8. If you were successful here, the learn-flag LEARNF will now be lit and your battery charging.
9. LYPTFA - Leave your phone the .... alone.
10. When charging completes, the CHGTF flag will be lit, Battery Status Register 0x81 displayed, your battery calibrated.
11. Unplug. Reboot.
Supplementary:
The application monitors the battery chip registers. As charging nears completion the pulse current (mA) sent to the battery gradually diminishes in amplitude. This will tail off at about -20mA which the battery interprets as “charging complete” and the battery registers are stamped with its newly determined capacity values. Activating the screen, or any function which subsequently draws current pulls the charge current above -20mA and which the battery detects as charge complete – this is why you should LYPTFA. It’s okay to set an extended screen-timeout and occasionally touch the screen to reset the screen-off timer (i.e. keep the screen on) to keep an eye on charging without affecting charge current.
As an additional experiment, install JuicePlotter, run it once, and enable graphing. This will also monitor dis/charge cycles and give you an idea of the memory effect that the battery suffers from.
I'm trying the guide above me, thanks.
In the Nexus One Battery Calibrator app you can see charging current in miliamps, could you please tell me what is the value for you guys while charging?
Recently my N7(2013) will shut itself down when the battery is low (about 10%) without any warnings, not even the "Shutting Down" dialog that it should show whenever it shuts downs (except for the usual low batt warning when it reaches 15%). After the shutdown, I cant even turn it back on not even the screen, nor the low batt (waiting for charger) screen is showing up until I plug it into a power source the it will show the charging screen and then I can turn it on again.
Its been a few times now, not sure its a hardware or software problem though. It shouldnt shut down when it still has 10% in it right?
Attached is the screenshot of the Battery Usage that shows the battery level shots down to 0% immediately from 10%.
Nexus 7 2013, Stock, Not Rooted
Are you using a battery monitoring program (battery doctor, better battery stats, etc)? If so, look in their settings, to see if they are set to shut down @ 10%...
BSnapp said:
Are you using a battery monitoring program (battery doctor, better battery stats, etc)? If so, look in their settings, to see if they are set to shut down @ 10%...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nah I don't trust these apps so I don't use them. Moreover I'm did not root it so even if I use them they shouldnt have the permission to shut it down
Simple fix
It is an issue I have suffered with a couple of times and it appears we are not alone. It seems that the battery calibration is out of whack. When you charge your nexus up does it stay at 100% for quite a while? I
tried factory data resets amongst other things and nothing worked. I stumbled across a thread with a really simple fix. Turn your tablet off for 2 hours. Then turn it on again. Mine miraculously lost 26% of battery in that time (from 100% where it had been for 8 hours down to 74%). Then it started to use the battery at a normal rate. Working fine now.
I am running viper rom and i facing some illogical Battery percentage
Any idea how to calibrate it
I ve tried many apps from play store and no results
And i even tried the hard way by pressing the 3 buttons while the phone is off olso no luck
Any idea?
Calibrating the battery on Android devices
Method for rooted devices:
1. Discharge your phone fully until it turns itself off.
2. Turn it on and let it turn off again.
3. Plug your phone into a charger and, without turning it on, let it charge until the on-screen or LED indicator says 100 percent.
4. Unplug your charger.
5. Turn your phone on. It's likely that the battery indicator won't say 100 percent, so plug the charger back in (leave your phone on) and continue charging until it says 100 percent on the screen as well.
6. Unplug your phone and reboot. If it doesn't say 100 percent, plug the charger back in until it says 100 percent on screen.
7. You want to repeat this cycle until it says 100 percent (or as close as you think it's going to get) when you start it up without being plugged in.
8. Now, install the Battery Calibration app attached below and, before you launch it, make sure your battery is at 100 percent again, then reboot.
9. Immediately launch the app and recalibrate your battery stats.
10. Once you've calibrated your battery, discharge it all the way down to 0 percent and let your phone turn off again.
11. Fully charge the battery one more time without interruption while it's switched off, and the Android system's battery percentage will be reset.
Note that all the app does is wipe the accumulated data from the batterystats.bin file giving you a new clean slate to work with. This method is also called, "training the battery" and should be performed infrequently. Maybe once every four months or so.
References:
https://www.androidpit.com/how-to-calibrate-the-battery-on-your-android-device
.
Aurelius99 said:
See if this will help you.....
https://www.androidpit.com/how-to-calibrate-the-battery-on-your-android-device
.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I ll give it a try
I would also note that this would be good to do right before installing a battery monitor app like Gsam or BBS. :good:
comstockload said:
I would also note that this would be good to do right before installing a battery monitor app like Gsam or BBS. :good:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I haven't calibrated mine in a long time. Getting ready to do it right now.
How successful was this calibration?