So my question is basically asked in the title already.
But to get you all you all to the background story, I use my gnex 5 days in a week as alarm, (2 days off, thank god i can sleep little longer in the weekend), but sometimes my gnex is nog fully recharged or has not that much battery left to hold on the whole night till my alarm will ring and wake me up.
So is it harmful to my battery when it recharges the whole night or is there some kind of system that will prevent the phone from recharging when its full?
Teoctist
Teoctist said:
So my question is basically asked in the title already.
But to get you all you all to the background story, I use my gnex 5 days in a week as alarm, (2 days off, thank god i can sleep little longer in the weekend), but sometimes my gnex is nog fully recharged or has not that much battery left to hold on the whole night till my alarm will ring and wake me up.
So is it harmful to my battery when it recharges the whole night or is there some kind of system that will prevent the phone from recharging when its full?
Teoctist
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
First of all, all Li-ion batteries will stop charging when they're full, second, if you haven't noticed yet, try to look at your battery percent after a night of charging, it will almost never be at 100% but 98-99, and that is because the GN reflects the real state of the battery, unlike other phones in which you'll see the batt at 100% once you unplug it, but it'll drop to 98 in 10 seconds, the GN will stop charging when the batt reaches 100 and restart charging when it reaches 98 again, so, the battery will never overcharge, and to your question - no, this will not decrease your battery's life, of course not using the battery at all may help, but that's just stupid, charge you phone as much as you want, that's what it's there for, and even if you think your battery is gone (theoretically after 5 years of use..) then just buy another one.
omricn said:
First of all, all Li-ion batteries will stop charging when they're full, second, if you haven't noticed yet, try to look at your battery percent after a night of charging, it will almost never be at 100% but 98-99, and that is because the GN reflects the real state of the battery, unlike other phones in which you'll see the batt at 100% once you unplug it, but it'll drop to 98 in 10 seconds, the GN will stop charging when the batt reaches 100 and restart charging when it reaches 98 again, so, the battery will never overcharge, and to your question - no, this will not decrease your battery's life, of course not using the battery at all may help, but that's just stupid, charge you phone as much as you want, that's what it's there for, and even if you think your battery is gone (theoretically after 5 years of use..) then just buy another one.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The answer could not have been more perfect! Thanks!
Teoctist said:
The answer could not have been more perfect! Thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Couldn't be more happy to help!
Related
Flattened my Xoom earlier, as I do everynow and again to full cycle the battery.
Came back to it a bit later and it had charged up to 40 odd %
Used it for a while then it suddenly said the battery was flat and switched off..
Anyone else had this, am I looking at a dead battery or should I just leave it swtiched off and on charge overnight?
Trig0r said:
Flattened my Xoom earlier, as I do everynow and again to full cycle the battery.
Came back to it a bit later and it had charged up to 40 odd %
Used it for a while then it suddenly said the battery was flat and switched off..
Anyone else had this, am I looking at a dead battery or should I just leave it swtiched off and on charge overnight?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It shouldn't be, lithium ion batteries don't have as intense a memory problem as the old nicad batteries...maybe just wipe the batteries stats in clockwork for good measure and take it from there. Sorry I forgot to mention that this would assume you are rooted. All my Android devices have weird jumps like that, but not usually that extreme.
cool, I'll clear the battery stats and see what it says in the morning.
Clear the stats in the morning after the full night charge not before..
Sent from my mind control device
Good job I checked here before I went to sleep eh
Lithium batteries do not like to go all the way down to dead (so low the device won't even start). They wear alot if you do. There is no reason to cykle them after the first time charge as there is no memory effect on them.
I had a laptop battery partially charged installed in my laptop and did't use it for two weeks. The battery went compleatly dead and when I charged it I only got like 20% into it before it said full. I had to buy a new battery.
So don't leave your XOOM with 1% battery for a long time. If you are not gonna use it for a prolonged time charge it up to about 75% before leaving it.
SEALen is correct, Lithium batteries should not be fully discharged it significantly shortens their lifespan, there is also no memory effect, the only battery type that ever did have one is NiCad.
The best way to keep a lithium battery healthy is to charge little and often, keep it topped up.
Troute said:
SEALen is correct, Lithium batteries should not be fully discharged it significantly shortens their lifespan, there is also no memory effect, the only battery type that ever did have one is NiCad.
The best way to keep a lithium battery healthy is to charge little and often, keep it topped up.
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Click to collapse
+ 1 to your arguments however if he is doing a calibration, i let it get to 1% before charging it again, i dont let it die i watch battery widget pro and watch the mA.. This will not fix a battery but give better indication of its lifespan
Sent from my GT-I9100 using Tapatalk
so what is the best thing to do?
is there any way of charging,dis charging ect to get the best battery life?
or should i just charg it to 100% and use it right away?
i did a charging squence with my nexus s. but duno about the Gn.
for me is to turn on the device and start working until the battery drops to 0-1%.
only then im charging it X2 then needed to go to 100%, you can make it Double if you want.
Well, this is going to be one of those threads where everyone has their own little way to care for a battery and others say their way is better, etc, etc the arguments breaking out which will result in people posting www.batteryuniversity.com in an effort to win said arguments.
Here's mine. On a brand new phone, I put the battery in, boot up, connect the charger, run it to 100%, disconnect charge, run battery all the way down, connect the charge, run to 100% and go about my life charging when I need to.
My two cents. Have no idea if it does any good, but my SGSII is going on 1 day 14 hrs on a single charge, so it must work somehow...
ericshmerick said:
Well, this is going to be one of those threads where everyone has their own little way to care for a battery and others say their way is better, etc, etc the arguments breaking out which will result in people posting www.batteryuniversity.com in an effort to win said arguments.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
100% Agree. There will be a lot of different opinions.
ericshmerick said:
Here's mine. On a brand new phone, I put the battery in, boot up, connect the charger, run it to 100%, disconnect charge, run battery all the way down, connect the charge, run to 100% and go about my life charging when I need to.
My two cents. Have no idea if it does any good, but my SGSII is going on 1 day 14 hrs on a single charge, so it must work somehow...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My way,
Turn on phone, charge it to 100%, leave it plugged for an extra 20 min, and start using it normally.
The only time I discharge a battery is after a couple of months. Because we never charge it to 100% and they start creating memory and charging less and less every time. The purpose of discharging it completely is to erase its memory. That's why when it is new, I see no point on discharging it completely. Batteries suffer every time they are completely discharged and if they are left 100% for a long period of time, thats why new batteries always come charged about 50%, to extend battery life since they may be stored for a long period of time. (ref. aviation school)
Just my 2 cents.
sstang2006 said:
The only time I discharge a battery is after a couple of months. Because we never charge it to 100% and they start creating memory and charging less and less every time. The purpose of discharging it completely is to erase its memory. That's why when it is new, I see no point on discharging it completely. (ref. aviation school)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That hasn't been true since NiCd's in the 1980s.
Modern Lithium-Ion and Lithium-Polymer batteries have no "memory" and are actively damaged if allowed to discharge fully.
HooloovooUK said:
That hasn't been true since NiCd's in the 1980s.
Modern Lithium-Ion and Lithium-Polymer batteries have no "memory" and are actively damaged if allowed to discharge fully.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OK, I may be wrong I'm no expert.
Why do people keep discharging them to 0% if they have no memory? (I'm not been sarcastic)
sstang2006 said:
Why do people keep discharging them to 0% if they have no memory? (I'm not been sarcastic)
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Click to collapse
Generally because they don't know any better and they don't realise battery technology has moved on.
Because batteries "back in the days" were quite sensitive to memory. That's why we were all raised by the complete-discharge-mantra, which sticks with you forever. The next generation won't have this problem and will feel free to charge their phones when they want to. ;-)
sstang2006 said:
OK, I may be wrong I'm no expert.
Why do people keep discharging them to 0% if they have no memory? (I'm not been sarcastic)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Becouse android in itself keeps a battery log, it is from this log your device calculates the amount of battery you have left. To keep these values true (calibrated) you should do 2-3 cycles where you on purchase, discharge fully until device auto shut down, start it WITHOUT charge a couple of times and let it die to set the min value, charge up to 100%, use your device again till auto shut down... you dont have to worry about damaging your battery in this case since your device it programmed to shut down with good marginal of battery depletion. What you SHOULD NOT do is leave an empty battery uncharged for a long period of time.
Sent from my X10i using xda premium
Lithium batteries will be damaged if they are stored fully charged or fully discharged for extended periods of time. Thats why the battery is about half charged when its new. They have no memory effect, they just loose capacity.
Sent from my Nexus S using Tapatalk
Tjotte said:
Becouse android in itself keeps a battery log, it is from this log your device calculates the amount of battery you have left. To keep these values true (calibrated) you should do 2-3 cycles where you on purchase, discharge fully until device auto shut down, start it WITHOUT charge a couple of times and let it die to set the min value, charge up to 100%, use your device again till auto shut down... you dont have to worry about damaging your battery in this case since your device it programmed to shut down with good marginal of battery depletion. What you SHOULD NOT do is leave an empty battery uncharged for a long period of time.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good point. While it's important not to fully discharge the battery too often, there is also the issue of calibrating the battery meter.
ericshmerick said:
Well, this is going to be one of those threads where everyone has their own little way to care for a battery and others say their way is better, etc, etc the arguments breaking out which will result in people posting www.batteryuniversity.com in an effort to win said arguments.
Here's mine. On a brand new phone, I put the battery in, boot up, connect the charger, run it to 100%, disconnect charge, run battery all the way down, connect the charge, run to 100% and go about my life charging when I need to.
My two cents. Have no idea if it does any good, but my SGSII is going on 1 day 14 hrs on a single charge, so it must work somehow...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's exactly what I do, had 14 hours of moderate use today and still had 45% left. More than happy with that. It seems to be getting better each day at the moment.
Crin said:
That's exactly what I do, had 14 hours of moderate use today and still had 45% left. More than happy with that. It seems to be getting better each day at the moment.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
78% after 14 hours here, but that's light use.
sstang2006 said:
OK, I may be wrong I'm no expert.
Why do people keep discharging them to 0% if they have no memory? (I'm not been sarcastic)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The whole "discharging the battery fully" thing doesn't really apply here - because nobody will ever fully discharge it. The Nexus uses a Lithium Ion cell - it's a single cell, with a nominal voltage of 3.6V. When fully charged, it peaks at 4.2V (at which point, the charging circuitry cuts off to avoid overcharging). However, when we "fully discharge" our phones, the cell only goes as low as 3.5V - and then the phone shuts off.
In reality, lithium cells can discharge to around 3.0V before any damage occurs. However, this would yield very little extra battery life. Stopping at 3.5V provides a wide safety margin (lithium cells are potentially dangerous if overcharged/discharged), whilst extending cell life.
In a nutshell - don't worry about running your phone down to 0% (unless you're putting it in storage, in which case leave it at about 60%). In fact, it's a good thing with a new phone, as cycling (charging and discharging a cell) helps to "wake" the cell up and reach it's max capacity more quickly.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using XDA App
i see some good ideas about charging and discharging.
but it is indeed a fact that 100% and 0%(real) isnt good for our new race of battery's.
but a few posts here already tell how and what.
and its not gonna be a thread of arguments and stuff,if we all keep it in our heads that we just want to share our tip's of how you think its the best way(and have some experience with it)
just to share some info. and not compete the info against each other.
i well know there are different ways. but its always nice to read what experience people have with it to make a choice for my own and any other wanting to know this.
and i posted here in the GN section,instead of the Android section because each phone handles battery different,and this narrows the options down to a single device :3
Just keep in mind it's not just about the battery itself it's about the software registering how much actual power the battery has at a certain time, so if the battery has in actuality 100% charge in it, and the software reads 80 then your phone will die out sooner. So charging and discharging is good because it calibrates the hardware with the software. Just remember to switch off the device then charge it so the software doesn't auto discharge when it thinks the battery reached 100%.
K i just skipped thru the posts, gonna throw in my input real quick.
Basically just run down the battery. Once it turns off, hold the power button to make sure all the juice is gone. Then charge it up to 100% and leave it there for a good hour. Now (root required) download https://market.android.com/details?...yLDEsImNvbS5uZW1hLmJhdHRlcnljYWxpYnJhdGlvbiJd and follow the instructions .. its not exactly necessary but a nice thing "just in case" .
thats my plan anyways.
Nutsonfire said:
Lithium batteries will be damaged if they are stored fully charged or fully discharged for extended periods of time. Thats why the battery is about half charged when its new. They have no memory effect, they just loose capacity.
Sent from my Nexus S using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Where does the loosed capacity go? Can it be caught?
And what do you think about charging with the phone being switched on? Is it better to have it switched off?
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
juniorbattle said:
And what do you think about charging with the phone being switched on? Is it better to have it switched off?
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Won't make a difference.. Phones are designed to be left on anyway.
Hello,
So I am going to get HTC One X next week. Though, I have one question. Should I charge it first time for a long period or can I turn it on in shop, just to check if everything is okay and etc. I just want to have the maximum battery life, possible. Thanks for your answers
And hey, maybe you have any other suggestions?
I would get it home and stick it on charge until at least the light turns great. A few people are suggesting leave it for at least another 20-30 mins after this too if you can. I definitely wouldn't turn it on in the store; and HTC also recommend to fully charge before use.
DazNoonan said:
I would get it home and stick it on charge until at least the light turns great. A few people are suggesting leave it for at least another 20-30 mins after this too if you can. I definitely wouldn't turn it on in the store; and HTC also recommend to fully charge before use.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh, okay Thanks. Well, I am just so scared... I don't want to get a phone with bunch of bugs
You're fine to turn it on and give it a quick test. All Lithium Ion/Polymer batteries have a partial charge for shipping as leaving it completely flat for long periods of time will damage it. Don't run the battery down though.
You should still charge it fully before using it properly however. Once the phone is fully charged then you can unplug it and use it. You don't need to leave it "charging" for 12+ hours even if the phone thinks it is fully charged.
Tiersten said:
You're fine to turn it on and give it a quick test. All Lithium Ion/Polymer batteries have a partial charge for shipping as leaving it completely flat for long periods of time will damage it. Don't run the battery down though.
You should still charge it fully before using it properly however. Once the phone is fully charged then you can unplug it and use it. You don't need to leave it "charging" for 12+ hours even if the phone thinks it is fully charged.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Okay, I will plug it in for the first time. But what about second, third times? Should I discharge it completely?
Niiceg said:
Okay, I will plug it in for the first time. But what about second, third times? Should I discharge it completely?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Its normally better for the battery to run down to a low level before re-charging if you keep topping the battery up when it gets to 50 - 60 you could end up damaging the battery.
Appsdroid said:
Its normally better for the battery to run down to a low level before re-charging if you keep topping the battery up when it gets to 50 - 60 you could end up damaging the battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is with NiCad and NiMH batteries. Lithium Ion batteries don't have the memory effect and actually prefer partial discharge cycles.
If anything odd happens then you can recalibrate the battery monitoring data by discharging it fully then charging it. In general however, you shouldn't do this every cycle.
My second phone that arrived took around 3 hours 15 mins for its charge light to turn green; I unplugged it after 4 hours and I was actually happy with the battery life on that one. My third one arrived earlier and the green light came on after 1 hour and 25 mins.
Guess they started with different battery levels? I will leave it on charge for another hour or so as I'm going in a meeting anyway; therefore when I turn it on its initial charge will have been around 3 hours long.
I believe you can't over charge the battery anyway, so once the green light it on there is a chance its probably not taking in anymore power. If thats the case leaving it plugged in once the light has changed is just irrelevant?
DazNoonan said:
I believe you can't over charge the battery anyway, so once the green light it on there is a chance its probably not taking in anymore power. If thats the case leaving it plugged in once the light has changed is just irrelevant?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Li ion batteries are protected from overcharging, as overcharge could actually cause it to overheat and catch fire or explode. Not sure if the protection is in the OS, hardware, or battery. But basically charging will stop when the battery is 100% and saturated, then when the battery dips below 100%, it will top it off again. Not sure about the One X (still waiting for the AT&T variant), but on other HTC phones, you will sometimes actually see the battery meter drop down from full to 99% when its on the charger, then read full again.
So leaving it on the charger doesn't hurt things much (although technically partial charges are better for the battery long term). Leaving the battery charging for longer ensures the "saturation" charge is applied, which may not happen if you quick charge to full, then disconnect.
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
---------- Post added at 01:04 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:52 PM ----------
Tiersten said:
If anything odd happens then you can recalibrate the battery monitoring data by discharging it fully then charging it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You shouldn't purposely discharge Li ion batteries until the phone shuts off. In theory, protections in the OS and the battery's safety circuit are supposed to prevent over-discharge. But its not fail-safe, and I've seen reports of plenty of Android phones where the battery fails to take a charge after being discharged to shutdown. If this happens to you, the only way to bring the battery back to life is with a special battery meter with boost function (which most people do not have access to) or buy a new battery (which is of course a problem on the One X, due to the non-removable battery).
Its rare, but it does happen, and there is no real benefit to running the battery until the phones shuts down. The battery meter is not remotely accurate enough to justify purposely discharging below 10 or even 15%, just for sake of calibration. Charge to full, leave it a while (30 min), then use until 15% charge or so. Repeat a couple times to fully calibrate the battery meter.
To answer the original question, powering the phone on (when you first get it) for a short time is ok. Just go through the battery meter calibration as I described as soon as possible thereafter, and it should be fine.
redpoint73 said:
Li ion batteries are protected from overcharging, as overcharge could actually cause it to overheat and catch fire or explode. Not sure if the protection is in the OS, hardware, or battery. But basically charging will stop when the battery is 100% and saturated, then when the battery dips below 100%, it will top it off again. Not sure about the One X (still waiting for the AT&T variant), but on other HTC phones, you will sometimes actually see the battery meter drop down from full to 99% when its on the charger, then read full again.
So leaving it on the charger doesn't hurt things much (although technically partial charges are better for the battery long term). Leaving the battery charging for longer ensures the "saturation" charge is applied, which may not happen if you quick charge to full, then disconnect.
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
---------- Post added at 01:04 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:52 PM ----------
You shouldn't purposely discharge Li ion batteries until the phone shuts off. In theory, protections in the OS and the battery's safety circuit are supposed to prevent over-discharge. But its not fail-safe, and I've seen reports of plenty of Android phones where the battery fails to take a charge after being discharged to shutdown. If this happens to you, the only way to bring the battery back to life is with a special battery meter with boost function (which most people do not have access to) or buy a new battery.
Its rare, but it does happen, and there is no real benefit to running the battery until the phones shuts down. The battery meter is not remotely accurate enough to justify purposely discharging below 10 or even 15%, just for sake of calibration. Charge to full, leave it a while (30 min), then use until 15% charge or so. Repeat a couple times to fully calibrate the battery meter.
To answer the original question, powering the phone on (when you first get it) for a short time is ok. Just go through the battery meter calibration as I described as soon as possible thereafter, and it should be fine.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Brilliant post redpoint73; appreciate you taking the time. Just got out of my meeting so my device has been on charge for around an extra hour since seeing the green light so I will be taking it off charge now to set it up etc... Total first time charge time will have been 2 hours 40 mins.
It's likely it will be down to 15%-20% before I put it on charge again tonight as will be syncing all the apps and data back on to the device as well as giving it a good bit of usage to check things out. Will no doubt then be on charge for around 7 hours through the night whilst turned off, and I will do this for the first 3/4 days (same as previous one). My last battery was good so hoping for the same again.
redpoint73 said:
You shouldn't purposely discharge Li ion batteries until the phone shuts off. In theory, protections in the OS and the battery's safety circuit are supposed to prevent over-discharge. But its not fail-safe, and I've seen reports of plenty of Android phones where the battery fails to take a charge after being discharged to shutdown. If this happens to you, the only way to bring the battery back to life is with a special battery meter with boost function (which most people do not have access to) or buy a new battery (which is of course a problem on the One X, due to the non-removable battery).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It is pretty poor design if your phone does kill itself if you hit 0% though as that isn't too unusual of an event for a phone. I've never seen any phone which did that but I agree it could happen.
So, I bought another battery. Will this sort it?
Also, what's the usual procedure?
Should I charge the battery to full in the phone (turned off) then boot, set up, then charge again and reset battery stats?
The problem is that the battery control chip doesn't take into account that the battery ages.
Resetting battery stats or charging while turned off will only clear the stats you see in the settings menu. This guide will make your battery drain to 0% again: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1534892
I don't know what a new battery will do though.
I gathered that, but as the phone is going to a new user (my stepson) we got him a new battery anyway
I just wondered what the correct procedure is. I know you need to do a first charge with a new battery, as with a new phone, however, this phone obviously has a working ROM already on it.
So, the phone is charging now, switched off. Should I turn it on, use a little, then use the battery calibration app to delete the stats and then drain to 0%?
Kryten2k35 said:
I know you need to do a first charge with a new battery, as with a new phone
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, that assumption is probably inherited from the NiHM batteries in the past, because it's not needed with Li-Ion batteries. In fact charging to 80% is better than charging to 100% and keeping it plugged in.
You can read more about it here and here.
Kryten2k35 said:
So, the phone is charging now, switched off. Should I turn it on, use a little, then use the battery calibration app to delete the stats and then drain to 0%?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just charge it and use it for a full cycle. If it shuts down at 15%, you can try the battery calibration from the thread I mentioned above. If it doesn't, you're battery capacity is the same as the one the battery chip has calculated, which is good.
So, why does the first charge take so long?
This thing is still charging and it's been on the charger for 3 hours, whereas usually it'd be charged fully by now.
Been like that for every Li-Ion battery I've ever had (including my S3, took around 6 hours to charge, usually takes 3).
EDIT:
Just to clarify, I don't intend on leaving it past the green light. As soon as it says it's full I'll be taking it off charge and not trying ot overcharge it. But I still have the orange charging light after 3-4 hours.
To be honest, I don't know. Maybe it's a safety to prevent overcharging. Coincidentally, I've got exactly the same issue now. I asked about it in the calibration thread. I suppose it's normal, but I'm not sure about that.
Kryten2k35 said:
So, why does the first charge take so long?
This thing is still charging and it's been on the charger for 3 hours, whereas usually it'd be charged fully by now.
Been like that for every Li-Ion battery I've ever had (including my S3, took around 6 hours to charge, usually takes 3).
EDIT:
Just to clarify, I don't intend on leaving it past the green light. As soon as it says it's full I'll be taking it off charge and not trying ot overcharge it. But I still have the orange charging light after 3-4 hours.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
my battery took just over 6 hours to charge the other day from completly dead
Sent from my HTC Desire
Hi all,
occasionally I see my 7 months old Pixel 3a XL can't hold battery power from 11% down. Switches off very fast, abnormally fast. Then if I power it and start it then keeps on restarting until battery level is higher than 5-6%
I use the original charger only. Sometimes it appears, some it does not and I can see it discharges as expected.
I try to keep my battery within 40-100% full and discharge it very rarely to 0%.
Anyone facing those abnormalities? Can't think of connected events - updates, etc ....
Cheers
p.s. after last night happening again, charged the phone from 0% to 86% (phone was off during charge), turned on on 86% and left over night on the shelf. Usually drains 2-3%, this morning it dropped from 86% to 62%. All connections off, nothing unusual shown in the battery usage stats...
TodNex said:
Hi all,
occasionally I see my 7 months old Pixel 3a XL can't hold battery power from 11% down. Switches off very fast, abnormally fast. Then if I power it and start it then keeps on restarting until battery level is higher than 5-6%
I use the original charger only. Sometimes it appears, some it does not and I can see it discharges as expected.
I try to keep my battery within 40-100% full and discharge it very rarely to 0%.
Anyone facing those abnormalities? Can't think of connected events - updates, etc ....
Cheers
p.s. after last night happening again, charged the phone from 0% to 86% (phone was off during charge), turned on on 86% and left over night on the shelf. Usually drains 2-3%, this morning it dropped from 86% to 62%. All connections off, nothing unusual shown in the battery usage stats...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's pretty weird
My 3a xl (about the same age as yours) doesn't use more than 10% max when left overnight. Are you using AOD or anything?
Sent from my Pixel 3a XL using XDA Labs
@Skittles9823 nothing beside stock Android and apps that I've used forever. Strange is that it's occasional - also occassional is initial drain from 100% to 92%.
Maybe its time to flash it - nothing suspicious is shown in batt stats
I use the fast charger that came with it. Not sure how it affects battery life long term. I try to keep it 100% to 40% usually and not charge it if not necessary..
TodNex said:
@Skittles9823
I use the fast charger that came with it. Not sure how it affects battery life long term. I try to keep it 100% to 40% usually and not charge it if not necessary..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think popular wisdom is that both fast charging and in particular charging to 100% are not kind to the battery's longivety. Divided opinion about the effect of discharging to low percentages. Personally I charge to between 70 and 80% unless I know I'm going to need more capacity. 3a XL has a bigish battery, which helps. I recharge most nights but only to 70-80%. End of day I usually end up between high 40's and low 30's charge.
I manually set all apps I don't actually need to run in background to 'restricted' background use.
I charge mine up to a 100% often, when using it heavy.. I never heard of charging a battery to 100% being bad for it, unless you believe everything that is told or should I say sold to you.. Sounds like a faulty battery. If still under the 1 yr usual warranty I would have it replaced. I have drained mine down to less than 20% and still never experience any issue that OP state.
doubledragon5 said:
I never heard of charging a battery to 100% being bad for it
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Some research references in here
https://accubattery.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/210224725-Charging-research-and-methodology
https://accubattery.zendesk.com/hc/...-Cycle-Life-Modeling-of-Lithium-Ion-Batteries
Also Apple have actually introduced a feature to stop/postpone 100% charging when the phone thinks it's not required. Would be good if we had similar/more control for Android.
https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT210512
WibblyW said:
Some research references in here
https://accubattery.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/210224725-Charging-research-and-methodology
https://accubattery.zendesk.com/hc/...-Cycle-Life-Modeling-of-Lithium-Ion-Batteries
Also Apple have actually introduced a feature to stop/postpone 100% charging when the phone thinks it's not required. Would be good if we had similar/more control for Android.
https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT210512
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I'm still not sold on the idea that charging a battery to 100% is bad.. But thanks for those links.
doubledragon5 said:
I'm still not sold on the idea that charging a battery to 100% is bad.. But thanks for those links.
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It's actually true. Lithium Ion batters degrade over time, the speed of which, depends on the amount of battery cycles they go through (0-100% and vice versa). Others have done the research and the math and found that generally a 20% to 80% and vice versa charge seems to be the best for longevity.
Personally I charge to 100 but try to charge my phone when it gets to 20-30%.
Sent from my Pixel 3a XL using XDA Labs
doubledragon5 said:
I'm still not sold on the idea that charging a battery to 100% is bad.. But thanks for those links.
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Evidence and research is there. Of course you don't have to believe it. It's your phone, your battery, your money
WibblyW said:
Evidence and research is there. Of course you don't have to believe it. It's your phone, your battery, your money
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So very true my phone my money. In all my years of using cell phones, I think I have actually replaced a battery once because it went bad.
Thank you all for the links and the inputs!
One more symptom - when is very low like this morning - 1% and put it in charger - phone shuts off.
I will keep the battery in 40-80% for the future and limit the drain below 40%. I tried to charge it slow with USB - took me like 6-7 hours...
How long it takes you from zero to 100% with the stock charger - looks very fast to me - 0% to 67% in 35 mins
I personally tried to research and could not find what is worse for these batteries - number of cycles (obvious less when used below 40%) or the low capacity usage ?
TodNex said:
Thank you all for the links and the inputs!
One more symptom - when is very low like this morning - 1% and put it in charger - phone shuts off.
I will keep the battery in 40-80% for the future and limit the drain below 40%. I tried to charge it slow with USB - took me like 6-7 hours...
How long it takes you from zero to 100% with the stock charger - looks very fast to me - 0% to 67% in 35 mins
I personally tried to research and could not find what is worse for these batteries - number of cycles (obvious less when used below 40%) or the low capacity usage ?
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Click to collapse
The included charger is a fast charger, good for headlining how fast it charges, not so great for the battery. I just use a 'standard' (Anker) USB charger.
Jury's out on if deeper discharge is bad, but it's the number of complete cycles (0-100% counting as 1). So 40 - 80% is 0.4 of a full cycle, and you're not stressing the battery so much by taking it to 100%. Many folk here replace their phones frequently enough not to be bothered by all this - if they sell it when 20% of the battery capacity's gone, that's fine.
I've observed the behaviour and few things made me question myself...one time I can see 13% battery and palying Youtube just shutdown the phone. Put it into charger and started showing 4% as initial charge.
There was another time when using Viber video shutdown in 23% but can be overheat or software bug.
I try to keep it these days above 40% charge but still use the supplied charger till I buy new slower one.
TodNex said:
I've observed the behaviour and few things made me question myself...one time I can see 13% battery and palying Youtube just shutdown the phone. Put it into charger and started showing 4% as initial charge.
There was another time when using Viber video shutdown in 23% but can be overheat or software bug.
I try to keep it these days above 40% charge but still use the supplied charger till I buy new slower one.
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The good news is that this phone seems to be pretty easy to repair and a battery replacement could very well be a good option for you, especially since you wouldn't be compromising any water resistance or anything