Anyone got a battery (or just the connection?) - Note 7 Questions & Answers

Long shot really, but I need one. While doing a screen replacement my battery did the Note7 thing and exploded due to it bending ever so slightly. It came out of the phone before it burned up, my phone is otherwise unharmed.
I want to use the battery connection to solder onto a different, non exploding battery. Figured I'd reach out to see if anyone had a bricked phone they were parting out.
*shrug* don't know why I'm holding on at this point but here we are lol.

Related

HTC Hero battery bulging

I have a HTC Hero, and noticed recently the cover seems to be almost popping off a little bit by the volume rocker, I thought I maybe broke a clip taking it off/putting it on a lot (I tend to do it a lot while I'm bored lol)
I noticed today however when I push it on, it comes back off. I took the cover off, and the battery seems to be almost popping out. I push it in, and it pops out a bit more. I held it in front of me and each side isn't straight, one is raised maybe a millimetre in the middle
Is this still safe to use, and is it covered by a warranty?
I would not use it. Batteries are actually fairly dangerous because of the lithium parts. They can, in rare cases, catch fire. I don't know why a battery would bulge out, but I can't imagine it being any good.
I'd try to look for warranty. If you don't have warranty (I'm not sure if it's covered) you can buy a new one from DealExtreme for a mere 5 USD, shipped free. But those batteries are fairly low quality, so using them is not actually recommended.
It might be an idea to buy a new one off eBay, or email htc about your problem.
Nothing to worry about the battery is overused/overcharged that is it won't funvction properly any more and it might cause damage to your phone...best suggetsion is to buy another battery
I had this issue with my HTC Glacier. I was swapping ROMs on my phone without having a fully charged battery and I believed that messed with the phone's abilty to detect the charge level. I ended up overcharging the battery without realizing it and it developed a bulge. I had to get a new battery because the phone would eventually crash even with a full charge and then reboot showing 0% battery.

[Q] Returning phone question

Looks like my Galaxy 2 has some kind of battery issue. It could just be the battery, but I think something is screwed up internally. Anyway, has anyone gotten a brand new phone out of Sprint?
I want to take it in, but there's NO WAY I'm accepting a refurb...
Any tips on getting a new one?
If the issue is related to the battery taking a long time to charge, then that's just a Samsung phone thing. Their phones usually charge slowly.
And what's wrong with a Refurb phone? It's a broken phone that was fixed back like new, but it's still the same phone that was used, so you can't sell it as new.
It's like if a car get's in a wreck, but then you replace every single part in the car and make it like it was when it first was bought. You can't sell it as new, because it's not, so it's refurb.
Unless you just had a bad experience with something refurb, then I don't see why not to get one. I know this is off topic, but my first GameCube lasted 2 years, a refurb that I was able to get as a replacement is still running perfectly, and I got the refurb in 2005.
Nah, the battery issue isn't that simple.
It won't even charge when the phone is turned on; I have to keep the phone off to charge it. If its on, it charges ridiculously slow, and on top of that, sometimes the battery overheats and it stops charging altogether.
I don't like refurbs plain and simple.
well its a 50/50 if u will get referb or new. the past 3 phones i have gotten were new due to the manufacture date on the back stated what day. but then again that was a evo shift. i am still waiting to get this phone (this week). either way if its referb, the onlything they keep in the phone is the motherboard, everything else is replaced, but u keep ur old bat. the motherboards with the processors are the expensive part. so you are getting a brand new phone with the same motherboard. if the issue persists then bring the phone back in, simple 1 2 and 3.
Edit: ALSO with most sprint repair stores you go to can fix it on the spot with brand new parts.
saj1jr said:
Looks like my Galaxy 2 has some kind of battery issue. It could just be the battery, but I think something is screwed up internally. Anyway, has anyone gotten a brand new phone out of Sprint?
I want to take it in, but there's NO WAY I'm accepting a refurb...
Any tips on getting a new one?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good luck. Let me know how it went.
Sent From My Evo Killer!!!
I'll probably take it in tomorrow.
I just had it charging with the phone turned on, and I got the warning saying the battery temp is too high and it's going to stop charging. It ended up charging about 7% over the course of 2 hours plugged in, and at some point it overheated.
What a pain the ass. I hate dealing with this crap, especially with something I spent over $400 on.
saj1jr said:
I'll probably take it in tomorrow.
I just had it charging with the phone turned on, and I got the warning saying the battery temp is too high and it's going to stop charging. It ended up charging about 7% over the course of 2 hours plugged in, and at some point it overheated.
What a pain the ass. I hate dealing with this crap, especially with something I spent over $400 on.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
sooner the better, its def a hardware issue, or battery which if its battery they make you pay for a new battery since its not under warranty.....
What do you mean it's not under warranty? Anyway, I took it in today, they said it looks like the battery so they had to order me one. Free of charge..

removeable battery

just curious can note 7 avoid this catastrophe if the battery was removeable ,what are your views ?
Since we don't know what the cause was, my opinion is I don't know (well, I read something I haven't seen anywhere on the boards or any other news source but one but I won't state it because I have been accused of reading the news, it is in a language most won't understand anyway). But I am confident they should be able to fix the issue. I would largely prefer them to keep the IP68 rating.
You asked for some views so here are mine, much to the chagrin of many I'm sure but that's ok, that's just fine, really.
Based on currently available information which includes how Li-Ion batteries actually work, I personally would say the actual reason(s) that the Note 7 devices are considered to be defective is not because of the battery itself. So, while having a removable battery is a great thing - and I prefer devices that have removable batteries personally and only buy such devices with my own cash (I got my GS7A as a trade for a laptop so it didn't cost me any cash out of pocket).
Try this hypothetical situation for just a moment, if you will.
Without naming name brands or particular models, say you have a smartphone that has a removable back cover and a removable battery inside. To get to that battery and remove it you must handle the device well enough to be able to get at the back cover, probably find the tiny little gap that most have so you can insert a fingernail into it or perhaps a nail file, a butter knife, anything at all that can fit in that little gap so you can then start to lift the back cover off the device, unsnapping the retainer clips as you do so.
Follow me so far?
After the back cover is fully removed from the device you then have to remove the actual battery itself. Most removable batteries have a spot where you can "hook" a fingernail into and then pull gently to pry the battery up and out of the frame of the phone itself. If necessary you can probably turn the smartphone display side up and then smack the phone into your palm and the battery would probably drop out into hand, but generally most people just use their fingernail or perhaps a spudger to pry the battery loose from the device.
Voila, you've removed the battery entirely, congratulations.
Now here's where it gets interesting:
Say this smartphone has a defect that is occurring at random times on some devices - some of them will exhibit the defect (as cause and effect) and some devices may never exhibit it because of the random nature of how it presents itself. Considering this random nature of the defect presenting itself, say that at some point either while you are actually using your smartphone in your hand, or it's in your pocket, or it's mounted to your dash in your car with a holder, or it's sitting on a desk or table, or anywhere at all really and...
It starts smoking.
I mean it literally starts smoking and the smoke is quiet visible and you can see it easily. You can even smell it as it's happening. If the phone is in your hand when it starts smoking your most common reaction will be to drop the device right then and there, especially if in addition to the smoke you feel some heat buildup, like it was somewhat cool a few seconds ago but now it's smoking and it's getting damned hot, fast.
Again, most people in that situation are going to drop the device immediately.
But your device has a removable battery under the removable back cover, right? So...
If you dropped the device because it was smoking and getting hot there's a chance, a small chance but a chance nonetheless, that in the act of dropping your device when it hits the ground or it lands on a desktop or table top it might just cause the back cover to pop off and the battery might just pop out of the device entirely. That's a possible thing, right, you can actually imagine that dropping a smartphone with a removable back cover and removable battery might just make the back cover pop off and the battery pop out.
Still following me? Good but here's my point.
If you have a smartphone and it starts smoking, anywhere - be it in your hand, pocket, dash holder, tripod holder for pictures, on a flat surface, in a pool, under water, in a toilet, desktop, table, gravel, dirt, sand, on a road, it doesn't matter - the primary way to get the battery out of that device means you have to remove the back cover and then remove the battery and that requires you to hold it but since it's smoking and getting hotter by the second that's not really an option anymore.
So what then? Does that mean having a removable battery is a bad thing? Well, no, not really, but in a situation where the device fails in some manner and causes - that's the important thing here, the cause - the battery to fail as well and burn itself up it means you could potentially suffer some injury yourself because you have to manually remove the back cover then the battery.
tl;dr Yes it's a good thing to have a removable battery, but if a device with a removable battery fails and you want to remove the battery during the failure hoping to save the device itself from further damage, you might be injured yourself because you have to handle the device to some degree to get that failing battery out before it does damage the device or in the most extreme situation explode which destroys the device and also might release the gases from the battery which are incredibly toxic to humans.
I'm just speculating here.
My answer is: Maybe.
If I read is correct and the fault lies with the design flaw more than a battery defect, having removable battery would mean losing water resistance and the curve design, and maybe not apply too much pressure on to the physical battery itself.
What I do know is, if we had removable battery, Samsung would have avoided a full on major recall and just exchange the battery. If size is a problem, maybe a smaller capacity in exchange for safety. And maybe a small refund or a token of gesture to make up for the smaller capacity.
Oh well. What a waste.
Aimara said:
just curious can note 7 avoid this catastrophe if the battery was removeable ,what are your views ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
IF the battery is-was the problem then your question has an obvious answer. WE don't know yet what the problem is so no one can yet say.
Its yet more of these threads with yet more speculation over a done and dusted deal.
Ryland
I do agree with broadband. Even with removable batteries, if the batteries were damage, I wont be fast enough to remove it to prevent total loss.
But yah, it will drastically affect the recall process. Recall batteries are still better than the whole phone. And there will be plentybof after market alternatives to tide over temporarily
One of the reason is also easy troubleshooting , but a faulty set is needed to test the theory, example a faulty note 7 came with a removable battery, reports states that it will get extremely hot before smoking up, sure many of you who own Samsung older version of phones, changing battery is quite fast if the techniques is right, ok just a example, if the first one is a sdi battery as claimed, went faulty, threw it off before smoking up.
Went to claim from Samsung, which is ampere battery(forgot the name), if it didn't does a thermal? What's the deduction then?
If the second battery did smoke up, high chance its the phone issue? Of course this is just a theory, with all the reported note 7 smoking up and burned like crisp, it's quite hard to csi it.
Based on my observations, it seems like the replacement units are more prone to blowing up than the original. Even with the ATL batteries.

Flooded phone, working screen but not charging

Hey guys,
So i flooded my phone, dried it, left in rice for 2 days and now when i connect it to my charger the screen goes up after a minute or so but its not charging. My screen shows battery icon with a bolt inside and a zero below, or battery with a cable inside and zero below. Any idea what can i do to fix this? I can boot to bootloarder mode, but when I'm trying to boot to recovery/other modes it goes back to 'charging screen'.
Thanks in advance!
The battery is eeprom controlled so you probably damaged it when teaching the phone to swim. Flashing will do nothing for it.
Putting the phone in rice is a bad idea as it isn't as absorbent as you think. You should have left it over a radiator for a week or so to evaporate the water before even thinking about switching it on, but by then the damage was probably already done.
If it doesnt start working in week or so then expect it to be expensive to fix.
Beamed in by telepathy.
Not sure what eeprom is, but if its in the part below, then i could replace it myself with no problem. What are Your thougts? I know that more thing may be broken, but if it would go back to life i would be glad because I don't want to spend money on any new phone, maybe apart from S8/pixel but its expensive as hell.
https://e.allegroimg.com/original/0115f6/28e0dc9447338f8114880dfb6c1e
If i couldn't repair this bad boy then I would probably go with 6s, but I'm not sure if I want to make the transition to iOS.
Cheers and thanks for previous reply

Question Z Fold 3 'Too Cold To Charge' after water damage

Okay, hello XDA Forums peoples! Ive been lurking here for like a decade. I feel bad for bothering you nice people, but now I'm at my wits end with this phone.
Okay, so, long story short:
Z Fold 3, let it run the One U.I. 4 update, bricked the whole phone, wouldnt come back on. This happens a week away from being out of warranty. So i get samsung to agree to let Asurion/uBreakiFix repair it (I almost always fix my own electronics, I hate Asurion, I've had problems dealing with them before, but its free so whatever). Well they get it working, i asked what they did and they were basically like 'uhhh idk'. I assume it was just an 'unplug the battery and plug it back in' kind of thing.
Anyways fast forward to a couple months ago. Im walking along the creek, i always keep my phone in my backpack for safety. Zipper on my backpack comes open some, phone falls out and directly into the water for about 3-5 seconds. Goes black within 15 minutes. Alright, so it seems like maybe the boys who worked on this didnt seal it back properly. Whatever.
I let it dry for about 4 or 5 days. Comes back on, everything works except the front screen's digitizer(which is cool for me, because the inside screen still works fine) and its reporting too cold to charge, so now once the battery runs out i have a new foldable brick! Yay! I check the battery temperature thats reported in settings and its completely fine. I hit it with a hair dryer for like 5 minutes to try and trip the thermometer, and nothing happens.
I tried some cheap shots in the dark, i replace the USB charging board, i replace the wireless charging coil, both of which have thermistors on other older samsung phones, so i figured it was a decent guess. Still too cold to charge.
So I find a schematic, or not exactly a schematic, but like a boardview, i guess. So at least i know where the thermistors are to check them. Theres about 10 thermistors on the main and sub boards. 5 of which are covered by metal shielding which i am just terrified of trying to remove, mainly because i havent done it before. So i check the other half.
The thermistors used in these phones are like inverse, so they have less resistance for higher temps and more resistance for lower temps. If one of them is dead, it will have like "maximum resistance", right? Which would report the coldest possible temperature, right? So that all makes sense, to me at least.
The 5 i can get to with my meter to check, they seem to work completely fine. From what research ive done they seem to be like 100k resistors when measured at ~70 degrees f, and i can watch the resistance go up and down when its cooled or heated past that temperature. Okay, perfect. That all checks out.
Because the other ones are under some metal shielding, i assume theyre most likely fine because any water would have a harder time getting in there. So i skip to the most expensive option so far: i buy two replacement batteries. The schematics do not include the battery, so i dont know where the thermistors are on my current batteries to check them, if that was the problem.
Well, batteries came yesterday, i pop them in, still too cold to charge. I've already ran the phone dead checking it, so i cant do any further diagnostics with the phone on. And now the most i get is a Yield sign with a thermometer in it when i plug it in.
Okay, so... Idk?? This problem is starting to get over my head. What do y'all think? It seems like my options are becoming more limited and expensive.
I can try and put a big blob of solder on the top of the shielding and pull it off to check the remaining thermistors, which seems to be how people remove those things. I also have have hot air at my disposal, which is always risky with tiny things because too high airspeed might blow components away on the board and then i'll probably cry.
It could just be a connector somewhere on some flex cable? Maybe? I mean like maybe what if one of them is for reporting temperature, and water corrosion is stopping it from sending a signal through???
Im fine with doing whatever, but i just want a charged battery first so i can recover my data before i do anything that drastic. I mean, back in the day they had 4 big pads on a removable battery. You could buy a universal samsung battery charger or rig a USB cable to charge it, but I have literally no idea what to do here. Does anyone know of some specialized battery charger that will connect to these flex cables?? That would be a gigantic help right now. Or if i knew where to get a Z Fold 3 just to pop it open and charge my battery with? Or maybe just sit there for 2 hours holding two wires to the positive and negative pins?!??!?? I dont know. Someone throw ideas at me, please!
Might be worth buying a bench power supply and either injecting voltage through the phone or connecting it to the cells to trickle charge them back up? Im not an expert it these just throwing ideas

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