Left my phone on charger - Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ Questions & Answers

Hi guys.
I was tired and accidentaly slept over a day and left my phone on charger for like 2 hours.
It was probably holding on a charger at 100% for at least 30 min.
Now I know that is not healthy for battery,so I'm worried about this.

The phone will not allow the battery to go over voltage no matter how long it's plugged in.
Charging beyond 80% and especially 90% stresses the battery and reduces its lifespan.
When the battery's capacity drops to 80% it has reached its useful lifespan, replace it to reduce the chances of a failure.
A battery failure can severely damage the phone.
Any swelling (rear cover) is a battery failure!
Replace it that day if it fails, do not charge!!!
Erratic fast charging and especially a rapid decline in capacity are also indicators of a failure.
The battery is cheap, fairly easy to replace and not worth damaging the N10+ over!
Replace with a new OEM rear cover seal to preserve water resistance.
My first battery failed at 1.5 years, I was very fortunate it didn't damage the display. My N10+ is heavily used. I estimate the battery will last me 1-2 years tops.
Regardless I will now replace it yearly.

blackhawk said:
The phone will not allow the battery to go over voltage no matter how long it's plugged in.
Charging beyond 80% and especially 90% stresses the battery and reduces its lifespan.
When the battery's capacity drops to 80% it has reached its useful lifespan, replace it to reduce the chances of a failure.
A battery failure can severely damage the phone.
Any swelling (rear cover) is a battery failure!
Replace it that day if it fails, do not charge!!!
Erratic fast charging and especially a rapid decline in capacity are also indicators of a failure.
The battery is cheap, fairly easy to replace and not worth damaging the N10+ over!
Replace with a new OEM rear cover seal to preserve water resistance.
My first battery failed at 1.5 years, I was very fortunate it didn't damage the display. My N10+ is heavily used. I estimate the battery will last me 1-2 years tops.
Regardless I will now replace it yearly.
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Who told you that battery on modern phones can damage is display?
The battery to blow up needs like 10 years of charging which in 99% you won't even reach because you will change the phone years back.
Give me one example where battery on modern phones like Samsung and Huawei damaged the display.
Besides I always charge the phone while it's off I know why.

paparazzo79 said:
Who told you that battery on modern phones can damage is display?
The battery to blow up needs like 10 years of charging which in 99% you won't even reach because you will change the phone years back.
Give me one example where battery on modern phones like Samsung and Huawei damaged the display.
Besides I always charge the phone while it's off I know why.
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The battery is mounted directly on the back of the display with it's thousands of semiconductors. This type of battery typically has a lifespan of 200 full charge cycles before it degrades to 80% of its original capacity.
A degraded Li is much more likely to fail.
Lol, do want you want.

blackhawk said:
The battery is mounted directly on the back of the display with it's thousands of semiconductors. This type of battery typically has a lifespan of 200 full charge cycles before it degrades to 80% of its original capacity.
A degraded Li is much more likely to fail.
Lol, do want you want.
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Yeah right.just like degraded on my 8 year old S7 edge..please cut this c..p.

paparazzo79 said:
Yeah right.just like degraded on my 8 year old S7 edge..please cut this c..p.
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Your ignorance is not my problem.
Don't ask for help if all you want to do is act like a runt.
Really?
Oh no I left my phone on the charger overnight, the sky is falling
Problem solved, you're so on my ignore list.

blackhawk said:
Your ignorance is not my problem.
Don't ask for help if all you want to do is act like a runt.
Really?
Oh no I left my phone on the charger overnight, the sky is falling
Problem solved, you're so on my ignore list.
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Who cares about you and battery blowing up the screen..
I asked Samsung technician about it and he told me:" in my career as a technician never saw that,are you joking me"?
So stop witj it.

Related

the truth about HTC extended batteries which claim same size , higher capacity

Under mango or one of the firmware updates which had been updated recently , u will see yr battery saver is fluctuating , at one time saying u have a 1 day, while another time it says u only 2 hours on a reasonably fuller charge.
there is a problem with HTC original batteries, rather i will say a safety regulation after recent incidents with battery safety
yr htc only charges up to 85% level even though the phone indicator shows 100%
when u unplug it from the charger, it immediately drains and stays at 80%.
THis is likely why the HTC phones have a shorter battery life, whether its android or windowsphone 7
this is not a defective battery, its made intentionally by HTC for 2 reasons 1) safety , 2)battery longevity ,the safety mechanism built in stops charging it to 100%, thus overcharging, overcharging means the battery is out thru stress which may pose a hazard. if a battery is fully charged to true 100 % , it poses a hazard if one of the pins in the phone connectors break. apparently this pin tells the charger or the phone not to charge anymore once reaching 100%. there is a possibility that if this pin breaks, the phone will overcharge and pose a safety hazard. So this is why HTC batteries dont charge to true 100% and this particular pin is tweaked to full charge to only 80%
wheareas, mugen batteries ect do not have this safety regulation or charging limit although they are safe to use, so they seem to last 20% more than stock HTC battery because they fully charge to 100%.
Mugen or other reputed aftermarket batteries are more likely to wear out sooner than stock batteries unless depending on the quality of the battery..
in order to get yr HTC battery to full charge it u need to bump charge it.bump charging is a technique to fully charged the battery closer to its real capacity
to bump charge
1) fully charge the battery from 20% to 100% , as indicated by the phone OS
2) turn off the charger, turn on again, u will notice the phone charges again even though its 100% full for 1/2 a minute. wait for it to fully charge
3) repeat the above step 2) for 10 times
4)use a timer plug to simplify the process. Set the timer plug to on/off every minute for 10 times. u need to get a digital timer for this purpose with mutiple timer settings
Magpir said:
yr htc only charges up to 85% level even though the phone indicator shows 100%
when u unplug it from the charger, it immediately drains and stays at 80%.
THis is likely why the HTC phones have a shorter battery life, whether its android or windowsphone 7
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Interesting. I noticed this with my HTC Mozart; battery indiactor drops one bar (to 80-85%) as soon as I take it off charge. Always assumed it was a WP7 thing - like it was drawing a lot of current.
Where did you get this info from? Looks like I'll be ordering a new (non-HTC) battery asap!
If it's true i won't buy a plug timer but a new battery, not from HTC...at least i hope it's true caus my battery capacity sucks and that gives me hopes, enjoying my hd7 more than a half day without plugging it (when it's possible)...so nuff thanks for the tip.
Sent from my HD7 T9292 using XDA Windows Phone 7 App
Funny, I have always done this with every device (maybe not the x 10 repeat!). never knoew that was the reason though thanks!!
not only HTC, there are couple of other devices like samsung galaxy ect
now u know why they claim mugen and other aftermarket batteries last longer...
mugen 1500 mah battery with the same size as the stock 1230 mah batt>
thats bull..because a 1500 mah battery looks much bigger ... the samsung omnia 7 has a 1500 mah battery and its 30% larger than than the HD7 battery....
Aphasaic2002 said:
Interesting. I noticed this with my HTC Mozart; battery indiactor drops one bar (to 80-85%) as soon as I take it off charge. Always assumed it was a WP7 thing - like it was drawing a lot of current.
Where did you get this info from? Looks like I'll be ordering a new (non-HTC) battery asap!
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thats because the battery stops charging once it reaches 85%
u may have heard of the HTC bump charging technique. thats what this si all about , but u need to do it everyday, so get a timer plug and leave it to do its job overnight everyday
the best is to use a digital programmable timer plug .
Ok, had a google and looks like your post is only partially true:
http://phandroid.com/2010/12/25/you...is-lying-to-you-and-its-not-such-a-bad-thing/
Appears it's an issue with all smartphones, not just HTC! Also bump-charging will dramatically reduce battery life.
As someone in the comments says; why can't the phone just stop charging and switch to running wall power once battery gets to 100%, same as laptops? I assume this is what Apple do, as the iPhone doesn't suffer from the same issue.
Interesting because I have no problems with my battery doing that running Mango beta 7712 on my HTC 7 Pro.
The moment I take my battery off once it turns green, it stays at 100% for hours if there's absolutely no activity on it.
I think it's how far you guys are draining your batteries. Ever since I've gotten my phone, only twice did I push the battery lower than 15% charge; once on accident and another to recalibrate it. After that, I never pushed it lower than 15% and made sure to only recharge it after at least a good 20% of usage (days i feared i wouldn't be near a charger and needed full charge).
Granted, I'll add that it maybe be because I swap the battery out every other night with a spare, and if I do so I make sure there's between 50-58% charge left.
No bump charging either.
ScottSUmmers said:
Interesting because I have no problems with my battery doing that running Mango beta 7712 on my HTC 7 Pro.
The moment I take my battery off once it turns green, it stays at 100% for hours if there's absolutely no activity on it.
I think it's how far you guys are draining your batteries. Ever since I've gotten my phone, only twice did I push the battery lower than 15% charge; once on accident and another to recalibrate it. After that, I never pushed it lower than 15% and made sure to only recharge it after at least a good 20% of usage (days i feared i wouldn't be near a charger and needed full charge).
Granted, I'll add that it maybe be because I swap the battery out every other night with a spare, and if I do so I make sure there's between 50-58% charge left.
No bump charging either.
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yes its better to maintain 20% charge .
If u noticed the iPhone batteries wear out faster.
About year or so.
Just to confirm I have used the timer plug technique twice the last 2 days .
This is what I have
30% charge
8 hours since last charge
Moderate usage.
Somehow those who claim to use momax or mugen batteries claim to have the same results above .
the charge-controller is in the phone not the battery.
schranz01 said:
the charge-controller is in the phone not the battery.
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apparently it still the battery...
up for awareness.....
My HD7 doesn't do this. Tried several times even over a 5 minute span keeping the battery indicator in view. It never dropped to 80%.
---------- Post added at 08:57 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:54 AM ----------
Magpir said:
yes its better to maintain 20% charge .
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You should not let Li-ION batteries fully discharge, ever. It's good to keep it on a charger whenever you can, than keep it off a charger and let it fully discharge. That wears the battery out.
Also, there's no risk in overcharging the battery because almost all decent phones will stop charging when the battery is full. They know when to stop charging, just like they know when to alert you that the battery is fully-charged (via a notification and/or changing the LED Notification light color).
You actually can overcharge it by exposing a fully charged battery to higher temperatures - putting the phone in direct sunlight or setting it in a car holder in the way of hot air from the heater deflector while using Satnav, for example. In order to avoid these conditions, controllers do prevent batteries from 100% charge. That being said, I don't think there's a standard for marking battery capacity, and an honest manufacturer should put real effective battery assembly capacity accounting for those limitations, not the sum of capacities of included cells. Don't think they do it really.
vangrieg said:
You actually can overcharge it by exposing a fully charged battery to higher temperatures - putting the phone in direct sunlight or setting it in a car holder in the way of hot air from the heater deflector while using Satnav, for example. In order to avoid these conditions, controllers do prevent batteries from 100% charge. That being said, I don't think there's a standard for marking battery capacity, and an honest manufacturer should put real effective battery assembly capacity accounting for those limitations, not the sum of capacities of included cells. Don't think they do it really.
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Yea, its like computer hard drives and flash cards....Formated they never will be the size your quoted or paid for.
I wish there was standards for this and it's only sold on the actuall usable space or time.
N8ter said:
Also, there's no risk in overcharging the battery because almost all decent phones will stop charging when the battery is full. They know when to stop charging, just like they know when to alert you that the battery is fully-charged (via a notification and/or changing the LED Notification light color).
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It's actually still not good to leave li-ion batteries plugged in when they are fully charged and stopped charging. They will suffer from capacity loss that way as well. Not to mention any heat coming off the device.
Update: i did not bump charge today..
and the old symptom returned again.. draining fast

Battery life: frequent micro charges vs more spaced charges

What is best in terms of battery longevity?
1 - Wait until battery level fall below a certain level (and which % is ideal to start charging)
or
2- Charge the battery as frequently soon as possible
Thanks for any advice
Lithium batteries last longer if you do not disharge them all the way..
I don't have reference material handy. If you really want some, I will try and find some again..
But basically charge the battery whenever you can or at least do not let it go below say 20 or 25 percent if you are concerned about that. Since our devices have a replaceable battery I do not stress out over it too much. If I cut 6 months off the battery and it only lasts me a year or so, I can always just put in a new one, they are not that expensive..
Now on a device without a replaceable battery is where you really have to be concerned..
Drain till 20% then recharge it. Best way to use lithium battery.
kyokeun1234 said:
Drain till 20% then recharge it. Best way to use lithium battery.
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Thank you gentlement for your advice. So far, I connect the USB cable each time I sit at the desk. Even if battery is 9x% full. I will stop doing this now.
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/how_to_prolong_lithium_based_batteries
says it's best to keep the battery charged. best to keep the battery levels at 40-90%
ceejay83 said:
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/how_to_prolong_lithium_based_batteries
says it's best to keep the battery charged. best to keep the battery levels at 40-90%
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Huh, I heard it was around 20%~80%...
kyokeun1234 said:
Huh, I heard it was around 20%~80%...
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yea could be, just don't discharge or overcharge the battery :good:
i haven't looked into it lately. but i'm pretty sure our phones don't discharge the battery till it's technically at 0% (~3V)
i'll run my phone down tonight and check it with a mutlimeter to verify...
i wouldn't be surprised to find out the phone stops charging the battery before it's at a true 100% either. so i guess i'll check that too.
crazy talk said:
i wouldn't be surprised to find out the phone stops charging the battery before it's at a true 100% either. so i guess i'll check that too.
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I was also puzzled by the warning of overcharging issue. I read somewhere that the GalNexus has an electronic which prevents overcharging. I am very interested by your verification if that is true. Because frankly, it would be very inconvenient to wake in the middle of every night to disconnect the charger.
2LoT said:
I was also puzzled by the warning of overcharging issue. I read somewhere that the GalNexus has an electronic which prevents overcharging. I am very interested by your verification if that is true. Because frankly, it would be very inconvenient to wake in the middle of every night to disconnect the charger.
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there are wall chargers that have timers on them, they shut off power after a custom time
You can't overcharge a phone by leaving it plugged in all night, the charging circuit only allows it to charge to a certain point. You can overcharge a phone by plugging it in everytime it hits 90% because you're being all OCD about it. Over time that will screw up your battery
The main thing you want to avoid is heat, which will seriously degrade the life of the battery. I only charge my phone once a day(before I go to bed). I've been doing this since I got my first Android device(well, my Nexus S had to be charged like 3 times a day :| ) and have never run into any premature battery failures.
speedyink said:
You can't overcharge a phone by leaving it plugged in all night, the charging circuit only allows it to charge to a certain point. You can overcharge a phone by plugging it in everytime it hits 90% because you're being all OCD about it. Over time that will screw up your battery
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Oh that's what overcharging mean? Ok thanks.
speedyink said:
You can't overcharge a phone by leaving it plugged in all night, the charging circuit only allows it to charge to a certain point. You can overcharge a phone by plugging it in everytime it hits 90% because you're being all OCD about it. Over time that will screw up your battery
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Quite the opposite is true, regarding the second part of your reply, actually.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
Actually, it's never a bad time to charge a lithium battery because the charge you are using is always the oldest added. Consider it as a bucket with golf balls and a hole at the bottom. You load golf balls from the top and use them one at a time from the hole on the bottom.
All lithium batteries have circuitry built into them to prevent overcharging but at the same time the circuitry needs power to operate. If you drain your battery down to nothing and leave it uncharged for a long time the circuitry will drain the reserve and you will not be able to charge it at all.
Another fact about lithium batteries is that you can charge them more times than their natural life span. So as soon as a battery is manufactured it starts to go bad just sitting on a shelf. So buy them fresh. They have thousands of charge cycles and only about 2-3 years life. So even if you charge all cells inside 2-3 times daily (remember the bucket analogy) that's only about 1,000 charges in a year.
Also, you could plug your phone in and out 100 times during one day and still not complete one full charge cycle.
Conclusion ; charge it whenever you can, whenever you want. You'll need a new battery in about 2-3 years anyway in which time you'll most likely get a new phone.
Thanks obsanity. Oh wow, this is indeed even better. Thank you very much for the technical background explanation.
So as soon as a battery is manufactured it starts to go bad just sitting on a shelf.
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Are those the cheap batteries you find on eBay, the kind of $20 for 3 batteries?
2LoT said:
Thanks obsanity. Oh wow, this is indeed even better. Thank you very much for the technical background explanation.
Are those the cheap batteries you find on eBay, the kind of $20 for 3 batteries?
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the cheap ebay batteries use a cheap/inferior chemistry. they may be capable of the same Mah as stock for example when new, but i wouldn't count on it to age as well compared to OEM.
obsanity said:
Actually, it's never a bad time to charge a lithium battery because the charge you are using is always the oldest added. Consider it as a bucket with golf balls and a hole at the bottom. You load golf balls from the top and use them one at a time from the hole on the bottom.
All lithium batteries have circuitry built into them to prevent overcharging but at the same time the circuitry needs power to operate. If you drain your battery down to nothing and leave it uncharged for a long time the circuitry will drain the reserve and you will not be able to charge it at all.
Another fact about lithium batteries is that you can charge them more times than their natural life span. So as soon as a battery is manufactured it starts to go bad just sitting on a shelf. So buy them fresh. They have thousands of charge cycles and only about 2-3 years life. So even if you charge all cells inside 2-3 times daily (remember the bucket analogy) that's only about 1,000 charges in a year.
Also, you could plug your phone in and out 100 times during one day and still not complete one full charge cycle.
Conclusion ; charge it whenever you can, whenever you want. You'll need a new battery in about 2-3 years anyway in which time you'll most likely get a new phone.
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Thanks for the clarification!
2LoT said:
Are those the cheap batteries you find on eBay, the kind of $20 for 3 batteries?
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I would say they are not only old but also fake claims of capacity. It's actually hard to measure how much a battery can hold so they take advantage of it. Who's going to prove them wrong?
system shutdown occurs on the Galaxy Nexus at 3.39 volts (assumed, measured voltage with no load is 3.42)
in theory you could get a bit better battery life at the cost of cell longevity by running it down to 3.2 volts. assuming the system could continue to function.
EDIT: full system charge is 4.2 volts, as expected. i don't see a practical benefit to modifying the system to run at below 3.4 volts, even if possible.

Battery Life/Damage

Hey guys I'm often a lurker on here and don't post a whole lot but came across this article and found it interesting. Thought I'd share... Also, I like to leave my HTC ONE plugged in on my desk stand at work with the "Daydream" clock function running (basically using my phone as a desk clock). Do you think leaving it plugged in charging all day running this clock is doing any damage to my battery? It of course fills up and charges to 100% pretty quickly because I never really let it get below 80%. Below is my charging habit...
1. Charges all night at my bedside
2. Take it off the charger in the morning while getting ready for work and my drive
3. Get to work, plug it in for 6-7 hours running Daydream
4. Take it off the charger and go home... (off the charger for about 4-5 hours in the evening)
5. Go to bed, plug it in, and start all over again...
Oh and here's the article :lol:
http://gizmodo.com/going-from-all-the-way-full-to-all-the-way-empty-wont-h-618834847
How To Take Care of Your Smartphone Battery the Right Way
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Your smartphone is a minor miracle, a pocket-sized computer that can fulfill almost every whim. But none of its superpowers matter a bit if it runs out of juice. With removable batteries becoming more and more rare, you've got to take good care of the one you got. Fortunately, it's not to hard keep the lithium-ion powering your everything machine happy if you follow a few simple rules.
Obviously, the first rule for extending your battery life is not using up all your battery life playing candy crush and walking around with Wi-Fi and GPS enabled when you're not using either and really, really need your phone to last that extra hour. But aside from that, there are some basic rules for care and charging, and they're the simplest baseline for a healthy battery.
Top it off
You may vaguely recall hearing something about rechargeable batteries and the "memory effect." You know, that if you don't "teach" your rechargeable batteries their full potential by taking them from totally full to totally empty, they'll "forget" part of their capacity. Well forget all that. Right now. It's wrong.
To get the most out of a lithium-ion battery, you should try to keep it north of 50 percent as much as possible. For the most part going from all the way full to all the way empty won't help; in fact, it'll do a little damage if you do it too often. That said, it's smart to do one full discharge about once a month for "calibration," but don't do it all the time. Running the whole gamut on a regular basis won't make your battery explode or anything, but it will shorten its lifespan.
So if you're really particular about optimizing your battery's life, you should try to go from around 40 percent to around 80 percent in one go, and then back down whenever possible. A bunch of tiny charges isn't as bad as going from 100 down to zero all the time, but it's not optimal either.
Keep it cool
It's easy to worry about bad charging habits thanks to the training we've had from old rechargeable batteries, but lithium-ion batteries have a worse enemy: heat. Your smartphone's battery will degrade much much faster when it's hot, regardless of whether it's being used or just sitting around doing nothing.
At an average temperature of 32 degrees fahrenheit, a lithium-ion battery will lose six percent of its maximum capacity per year. At 77 degrees, that number jumps to 20 percent, and at 104 degrees it's a whopping 35. Sure, it's not exactly practical (or sane) to keep your phone in the fridge, but it's worth going out of your way to prevent long stays in hot cars and the like.
Avoid wireless charging
Wireless charging is can be incredibly convenient if your phone can do it, but it's not without its disadvantages. The inductive, wireless chargers out there today have this nasty habit of generating a fair bit of waste heat. And while wasted energy is just a bummer in general, that heat will also toast your battery in the process. That's no bueno. It's a little less convenient, but standard plug-in charging is going to keep your battery in better shape, especially if you're some place warm to begin with.
Never go to zero
Obviously, using your battery is going to make it degrade. But it's going to slowly die even if you just leave that iPad in the closet for a bit. There's a trick to minimizing that inevitable aging though: leave it a little bit of juice.
If you're going to be shelving any lithium-ion battery for a long time, try to leave it with at least 40 percent battery power to tide it over. Lithium-ion batteries don't hemmorage power at 30 percent a month like nickel-metal-hydride batteries do; they'll lose maybe five to ten percent of their charge each month.
And when lithium-ion batteries get too low—like, literally zero percent—they get seriously unstable, and dangerous to charge. To prevent explosion-type disasters if you do try to charge one, lithium-ion batteries have built-in self-destruct circuits that will disable (read: destroy) the battery for good, if it reaches rock bottom. And sure, that'll save you from a face full of battery-acid, but it'll also leave you short one battery.
Don't sweat it too much
It's easy to get protective of your battery, but it's also easy to get lazy. And that's fine, because as long as you're not a complete idiot, you'll be OK. Typically, a lithium-ion battery lasts for three to five years, and chances are you're going to want to swap out your gadgets sometime in that window anyway. The slight damage of a technically bad idea like leaving your phone plugged in all night every night, or using wireless charging, might be worth the convenience.
Still, it's pretty easy to keep your battery reasonably healthy just by avoiding particularly egregious torture like letting your phone discharge from full to zero every single day, or leaving it in a hot car all the time. And the next time you make it back home with power to spare, you'll thank yourself for it.
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I dont agree that your battery dosent like being or performs worse at a 100%. Or that it harms the battery in any way. I keep my phone plugged in as much as possible durring the day, and all night long. But i only use the wall charger that came with the phone, or a smart car charger made for my phone. Because as the article says, these chargers are smart enough to stop charging for awile after the phone has reached 100% to prevent over charging/heating. Cheap wall and car chargers dont have this feature and continuously provide a charge to the phone. Also charging using a usb port on a pc or other device does not provide this overgharge protection.
My last phones battery lasted for almost 3 1/2 years before needing to be replaced. Heres what i do.
Keep it charging as much as possible only with a "smart" charger.
Never let the batter drain all the way down. If it gets to 10% and i cant charge it at the moment, i turn it off.
Never let your device get too hot. Dont leave it in hot cars or sitting in the sun, etc.
Never "bump charge". That is just a way to trick a smart charger into overcharging your battery.
Also over clocking/volting your phone puts more strain on your battery than it was intended to take. It makes its temperatures rise higher, and the charge to deplete in a more rapid fassion. Both of which are bad for your battery.
These are just my opinions of course, but it seems to work out good for me. I think 3 1/2 years is a pretty acceptable life span.
never let it die
I have always left my phone's plugged in constantly and never an issue. Once my phone hits 100% it stops charging and then is very cool to the touch from then on.I heard phone's now has a failsafe that will stop charging and start running the phone off the charger and not battery.
Sent from my HTC6500LVW using Tapatalk
What's the best battery conservative rom?
Why do you think you should never fully drain it?
Every 30-40 days, you should fully drain your battery - until your phone automatically powers down - and then fully charge it - and allow it to stay on the charger for 30-40 minutes after it's 100%.
cope413 said:
Why do you think you should never fully drain it?
Every 30-40 days, you should fully drain your battery - until your phone automatically powers down - and then fully charge it - and allow it to stay on the charger for 30-40 minutes after it's 100%.
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Draining a lithium ion battery all the way can damage the cells causing irreversible damage to the battery. Read this
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/how_to_prolong_lithium_based_batteries
Sent from my One using Tapatalk
disconnecktie said:
Draining a lithium ion battery all the way can damage the cells causing irreversible damage to the battery. Read this
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/how_to_prolong_lithium_based_batteries
Sent from my One using Tapatalk
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The battery management system in the phone does not allow the cells to go lower than the safe level. For Li-ion cells, that's somewhere around 2.7-3.0volts/cell.
If it did, there'd be not only a huge warranty liability, but also a safety one.
cope413 said:
The battery management system in the phone does not allow the cells to go lower than the safe level. For Li-ion cells, that's somewhere around 2.7-3.0volts/cell.
If it did, there'd be not only a huge warranty liability, but also a safety one.
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You can believe that if you want to but if you actually read that link you will understand. It puts a lot of strain on the cells to go that far down. There is a physical reaction inside your battery of growing and stretching created from the charge/discharge cycle. If you regularly drop the charge to nothing then it makes it harder for it to keep a charge over time. You're more than welcome to do your method of calibration but I'm a firm believer in keeping the battery healthy.
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disconnecktie said:
You can believe that if you want to but if you actually read that link you will understand. It puts a lot of strain on the cells to go that far down. There is a physical reaction inside your battery of growing and stretching created from the charge/discharge cycle. If you regularly drop the charge to nothing then it makes it harder for it to keep a charge over time. You're more than welcome to do your method of calibration but I'm a firm believer in keeping the battery healthy.
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I didn't say regularly. I said every 30-40 days. I have a lot of experience with lithium cells - both manufacturing and selling.
Before getting the One, I regularly used my HiTec lithium charger on my thunderbolt battery to run a discharge cycle, and then balance/charge it slowly.
No one need be afraid of their phone getting below 10%. It isn't causing any damage.
Well i guess its all a matter of opinion. Me and my wifes first smart phones were the htc incredible. I would never let mine die and the battery lasted fir 3 1/2 years. My wife would let hers die once or twice a month, and it lasted for 14 months before it needed a new battery. Got on her about not letting it die after we replaced the battery, much to my surprise she listened, and the replacement lasted for another 2 1/2 years. Both of our batteries actually still work today just not used to much anymore.
I had the dinc2 and followed the same procedure he used and pretty much nuked a battery from doing that same procedure. In less than a year my battery was bad. To each their own but I still don't suggest running it all the way out.
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even anker, who is is probably the biggest portable battery manufacturer recommends not letting their products get below 25% because it can reduce the lifespan of the pack. They state that keeping it between 25-75% is ideal.
Interesting article, thanks for sharing OP.
I also leave my phone plugged in while sitting at my desk and let it charge up. Typically I plug into my laptop via usb while at work, once fully charged it shows 'fully charged' and switches the led status light to green.
I try to never let it die either but have to travel for work and do get very low on occasion, once I get down to 10% I typically just shut to phone off to preserve power while I am flying and avoid turning it back on again til I can get it on a charger.
Battery Life
I'm new to this phone,so I'm not entirely sure how the battery life is ... but I heard a while ago that you get the best battery life out of phones when you only plug them in to charge when they are completely dead. I don't do it often enough to see a difference, but has anybody else done it?
You probably get a much more consistent charge while it is dead/powered off. The only problem there is does letting your phone die occasionally ruin your battery or not?
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danprichet said:
... I heard a while ago that you get the best battery life out of phones when you only plug them in to charge when they are completely dead. ...
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Did you not read the first message in this thread. wherein it says:
To get the most out of a lithium-ion battery, you should try to keep it north of 50 percent as much as possible.
and
Never go to zero.
Alright, alright - I was merely saying I'd heard a theory stating otherwise.
jpradley said:
Did you not read the first message in this thread. wherein it says:
To get the most out of a lithium-ion battery, you should try to keep it north of 50 percent as much as possible.
and
Never go to zero.
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Click to collapse
My laptop, which is a Lenovo, has 2 settings. Best battery health and best battery life. Best health keeps the battery charged to between 50-60 percent and then stops the charge. Best life goes up to 100.
Sent from my HTC6500LVW using xda app-developers app

Question Is it safe to leave the phone plugged in 24/7 with "protect battery" on, which limits max charge to 85%?

Is it safe to leave the phone plugged in 24/7 with "protect battery" on, which limits max charge to 85%?
Not a good idea. A power surge or near lightning strike could fry it. Rather pointless to leave it perpetually plugged in.
blackhawk said:
Not a good idea. A power surge or near lightning strike could fry it. Rather pointless to leave it perpetually plugged in.
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I see. What about leaving it charging overnight while I sleep? Does it hurt the battery to have it plugged in while it is at 85% with "protected battery" on in the same way that it hurts to have it plugged in when it is at 100%?
A 40-72% charge is better; Li's love frequent midrange power cycling. 85% is ok but 80% or lower be better. Do what best suites your needs.
Batteries aren't a big deal to replace. I now replace my heavily used N10+ battery about every year now as a matter of routine maintenance.
However a battery failure is a big deal and seriously damage the phone. Any battery swelling (rear cover) is a battery failure, replace immediately.
blackhawk said:
A 40-72% charge is better; Li's love frequent midrange power cycling. 85% is ok but 80% or lower be better. Do what best suites your needs.
Batteries aren't a big deal to replace. I now replace my heavily used N10+ battery about every year now as a matter of routine maintenance.
However a battery failure is a big deal and seriously damage the phone. Any battery swelling (rear cover) is a battery failure, replace immediately.
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I see. Too bad Samsung didn't choose 80% or make it selectable.
grayson73 said:
I see. Too bad Samsung didn't choose 80% or make it selectable.
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Like I said it's not a big deal. I just fast charge for 10-20 minutes when convenient.
You could put on a timer switch if it really bugs and slow charge it.
Why such concern ? Been charging all my phones since 2012 all day long on, during daytime, none of them was affected. Battery still same, last like new. Many of them still in use by my family members.
Example, I behaved like this to phones for around 1,5 - 2 years, then I got new one. So not just tiny short period of time.
Ing.King said:
Why such concern ? Been charging all my phones since 2012 all day long on, during daytime, none of them was affected. Battery still same, last like new. Many of them still in use by my family members.
Example, I behaved like this to phones for around 1,5 - 2 years, then I got new one. So not just tiny short period of time.
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Oh really? That's good to know. I thought fast charging, charging to 100%, or leaving it plugged in at 100% would degrade the battery.
Never actually carried about this, lucky me maybe, wait for other oppinions or exp.
make sure that it doesn't heat up. rest of it not affect too much.
I always charged my smart phones whole night.
Never faced any problem.
sunyakram said:
I always charged my smart phones whole night.
Never faced any problem.
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Higher cell voltage degrades the Li faster.
They are rated by full charge cycles; discharge until shutdown to 100% charged is a cycle.
Most have a rated life of 200 or so cycles.
High storage/use temperatures also can effect it's service life greatly as can rapid discharge cycles.
In any event when a Li reaches 80% of its original capacity it is degraded and should be replaced before it fails (which could destroy the phone).
On my heavily used N10+ I get about a year to 1.5 years of usable service life per battery.
Just replace the battery once it's degraded and otherwise don't worry about it if so inclined. Don't expect a 3 year service life though if it's charge cycle is fully or near fully cycled daily.
Leaving the charger H24 is less unsafe with the 85% limit enabled but it is not totally safe.
After the first charge starting the discharge and automatically the recharge. The result is the use of more number of recharging and the batteries doesn’t support an infinite number of this.
This worse if you use fast recharge, when I have to leave in charge all the night I use an old 5V 500mA charger.
Lightning strike... poof.
My S21FE half ended life yesterday, finished call and then died. Always on charger while in office. Startup possible but after Samsung logo always restart then loop. After 7 loops stays off. Sent to provider for claim. Maybe it is not related to battery, but you never know. Charging not working, no reaction after plug of the charger, even while turned off.
Ing.King said:
My S21FE half ended life yesterday, finished call and then died. Always on charger while in office. Startup possible but after Samsung logo always restart then loop. After 7 loops stays off. Sent to provider for claim. Maybe it is not related to battery, but you never know. Charging not working, no reaction after plug of the charger, even while turned off.
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That sucks.
Hardware failure of some type. Bootup requires a lot of current so it maybe the battery.
Sounds more like a mobo failure...

Poor battery life

Hello!
So I had my Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ taken in to the device repair shop in my town because of the battery not lasting long at all. They did testing and said that the wireless charging coil FPC had cold solder joints. I'm not sure what that means exactly but I had replaced the wireless charging coil and the phone is still dying at random times and at random phone percentage life.
I attached a copy of what the device repair shop had said about the issue with my phone.
stephsmith69 said:
Hello!
So I had my Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ taken in to the device repair shop in my town because of the battery not lasting long at all. They did testing and said that the wireless charging coil FPC had cold solder joints. I'm not sure what that means exactly but I had replaced the wireless charging coil and the phone is still dying at random times and at random phone percentage life.
I attached a copy of what the device repair shop had said about the issue with my phone.
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Was it ever exposed to water? Any drops without a good case protecting it?
Does wired charging work?
Otherwise possible battery failure. Probably should've had the battery replaced when it was apart.
Loose or damaged ribbon cable or connector.
Worse case a mobo failure.
stephsmith69 started a thread called Poor battery life. There may be more posts after this.
Today 12:39 AM
not sure why I got this notification.
stephsmith69 said:
Hello!
So I had my Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ taken in to the device repair shop in my town because of the battery not lasting long at all. They did testing and said that the wireless charging coil FPC had cold solder joints. I'm not sure what that means exactly but I had replaced the wireless charging coil and the phone is still dying at random times and at random phone percentage life.
I attached a copy of what the device repair shop had said about the issue with my phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
'Cold solder' is normally a reference to broken, cracked or just over all a bad solder joint. This would cause a bad, week (high resistance, low voltage) or no connection of the circuit.
If the battery was not charging properly, as blackhawk mentioned, the batter could now be bad.
Was the repair shop able to test the battery?
I am not a Sammy guy but, from what I understand they are a bit heavy on battery monitoring.
Maybe just give it a few charging cycles to see if the battery life improves.
Out of curiosity, what battery percentage is shown when the device turns off?
Cheers.
ipdev said:
'Cold solder' is normally a reference to broken, cracked or just over all a bad solder joint. This would cause a bad, week (high resistance, low voltage) or no connection of the circuit.
If the battery was not charging properly, as blackhawk mentioned, the batter could now be bad.
Was the repair shop able to test the battery?
I am not a Sammy guy but, from what I understand they are a bit heavy on battery monitoring.
Maybe just give it a few charging cycles to see if the battery life improves.
Out of curiosity, what battery percentage is shown when the device turns off?
Cheers.
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Click to collapse
It may be the battery, I'm not sure. The guy at the device shop said it doesn't charge normal and had a .6 amp draw when he hooked it up to his deal. And no, no water damage or any other damage.
And my phone dies at random phone percentages. It could die at 85%, 70%, 50% I mean any percentage, and I don't even know when it's going to die when it does! But then when I put it on the charger, after about 5 minutes it'll already be at 50% charged.
I just want to be able to fix this myself instead of sending it in and paying an outrageous amount haha
I appreciate ya'lls help!
stephsmith69 said:
It may be the battery, I'm not sure. The guy at the device shop said it doesn't charge normal and had a .6 amp draw when he hooked it up to his deal. And no, no water damage or any other damage.
And my phone dies at random phone percentages. It could die at 85%, 70%, 50% I mean any percentage, and I don't even know when it's going to die when it does! But then when I put it on the charger, after about 5 minutes it'll already be at 50% charged.
I just want to be able to fix this myself instead of sending it in and paying an outrageous amount haha
I appreciate ya'lls help!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Replace the battery, especially if it's over 2 yo.
Start there.
Let's stay on topic, folks. If you have questions about how XDA works or how to enable/disable certain features, ask them in the About XDA-Developers section.
Thanks

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