extended battery not lasting longer? - Optimus One, P500, V General

I recently bought this battery: http://amzn.com/B002MRA8FQ
However, it doesn't seem to last longer at all compared to the stock battery. I thought that maybe I needed to drain it fully and then recharge it the whole way before it would work properly, but I noticed that it was reporting 1% life left for a good hour or so before I gave up trying to drain it. Is it possible that the battery life isn't being detected properly since its not the stock battery or is there something else going on that it lasts exactly as long as the stock battery?

as i read the article, it doesnt apear to be an original LG battery...did u ever thought that batteries are not all about XXXXmAh? More is not always better
Think of cars... an american car(ex Ford Mustang) has an 4000cm3 engine producing 200Hp . Subaru has an 2400cm3 engine producing 300hp
But i could be wrong
Cheers !

You can try wiping battery stats

How do I go about wiping the battery stats? I'm using the stock rom BTW

You need a custom recovery (root your phone first)
You can gohere if you are unfamiliar with these terms

You can do it without custom recovery if you are rooted. Use either Battery Calibration app or Root Toolbox app. Both available in the market.
Sent from my LG-P500 using XDA App

ye market has a few tools to calibrate your battery for you

calibrated
So I've rooted and calibrated the battery... but it seems that it hasn't changed anything. It is weird that an extended battery twice the size of the original lasts exactly as long (or less) than the original battery

Charge your battery to full, 100%, then wipe battery stats, and allow your battery to DIE. Then your problem should be fixed. i went through the same problem, i bought a special battery with better battery life and my Optimus t, running at 806/480 on smartass governor can run for about 4 days without dying, and thats with constant use

DeBiasoMan said:
Charge your battery to full, 100%, then wipe battery stats, and allow your battery to DIE. Then your problem should be fixed. i went through the same problem, i bought a special battery with better battery life and my Optimus t, running at 806/480 on smartass governor can run for about 4 days without dying, and thats with constant use
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can you post a link to where you've got this battery from?
Thanks.
Sent from my LG-P500 using XDA App

I bought it used off a website called craigslist for about 50$
Sent from my LG-P500 using XDA App

mah DOES matter!
Battery life is dictated by the mah and how you use your phone. It sounds like the battery you received is defective which happens when you buy them from sites like ebay or amazon. Is there a return policy or warranty on the battery? You should definitely get more talk time and standby time with an extended battery.
It is a common misconception that you have to let the battery drain all the way. These are li-ion batteries which prefer a shallow discharge. Meaning, they prefer to be charged when they are at about 25% capacity.
Best of luck to you!

kphenix said:
It is a common misconception that you have to let the battery drain all the way. These are li-ion batteries which prefer a shallow discharge. Meaning, they prefer to be charged when they are at about 25% capacity.
Best of luck to you!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So true. The closer they remain to fully charged the longer they last.

Related

[Q] Battery Calibration - Seidio Extended Battery

So I was one of those who was finding my battery life to not be sufficient on the Photon and bought the Seidio extended battery. First thought is that it does make the phone heavier, but I can deal with that. Not a deal breaker.
My issue is that the Photon doesn't recognize the fact that I now have the extended battery. I've spent the last two days using Battery calibration software (charging overnight to 100%) and then trying to discharge completely and recharge. The problem is that the phone continually is showing 1% for almost 3-4 hours if not longer. I can't get it to recognize that there is more juice in there.
While it's great that it seems to be working well (first real work day with it today), having the battery drain like mad (or seemingly) and then sitting at 1% for half or more of the day and not knowing when it will die is a problem.
I wonder if this is why the stock seemed to drain so quickly - maybe it's a programming bug? Firmware bug? I dunno. In any event, any suggestions on how to make the phone actually see that there's more juice would be great.
As an FYI I've used "Battery Calibrator" - both of them and Battery Drainer and Fast Discharge to get the phone down. I am rooted, but everything is stock other then the root itself.
Thanks!
Rumor has it, that the latest software update decreases battery life. I have the latest update, (I understand that many have this issue updating, if you do, look it up in the forums, you will need to SBF the first version of software to your phone...), and my battery life could be a lot better, like it used to be.
Sent from my MB855 using xda premium
Well the issue now with the new battery isn't so much battery life. With the extended battery the life is stellar. This issue is that yesterday at about 3 in the afternoon the phone showed 1 percent battery life. Yet it didn't ever die. When i plugged it in last night before going to bed, at 1200, I still had 1 percent. So the issue is that the phone isn't properly recognizing the battery life itself.
Help?
Sent from my MB855 using Tapatalk
[/COLOR]
cubexg said:
Well the issue now with the new battery isn't so much battery life. With the extended battery the life is stellar. This issue is that yesterday at about 3 in the afternoon the phone showed 1 percent battery life. Yet it didn't ever die. When i plugged it in last night before going to bed, at 1200, I still had 1 percent. So the issue is that the phone isn't properly recognizing the battery life itself.
Help?
Sent from my MB855 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I understand that you have used the battery calibration application, try installing CWM, ClockworkMod, after you root the phone. Drain the battery, charge to 100% boot up into CWM, and go to advanced, and clear battery stats...
If that doesn't work, then I could be the battery, or the phone itself. See if any other members have any insight.
Can't change bootloader on photon without breaking 4g as far as I know. Will crosspost in main photon forum. Thanks!
Sent from my MB855 using Tapatalk

[Q] Why do soo many people recommend something soo bad for your battery?

One of the worst things you can do to a lithium battery is discharge it completely. They don't suffer from "memory" yet every time someone here in the forums complains that they are getting crappy battery life the instruction to discharge and recharge to 100% before clearing stats pops up.
For those who are interested here is an article that explains in detail.
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/how_to_prolong_lithium_based_batteries
My main question- Is there some function in android that looks at the maximum depth of discharge level of the battery or is it that most people don't understand the characteristics of L-ion and confuse them with those of Ni-Mh or Ni-Cad?
I want to know because if I need to completely discharge to get better perfomance, despite the reduction in charge cycle lifetime, I will do it but only infrequently.
I've only let my battery discharge completely once, and it wasn't on purpose. From the posts I see here I think I get above average battery life. About 18 hours miui before I go for the charger and on 2.2 roms I'd get 20 hours and still have 40% or so to go. So no I don't think completely discharging your battery does anything for battery life.
Sent from my T959 using XDA App
I have never run mine down completely. Gotten it to about 6% but that was because I was fighting ROM flashing problems. I usually call 25-30% enough for me and plug in then. I am also getting 30 hours out of my 2.2 with a good deal of use. I used to have a Motorola and their batteries are total crap. If you EVER let it get down below 10%, it took some real work for it to charge correctly and boot up. Even as much as a hardware mod where I have had to cut the wires on a USB charge cord and charge it rigged up with the wires pressed against the battery and prongs in the phone. Very dangerous, but worked for a last resort.
Discharging the battery is not for the sake of the battery,but more so for the ROMs data and how it acquires the battstats usage. I only run it up and down and clear stats when flashing a new ROM, but I do use my phone moderate to heavy daily and have had great success in battery life the way I calibrate it.
The solution I think is to use a larger capacity battery and regulate it to narrower window of operation never fully charging or discharging.
The fastest killer though seems to be heat.
I have read several times that your phone does not fully discharge the battery...that there is still a minimal amount of charge,not enough for the phone to opperate but enough to not damage the battery when it shuts down
Maybe the batterystats file can be saved after being calibrated once and then restored after every wipe oor flash.. that would save some time aabd according to you guys, batt life too
Sent from a cell tower to the XDA server to you.
I've only ever calibrated my a few times and only after flashing a new rom. I never run my battery down after resetting the stats. I just use my phone as I normally do. My understanding of calibration is that it's not about squeezing more life out of the battery despite what most people think but of getting a more accurate measurement of the battery's actual charge. Also while it's true that the phone will shut of before the battery is completely discharged damaging the battery, allowing the battery charge to drop that low shortens your battery's life and decreases the amount of charge your battery can hold.
What gets me is I also read somewhere that for optimum battery life you should keep your battery level somewhere between 70%-40%. Of course that doesn't stop me from charging my phone to 100% everyday. I don't remember where I found that article but I'll post a link if I can find it again.
The reason this bad advice about completely discharging your battery persists is probably the same reason people keep recommending automatic task killers.
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/how_to_prolong_lithium_based_batteries
ok, ok ill volunter, ill watch porn till my battery"discharges" At least my log will be interesting
radiohd said:
One of the worst things you can do to a lithium battery is discharge it completely. They don't suffer from "memory" yet every time someone here in the forums complains that they are getting crappy battery life the instruction to discharge and recharge to 100% before clearing stats pops up.
For those who are interested here is an article that explains in detail.
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/how_to_prolong_lithium_based_batteries
My main question- Is there some function in android that looks at the maximum depth of discharge level of the battery or is it that most people don't understand the characteristics of L-ion and confuse them with those of Ni-Mh or Ni-Cad?
I want to know because if I need to completely discharge to get better perfomance, despite the reduction in charge cycle lifetime, I will do it but only infrequently.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Discharging the Battery & Running the Battery Dead is 2 Different things!
We recommend running the battery dead ( Phone Shuts Off ) & recharging while off to train the Android OS from Full > Empty..
Running the Phone until Dead is not Going to hurt the Battery in anyways shape or form despite what you may think or read!
The Reason is, the battery is never fully Discharge & still holds Voltage.. The Calculations of Charged / Dead is at the Kernel Level, so even when dead it still has a 3.4v still or roughly..
As long as the kernel isn't tampered with, discharging the battery via the Phone will never hurt the battery period!
Now, Based on the link you posted you would have to run the battery down past the safe discharge point.. Via some other means of killing the battery, other than using the Phone.
To help ease your mind, Remember this:
~ Charge levels is controlled by the kernel
~ Even when Phone powers off, there is still plenty of charge in the Phone's Battery
~ Battery is never Fully charged, as this also hurts lithium batteries
Roughly every Android kernel does not let lithium battery get below 3.4v and at most 96% charged.
Hope this helps,
~Eugene
If you are still concerned wait until your phone turns off and stick your battery on a meter. You will see there is still power left in it...
My original battery that came with the phone got great life, then couple of months later it was discharging in like 2-4 hrs(froyo), so I called, they sent another one free...5-6 months later that one started doing it as well, so I pulled out the old one from the drawer, it powered on at like 85% ! and I was getting crazy ass life out of it on miui over 30 hrs one time...now that one is acting up again, so I'm going to try to swap again..lol...maybe there's something to not using them for a while...
I've used diff roms and combinations of draining/recharging...calibrating, not calibrating...it's always different results..honestly I don't think there's any rhyme or reason to it other than the fact that many vibrants have diff hardware and there will always be some weird quirk on a per user basis...
As far as hurting it by draining it all the way, I hardly think that's the case seeing as with both batteries I've always let it run down...not on purpose but there has been many many times I've plugged in at 1% or had to power back on because it died...charged it up and got 20-30hrs no prob..usually issues come up when flashing a new rom...
i think it all comes down to luck of the draw. ive had my vibrant since launch day, and i still manage great battery life. my battery is actually stamped 7-02-2010. every 2 weeks or so ill drain the battery completely, turn it back on and allow itself to die again, and finally allow it to fully charge overnight or 4 hours. i usually get a good 7-8 hours of constant use on cm7, or over 24hours if let on standby.
im still debating if i want to grab an epic 4g touch battery as well to increase it even more.
qpinto said:
im still debating if i want to grab an epic 4g touch battery as well to increase it even more.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
what's this about?
Epic 4g batteries are 1800 and fit in our vibes.
Dr.Stainedglove said:
what's this about?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1262035
in there they tested in a store since the epic 4g touch battery fit into a regular epic 4g, if it would fit into a vibrant. only thing is you have to put the battery in facing inside, and it fits and works 100%
Yeah the Epic 4G batteries fit in our Vibrant's. You can buy knock-off one's (that work well) for 19.99$ US! Here's a thread about it...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1316492
Epic touch battery for the win. I've been rocking it for a few weeks. I was on miui and getting 14-16hrs. I recently went back to froyo and yesterday I got 12hrs off of a 67% charge.
Sent from my SGH-T959 using xda premium
dont know if people have seen this article but i thought it was pretty interesting about the battery stats file not actually needing to be deleted...
http://www.androidcentral.com/wiping-battery-stats-doesnt-improve-battery-life-says-google-engineer
jonen said:
dont know if people have seen this article but i thought it was pretty interesting about the battery stats file not actually needing to be deleted...
http://www.androidcentral.com/wiping-battery-stats-doesnt-improve-battery-life-says-google-engineer
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lol one of the biggest flukes in our forum haha.. people will harm their battery to calibrate it and it doesn't even do anything ...
Thank god I only calibrated once
sent from the xda app on my android smartphone.

[Q] Extremely bad battery life

So I have just flashed the CM7 ICS Themed BETA, wiping everything.
I then charged to 100 percent, and used Battery Calibration app.
I have just setup some apps, and I have lost 10% battery life in 40 minutes
Display is using 85% battery life apparently.
Please help?
It can take up to a week to fully calibrate the battery. Since the battery doesn't have memory the phone has to get a feel for how much juice it actually has. Try it for a few days running the battery down and then charging it to full without unplugging. If that doesn't work you might want to try charging all the way then reflashing and immediately do a calibration.
Sent from my MB860 using xda premium
Yeah, I'd calibrate the battery - wouldn't hurt.
Ideally always flash on a 100 % full battery to avoid problems like yours..
Vangelis13 said:
Ideally always flash on a 100 % full battery to avoid problems like yours..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Cheers guys I've taken this all on board.
I'm on 13hrs on battery, its showing 16pc. Battery calibration app shows 3609mv however. This doesn't seem right to me. Am I correct in assuming the phones battery power is the mv listed and no battery is more like 100mv??
Could anyone explain the 'mv' term to me?
Is 0mv when it powers down? Is this indicative of power?
Thanks.
Lithium ion batteries never fully discharge. If they did the battery would not recharge again.
Sent from my MB860 using xda premium
mv referers to mV, as in Milivolt. Most li-ion batteries are rated at 3.7V or 3700mV. A nominal full charge should be around 4.2V or 4200mV.
dLockers said:
So I have just flashed the CM7 ICS Themed BETA, wiping everything.
I then charged to 100 percent, and used Battery Calibration app.
I have just setup some apps, and I have lost 10% battery life in 40 minutes
Display is using 85% battery life apparently.
Please help?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's 35 minutes of active use. 10% isn't outside the realm of the possible.
I usually can go a full day on 60% battery, but this morning Facebook, the interwebs and text messaging put me from 100% to 77% in the course of 30 minutes. Draining 10% in 45 minutes does not seem out of the realm of possibility
I get mine to last around 20-26 hrs on a single charge, of course depending on use. but i hardly leave the house and dont use it a whole lot. One thing to make sure of is setting up profiles on SetCPU and/or undervolting. i just posted my setup on another thread. http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=20284361&postcount=28
so after you clicked the battery calibration button and it said calibration successful, you're wondering why the battery is dropping so fast under use right away?
Easy answer my friend, when you first use the battery calibration app, the first cycle (when phone is being used) will always drain a lot faster than the 2nd and 3rd time around.
The battery calibration app, wipes the battery stats, and makes a new one, however that does take at least 1 - 2 times of a full charge/discharge of the battery. There is a battery tread in the atrix general forum i believe for cailbration steps, etc to go about successfully doing a complete calibration when flashing from rom to rom.
Hope this helped
Hmm, maybe I am just upset that I have to charge every night.
Coming from a BlackBerry 9780 I could go 2 days with semi-heavy use.
I am now using the official Motorola cable, and only charging from very low to full.
Thank you for the advice.
dLockers said:
So I have just flashed the CM7 ICS Themed BETA, wiping everything.
I then charged to 100 percent, and used Battery Calibration app.
I have just setup some apps, and I have lost 10% battery life in 40 minutes
Display is using 85% battery life apparently.
Please help?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try getting one of these:
4800mah extended battery
1900mah extended battery
Problem Solved.
Bluetooth radio was killing my battery. WiFi is fine leaving it on as it disables in stand by, but bluetooth was absolutely draining everything.
thanks for the update
I agree, 10% loss in 40 minutes of active usage is not bad. If the OP had better battery life before he flashed to new ICS themed CM7 beta rom, maybe the new rom is to blame??? I'd OC/UV, possibly with the latest faux123 kernel.
dLockers said:
Problem Solved.
Bluetooth radio was killing my battery. WiFi is fine leaving it on as it disables in stand by, but bluetooth was absolutely draining everything.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for the tip!!!

[Q] How to use 2 batteries alternating

I want to use 2 batteries for travelling where I need a lot of juice for GPS.
One battery will be recharged with the S2. The other battery with an Anker wall charger. That's just a plan right now
I would like to know something concerning the best recharging strategy & battery "calibration" if you are using more than one battery:
If you are using only one battery it's quite simple how to calibrate the system.
But if you are using 2 batteries alternating then you can run into trouble, because the system is "calibrated" to the first battery.
That means if you are using battery1 until 0%. The system knows battery empty. I you are putting the 2nd - already recharged with a external wall charger - into the S2 then I wouldthink that the system is confused, because you didn't recharged it internal.
I want to use 2 batteries for travelling where I need a lot of juice for GPS.
So I would use the first battery until 0% and then change to the 2nd which is already recharged and then draining it until 0% and then again recharging.
The other strategy would be drain the first battery until 0%, then using the 2nd until the evening and then recharging both during the night. But I think this strategy will confuse the system.
Hope you understand the problem and I hope someone knows the best solution!
Thank you for your help!
JLowe said:
I want to use 2 batteries for travelling where I need a lot of juice for GPS.
One battery will be recharged with the S2. The other battery with an Anker wall charger. That's just a plan right now
I would like to know something concerning the best recharging strategy & battery "calibration" if you are using more than one battery:
If you are using only one battery it's quite simple how to calibrate the system.
But if you are using 2 batteries alternating then you can run into trouble, because the system is "calibrated" to the first battery.
That means if you are using battery1 until 0%. The system knows battery empty. I you are putting the 2nd - already recharged with a external wall charger - into the S2 then I wouldthink that the system is confused, because you didn't recharged it internal.
I want to use 2 batteries for travelling where I need a lot of juice for GPS.
So I would use the first battery until 0% and then change to the 2nd which is already recharged and then draining it until 0% and then again recharging.
The other strategy would be drain the first battery until 0%, then using the 2nd until the evening and then recharging both during the night. But I think this strategy will confuse the system.
Hope you understand the problem and I hope someone knows the best solution!
Thank you for your help!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You don't need to calibrate the battery on the s2. The device should fix the percentage by itself. I would not recommend that you drain the battery fully to 0% as i have heard that it could damage the battery and use multiple cycles for the one you drain it. If you're running SiyahKernel you can try to reset the fuel chip in extweaks. Some say that it's a placebo but I seem to think that it works.
Hope that helps you out
Sent from my GT-I9100 using xda premium
You are over complicating this, just change the battery when it's flat and everything is ok.. I have 4 batteries, two Samsung and 2 off ebay, I always have one in the phone (obviously!), one charged in my pocket and one in the desktop charger.. Never have to worry about battery life
Sent from my GT-I9100 using XDA
The batteries should be charged just right if you use the wall charger, however sometimes when you charge in the phone, it might stop at 96% or somewhere around there, sometimes I off the phone and charge, gets it to 100%
You shouldn't worry about calibrating or whatever, new batteries with li-ion battery should be okay without calibration
Sent from my GT-I9100 using XDA
sounds inconvenient. better get a big battery replacement along with the new back cover
Sorry for upping this thread, but so (as traslate meaning) can you alternate a 1650 mAh stock battery and a 2000 mAh original Samsung battery without the needing of a wipe/recalibration?
Yes.
000zui said:
Sorry for upping this thread, but so (as traslate meaning) can you alternate a 1650 mAh stock battery and a 2000 mAh original Samsung battery without the needing of a wipe/recalibration?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i've heard that calibrating is just a myth or something.. i have to batteries and i just change them whenever. (idk if that's bad or not), i don't wanna complicate it or something lol
Calibrating is a myth. Charge to 100% and enjoy.
Yes, no problem if you are using the same batteries like original 1650mah, just change the battery when empty and recharge
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=28861605
Again, sorry to bring this thread back to life.. However I was wondering if anyone has had issues with using two batteries and having the "fuel gauge" chip fault on them. On my previous Galaxy S3 the chip that is dedicated to measuring battery stats, as found on many other phones, developed issues. This lead to the phone registering increases in battery percentage while off charger - basically the battery history graph at any given time had a 60% chance of going down and 40% of going up.
Could the use of two batteries caused the "fuel gauge" chip to malfunction?
Maybe temporarily. But charging it to full and/or resetting the fuel gauge running a kernel that supports same fixes that issue easily.

[Q] Anker battery issues

I recently purchased the Anker battery for my Amaze. I've done the suggested 4 full battery drains and charge, but I've noticed something odd. Right after taking my phone off the charger, the % drops pretty rapidly, roughly 10% in about 30 min, with almost no usage. The level continues to drop pretty rapidly till the % gets down to about 70%, where it seems to stabilize, and drop at a slower rate. Anyone else seen this issue, or know what might be causing it?
Sent from my HTC_Amaze_4G using xda app-developers app
Mine does it too. But it stabilizes around 80% and I can get a good 16hrs with moderate-high usage and about 3hrs screen time. I was reading somewhere that this is a common issue with Anker Batteries.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It's Better To Fail At Originality
Than To Succeed In Imitation.
-Mighty Healthy
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok, good to know I'm not the only one! Lol.
Sent from my HTC_Amaze_4G using xda app-developers app
Yeah. Same here. I believe it is a driver issue since the battery is not OEM.
hasoon2000 said:
Yeah. Same here. I believe it is a driver issue since the battery is not OEM.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yap, and the Anker battery is way better than the stock one.
I agree! Once it levels out somewhere around 80%ish, the battery life is amazing! A great investment indeed!
Sent from my HTC_Amaze_4G using xda app-developers app
This isn't a problem with your specific battery, it has to with overcharge prevention.
Essentially, once your battery is fully charged and the LED on your phone flashes green, the phone's battery is no longer charging, and it is actually running on stand-by off of the battery. Perpetually trickle charging the battery would shorten the life of it.
As a result, the battery consumes some energy while the device is in stand-by, but until the device reaches 80% or so, it doesn't start to re-charge. Because it is still plugged in, the device is reporting a full battery, even if it has been running on stand-by for hours on that charge.
There are kernel modifications that can change this, but unless it's an issue for you, I would avoid doing so for the long term preservation of your battery.
Ebonyks said:
This isn't a problem with your specific battery, it has to with overcharge prevention.
Essentially, once your battery is fully charged and the LED on your phone flashes green, the phone's battery is no longer charging, and it is actually running on stand-by off of the battery. Perpetually trickle charging the battery would shorten the life of it.
As a result, the battery consumes some energy while the device is in stand-by, but until the device reaches 80% or so, it doesn't start to re-charge. Because it is still plugged in, the device is reporting a full battery, even if it has been running on stand-by for hours on that charge.
There are kernel modifications that can change this, but unless it's an issue for you, I would avoid doing so for the long term preservation of your battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for the explanation!! Kernel mods?? Um, I'll pass... Lol. I can definitely live with it! I'm getting 14+ hrs with moderate-heavy use!
Sent from my HTC_Amaze_4G using xda app-developers app
Could it be the voltage?
I know that the stock amaze battery is a higher voltage than a normal lithium ion (normal is 4.2v, the stock amaze battery is the newish 4.3v lithium ions)
I did a quick search and found something similar with the sensation..
Someone in said thread even mentions voltage
http://forum.xda-developers.com/archive/index.php/t-1319605.html
kenypowa said:
yap, and the Anker battery is way better than the stock one.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have two Anker batteries, bought at the same time. Both were conditions per instructions. One of them has great battery time, the other has very poor battery time. I think it is hit or miss with these batteries.
If you're interested, I think you'd be able to get that stabilization (after then initial drop) a little higher if you tried calibrating as per here. I'm at about 90 for the one I calibrated, 80 for the other.
rwb2073 said:
If you're interested, I think you'd be able to get that stabilization (after then initial drop) a little higher if you tried calibrating as per here. I'm at about 90 for the one I calibrated, 80 for the other.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, I have done that - it is the instructions that came with the batteries.
Sorry, that was directed at the op, and fwiw conditioning (as per the Anker instructions) is separate from calibration.
Sent from my HTC_Amaze_4G using Tapatalk 2
try using the battery calibration app. that always resolves battery issues when flashing new roms (at least for me it does)
xDC23 said:
try using the battery calibration app. that always resolves battery issues when flashing new roms (at least for me it does)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, I do that also, but this has not helped that 2nd Anker battery.

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