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Hi,
The battery voltage (located in: CM7 spare parts >battery information) on my galaxy sii is reading between 3646 and 3648. First, I'm not sure if that is low, or if it is necessarily good or bad. I just can't seem to find an answer for this anywhere on the Internet, so I made started this thread.
Second, I was wondering what everyone else's battery voltage reading was on their galaxy s2.
Oh, and I also just did a battery calibration. ... If you didn't watch the video, Then I'll fill you in. I wiped my battery stats through recovery mode, then I let my phone drain its battery. BUT, in the process, my phone crashed (the screen froze) at around 1-5%. So I left it overnight and it eventually died. Then I plugged it in and left it till it fully charged to 100%. SO i was wondering if that could have messed up my battery voltage (the crash)?
Sorry if this was hard to understand... But I hope someone out there can help me with battery voltages! ><
J
Never drain battery to zero. Read plenty of users with different phones and ROM having issues in the past after draining to zero.
Should be approx 4200mV at 100% (approx 3500mV at zero).
1. I just drain to 1-2% (>3510mV) to be safe.
2. Charge uninterrupted to 100% and mA stops actual charging at approx 4200mV. As you will see, battery continues to charge for a time (mV increases) after 100% is reached.
3. Immediately delete battery stats. I use app Battery Monitor Widget to monitor current mA & delete without restarting, give SU permission (phone uses power to boot into CWM, and therefore not accurate at time of delete with this method).
4. Immediately unplug.
Done.
Sent from my GT-I9100 using xda premium
I'm on Axura 2.2.7.2 and have horrible battery life no matter what battery I use.
For example, my battery percent is at 63% right now:
4h 48m 38s since unplugged
Display 90%
WiFi 5%
Cell Standby 3%
Phone idle :1%
The weird thing is that I don't really use it a lot either. I used it for maybe 20 minutes max. Talked on the phone for 5 minutes, made about 10 texts, and checked the time from my phone thats it.
Also, I'm using Zeam launcher, could that be the problem?
Please give me some tips on how to maximize my battery life.
You have to calibrate your battery. Download Battery Calibration from the market first, then kill your phone all to like 5%. Charge your phone all the way up to 100%
Then click on the calibrate button on the Battery Calibration app. You should be good after that. Make sure your unplug after calibrating and die the phone down again, and then charge is back to 100%
Sent from my Vibrant on Ultimate 2.2.1
please go to settings / about phone / battery use and post what is consuming most of your battery so we can help u better knowing what the problem is.
there are a lot of ways of improving battery. the best 4 me so far is a custom kernel that allows undervolting which helps a lot without affecting performance. underclocking if u want to go the extra mile, and lowering brightness helps too since our screens are battery hogs.
Sent from my SGH-T959 using xda premium
Battery Life Help
Under Volting does not work for me...Making sure I run the battery down all the way and charge it full most of the time especially after deleting battery stats.
I have a extended battery. I usually get 2 days use on a charge. about a week ago I cannot make it thru a day. The battery is only about 6 weeks old. I tried another battery and same thing. I use task killer and app cleaner and have restarted several times. When I look in battery usage is shows the Android OS using 24% Display 26% and phone idle 24%. I did update all my app and this seemed to help just a little. Anyone have any suggestions before I return my extended battery or do a factory reset. tks in advance.
have you tried draining the phone completely till it shuts off, then plugging it in and letting it charge to 100% with the phone powered down?
Battery instructions say NOT to every let battery drain to 0. So not sure I should try that.
cdenloe said:
Battery instructions say NOT to every let battery drain to 0. So not sure I should try that.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is about the life that I get on mine on a bad day. Now that you have had the phone for a while, more than likely, your battery has not changed but you have installed more apps which are draining you battery even faster. You shouldn't use task killers either, they screw with the roms built in memory management. However, if you must, then use "Task Manager" the built in stock task manager to end apps. Also i agree that you should completely discharge your battery and then let it recharge completely without turning it on and without using it.
PS: You have a nice avatar. Conservative til i die
cdenloe said:
Battery instructions say NOT to every let battery drain to 0. So not sure I should try that.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is not true. The phone has its own power management. When you reach 0%, the battery has still at least 3100mV (on mine it's more than 3200mV).
Li-On and Li-Pol batteries are designed to operate between 4300 and 3000 mV when they reach more or less, than they are damaging.
So you can charge and discharge your phone everyday between 100 and 0%, without any battery damage.
Other thing is Android power management, every time you wipe battery stats or restore backup, or you spend some time in recovery, Android doesn't know, how much capacity is remaining and you need to make more charging cycles, to teach it again and get full capacity from battery. I still don't understand this kind of management in Android.
I've tried all the battery stuff. No dice still discharging fairly quick. In the Battery Usage section It still showing Android OS using around 39 to 40% usage all the time. I have done a full factory reset on the phone 2 days ago and still same.
I noticed, you are using the task killer, stop using it, you have probably loop of killing and starting of some services. Task killer kills, android starts, again and again...
I have uninstalled task killer restarted the phone and still got the high Android OS usage showing.
You won't notice any difference immediately, make one discharge, charge and discharge cycle and you'll see.
Do NOT discharge the battery completely. Over discharging Lithium ion batteries can be harmful to them. Here's a great article going into probably a little too much detail but it gets the point across: http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
As far as your problem goes it may be an issue with the phone itself I've seen a couple photons that needed to be exchanged due to issues that sound similar to yours. If it's doing the same thing on a different battery I'd take your phone into a sprint repair center, you could also try a factory reset if you have not already done so. If your only seeing this behavior with your current battery then I would return it or request a warranty replacement.
I have a extended battery. I usually get 2 days use on a charge. about a week ago I cannot make it thru a day. The battery is only about 6 weeks old. I tried another battery and same thing. I use task killer and app cleaner and have restarted several times. When I look in battery usage is shows the Android OS using 24% Display 26% and phone idle 24%. I did update all my app and this seemed to help just a little. Anyone have any suggestions before I return my extended battery or do a factory reset. tks in advance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
root your photon (if not already rooted) and download battery calibration from market, also after rooting go to android development and download th3bill's extended battery mod
schale01 said:
Do NOT discharge the battery completely. Over discharging Lithium ion batteries can be harmful to them. Here's a great article going into probably a little too much detail but it gets the point across: http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Omg... Read that article again, and check, how much voltage is in the phone battery, when it reaches 0% ;-)
peetr_ said:
Omg... Read that article again, and check, how much voltage is in the phone battery, when it reaches 0% ;-)
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Click to collapse
Yes, there is an additional reserve that the Smart chip will protect by turning off the battery once it reaches the "0% mark". The Smart chip will also continue to drain the battery further past the 0% mark eating into this battery reserve. Now one full discharge like this probably would not hurt the battery as long as the battery is recharge within a reasonable amount of time. However it certainly does nothing to benefit the battery health whatsoever and it is never recommended to let a battery fully discharge. There are some practices of only charging the battery to 75%-80% that can improve battery life, but individual run time will be sacrificed. My recommendation is if the battery is under 65% than to charge the battery if it is possible to do so.
After doing a factory reset the same problem remained. Sprint exchanged the phone for a new photon. Put my extended battery back in and so far no problems at all with the exception of not being able to join my contacts with my FB contacts.
I have been discharging my Photon and previous phones to 0-5% at least 3 times for a week and did not find any difference in capacity, compared with the new battery. Lasts from the morning to the evening. If I should charge it on 65%, then the phone would be unusable for me.
Like Schale said it could be an actual phone issue, but i highly doubt it. I would try some things before assuming its a problem with your phone. Do this... Also this assumes you are unlocked or at least rooted.
1: Factory reset so to start fresh with no crap applications (task killer apps do more harm than good, as do most battery saver apps)
2: Drain battery till the phone shuts itself off (Dude what right about it reserving a certain amount of juice to not cause damage)
3: Charge to 100% (Dont use the phone during this time.)
4: Use a battery calibrator app (rooted) or recovery (unlocked) to wipe the battery stats.
5: Drain power as fast as possible till phone shuts off
6: Charge to 100% (Again, dont use the phone during this time.)
You can now use the phone how you normally would. If you don't notice a drastic increase in battery after discharging and recharging three or four times over the next few days, I would be comfortable in assuming it's a phone problem. Good luck!
I have seen lots of threads about people complaining about very poor battery life after flashing roms. Sometimes battery charges to 100% quickly and discharges very quickly.
So, these are the solutions. These solutions are IN ORDER. If the first one has no effect, then try the next one. If the second one doesn't work, then try the third one.
Now-
1) Try reflashing your ROM.
2) If reflashing your current ROM doesn't work, that probably means the ROM itself has poor battery life and you should change it. Stock ROM's have the best battery life.
3) If you are on stock ROM and still having problems, switch off your phone, take off the back cover and remove the battery. If the battery is swollen or the shaped weirdly, this means your battery is dead and almost useless. You need to buy a new one.
I recommend buying only stock batteries manufactured by Samsung because other batteries can be fake, incompatible, or just used batteries sold to you. Don't buy anything else unless you're absolutely sure of what you're doing.
Hopefully I helped.
Re: Solutions to Battery Problems[Newbie Friendly]
General tips for saving your battery-
1) Switch off mobile data whenever you're not using the internet.
2) Change your wifi sleep policy. This can be done by going to wifi settings, pressing menu button and then select advanced.
You can change your sleep policy so that your wifi sleeps when the screen is off.
3) Decrease your brightness! Your screen is responsible for most of the battery drain. Increase your brightness only when you are in bright sunlight or when you're watching videos etc.
4) Switch off GPS. Keeping it on all the time also drains a lot of battery.
5) There is an app called 'Greenify' which hibernates the apps running in the background. This app has increased my battery life. Here a link https://play.google.com/store/apps/...e=google&utm_medium=organic&utm_term=greenify
6) Don't charge your phone when it's at 70%. Wait till it is between 20-30% and then charge it continuously till it reaches 100%.
7) Let your battery completely discharge once every month.
8) Don't use task killers. They use more battery life than they save.
9) NEVER charge your phone overnight. Your phone takes only about 4 hours to charge. Overcharging reduces your battery life
10) If you use a Bluetooth headset, switch off Bluetooth whenever not in use.
11) Using setCPU profiles. This is one of the most effective ways of saving battery. You all know about overclocking, but do you know about underclocking or undervolting? Using profiles, You decrease the clock speed of your CPU when certain conditions are met. These profiles can be on the basis of time, screen off/on, battery etc. So when my screen is off, it automatically reduces the clockspeed which saves battery
chalak said:
General tips for saving your battery-
1) Switch off mobile data whenever you're not using the internet.
2) Change your wifi sleep policy. This can be done by going to wifi settings, pressing menu button and then select advanced.
You can change your sleep policy so that your wifi sleeps when the screen is off.
3) Decrease your brightness! Your screen is responsible for most of the battery drain. Increase your brightness only when you are in bright sunlight or when you're watching videos etc.
4) Switch off GPS. Keeping it on all the time also drains a lot of battery.
5) There is an app called 'Greenify' which hibernates the apps running in the background. This app has increased my battery life. Here a link https://play.google.com/store/apps/...e=google&utm_medium=organic&utm_term=greenify
6) Don't charge your phone when it's at 40%. Wait till is below 10% and then charge it continuously till it reaches 100%.
7) Let your battery completely discharge once every month.
8) Don't use task killers. They use more battery life than they save.
9) NEVER charge your phone overnight. Your phone takes only about 4 hours to charge. Overcharging reduces your battery life
10) If you use a Bluetooth headset, switch off Bluetooth whenever not in use.
Using these tips, I have gotten almost 2 days of battery life on stock Roms and a whole day of battery life on custom roms like CM10.1 and CM7
If you have your own battery saving tips, please share and help expand this list.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm interested in the greenify app, the only problem is that it does not support stock gingerbread which can give the most juice. Do you have any other recommendations of similar apps?
stevenkyk said:
I'm interested in the greenify app, the only problem is that it does not support stock gingerbread which can give the most juice. Do you have any other recommendations of similar apps?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Greenify is a unique app and I am yet to come across a similar app.
You can try this one but it is paid - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.elsdoerfer.android.autostarts
Sent from my pet - Megatron™
6) Don't charge your phone when it's at 40%. Wait till is below 10% and then charge it continuously till it reaches 100%.
9) NEVER charge your phone overnight. Your phone takes only about 4 hours to charge. Overcharging reduces your battery life
Are you sure about these? Because I've read that phones only take how much ever charge that they need, so charging overnight isn't a problem. And i've also heard that letting the battery charge fall below 40% actually reduces the life over time.
Ajayr64 said:
6) Don't charge your phone when it's at 40%. Wait till is below 10% and then charge it continuously till it reaches 100%.
9) NEVER charge your phone overnight. Your phone takes only about 4 hours to charge. Overcharging reduces your battery life
Are you sure about these? Because I've read that phones only take how much ever charge that they need, so charging overnight isn't a problem. And i've also heard that letting the battery charge fall below 40% actually reduces the life over time.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, I am sure and it is something I have verified.
Overcharging kills the battery.
I saw a video once of an evo 3d. The battery almost completely died after it was charged for 3 days
And you should always charge only when your battery is low.
This will ensure longer battery life
chalak said:
Overcharging kills the battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Normally, when the battery is fully charged, the chip that controls the charging process reduce the current exponentially to 0: this avoid the overcharging.
I think all smartphones have the charging chip control integrated (an USB cable is simply a power source, not a battery charger), so I hope we can leave the phones on charge all the night without any problem. I do that always and never had problems.
Clearing battery stats has no effect whatsoever on battery life ...
Prawesome said:
Clearing battery stats has no effect whatsoever on battery life ...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, if you see again, I never mentioned that clearing battery stats saves battery. It is for those people whose phone charges very quickly with big increments, which typically happens after changing ROM's.
Sent from my pet - Megatron™
smanq said:
Normally, when the battery is fully charged, the chip that controls the charging process reduce the current exponentially to 0: this avoid the overcharging.
I think all smartphones have the charging chip control integrated (an USB cable is simply a power source, not a battery charger), so I hope we can leave the phones on charge all the night without any problem. I do that always and never had problems.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It seems both of us have read conflicting and contradicting things.
Sent from my pet - Megatron™
chalak said:
Well, if you see again, I never mentioned that clearing battery stats saves battery. It is for those people whose phone charges very quickly with big increments, which typically happens after changing ROM's.
Sent from my pet - Megatron™
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Quoting Dianne Hacborn(Android Framework Engineer):
"Today's myth debunking:
"The battery indicator in the status/notification bar is a reflection of the batterystats.bin file in the data/system/directory."
No, it does not.
This file is used to maintain, across reboots, low-level data about the kinds of operations the device and your apps are doing between battery changes. That is, it is solely used to compute the blame for battery usage shown in the "Battery Use" UI in settings.
That is, it has deeply significant things like "app X held a wake lock for 2 minutes" and "the screen was on at 60% brightness for 10 minutes."
It has no impact on the current battery level shown to you.
It has no impact on your battery life.
Deleting it is not going to do anything to make your more device more fantastic and wonderful... well, unless you have some deep hatred for seeing anything shown in the battery usage UI. And anyway, it is reset every time you unplug from power with a relatively full charge (thus why the battery usage UI data resets at that point), so this would be a much easier way to make it go away."
Its just a myth mate..
And also, it's a myth that you should let ur phone charge reach 10% or get fully discharged before charging. This actually leads to decrease in the battery life over time.
Prawesome said:
Quoting Dianne Hacborn(Android Framework Engineer):
"Today's myth debunking:
"The battery indicator in the status/notification bar is a reflection of the batterystats.bin file in the data/system/directory."
No, it does not.
This file is used to maintain, across reboots, low-level data about the kinds of operations the device and your apps are doing between battery changes. That is, it is solely used to compute the blame for battery usage shown in the "Battery Use" UI in settings.
That is, it has deeply significant things like "app X held a wake lock for 2 minutes" and "the screen was on at 60% brightness for 10 minutes."
It has no impact on the current battery level shown to you.
It has no impact on your battery life.
Deleting it is not going to do anything to make your more device more fantastic and wonderful... well, unless you have some deep hatred for seeing anything shown in the battery usage UI. And anyway, it is reset every time you unplug from power with a relatively full charge (thus why the battery usage UI data resets at that point), so this would be a much easier way to make it go away."
Its just a myth mate..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am aware of what you are saying and I fully agree.
But I have never mentioned that clearing battery stats increases battery life!
Tips to increase battery life are in the 2nd post. I simply said that if you clear your battery stats, UI will show you battery which is more accurate to the actual battery level.
Why are you arguing over something I never said?
Sent from my pet - Megatron™
Ajayr64 said:
And also, it's a myth that you should let ur phone charge reach 10% or get fully discharged before charging. This actually leads to decrease in the battery life over time.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Think of your battery as a person working out and charging is like taking rest. If the person's ability is to do 100 reps yet he takes rest after only 60 reps and keeps doing that continuously, he won't be able to do 100 reps after a few weeks!
Look at the logic mate.
Sent from my pet - Megatron™
chalak said:
I am aware of what you are saying and I fully agree.
But I have never mentioned that clearing battery stats increases battery life!
Tips to increase battery life are in the 2nd post. I simply said that if you clear your battery stats, UI will show you battery which is more accurate to the actual battery level.
Why are you arguing over something I never said?
Sent from my pet - Megatron™
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am not arguing :/
I am just trying to help make your guide more Informative. Read what I have put in bold letters mate. It doesn't affect the battery level shown to you
Prawesome said:
I am not arguing :/
I am just trying to help make your guide more Informative. Read what I have put in bold letters mate. It doesn't affect the battery level shown to you
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry if I sounded rude.
And thank you for your advice.
Sent from my pet - Megatron™
Updated
Sent from my pet - Megatron™
(I was Chalak)
Thanks for tips
You misunderstood me :'D
Clearing battery stats does not:
Affect battery life
Affect the battery level displayed to you
The only thing it does is, it wipes the history of battery consumption by each app. I am talking about the battery consumption by each app shown to you in Settings>About phone. If you clear the battery stats.bin file, the only thing that geta erased is this
Prawesome said:
You misunderstood me :'D
Clearing battery stats does not:
Affect battery life
Affect the battery level displayed to you
The only thing it does is, it wipes the history of battery consumption by each app. I am talking about the battery consumption by each app shown to you in Settings>About phone. If you clear the battery stats.bin file, the only thing that geta erased is this
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This! Anything about wiping battery stats is not a myth anymore, so please stop misleading people,
Also "6) Don't charge your phone when it's at 40%. Wait till is below 10% and then charge it continuously till it reaches 100%."
Not true! Charging your battery around 50% is the most efficient way to keep lithium battery alive longer. A discharge once a month is also recommended.
I have an att galaxy s3 (d2att) that I got back in March 2013. Over the course of the year I have probably changed my rom about 20-30 times to get the perfect rom. Now my phone's screen time is about 1 hour while just letting it sit with the display on and not running any apps or touching it. Currently running the task650 rom with android 4.4.3. Wiping the battery stats file or running the calibration app does not work. There is no option in my recovery menu under advanced settings to wipe battery stats and a battery calibration app says the battery file does not exist. Sometimes the phone will turn off at about 30% and the reason I believe for that is that the voltage goes down so much. On time I checked it around 35-40% and it was at about 2.5V and then it shut down. When I charge it, it hovers around 3.9-4.3V but when I use it, it starts to go down like crazy. I don't know if I need a new battery or if I should completely factory reset my phone.
Any advice?
mehtam said:
I have an att galaxy s3 (d2att) that I got back in March 2013. Over the course of the year I have probably changed my rom about 20-30 times to get the perfect rom. Now my phone's screen time is about 1 hour while just letting it sit with the display on and not running any apps or touching it. Currently running the task650 rom with android 4.4.3. Wiping the battery stats file or running the calibration app does not work. There is no option in my recovery menu under advanced settings to wipe battery stats and a battery calibration app says the battery file does not exist. Sometimes the phone will turn off at about 30% and the reason I believe for that is that the voltage goes down so much. On time I checked it around 35-40% and it was at about 2.5V and then it shut down. When I charge it, it hovers around 3.9-4.3V but when I use it, it starts to go down like crazy. I don't know if I need a new battery or if I should completely factory reset my phone.
Any advice?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
A bad battery can be really dangerous. It may have become like this because of bad use or overuse. I would recommend changing it asap
Sent from my SDT-737 using XDA Free mobile app
I don't see how flashing many ROMs could cause your battery life to drop. However the following issues are possible:
1) The ROM you are using has a bug that is causing some type of battery drain. These do happen.
2) You have charged and discharged your battery so many times that it cannot hold a charge anymore. I start noticing battery life decreasing after about 2 years of my usage (generally fairly low). Most times my battery life does not drop below 60% or so. If you very often let it drop very low, I can see the battery life decrease significantly after about a year.
nhakobian said:
I don't see how flashing many ROMs could cause your battery life to drop. However the following issues are possible:
1) The ROM you are using has a bug that is causing some type of battery drain. These do happen.
2) You have charged and discharged your battery so many times that it cannot hold a charge anymore. I start noticing battery life decreasing after about 2 years of my usage (generally fairly low). Most times my battery life does not drop below 60% or so. If you very often let it drop very low, I can see the battery life decrease significantly after about a year.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yea, I can only assume that because I have let it drop so low many times, I might have ruined the cells within. I might just end up buying a new battery. Thanks.