OK, i got a desire x off a friend he bought it new two weeks ago but he went on holidays and i swapped him an iPhone.
The phone is unrooted. Last night i sat down while it was in my pocket and my car keys cracked the digitalizer. I was extremely annoyed so i left it down on the table. I had installed a new android launcher team that day but when i had the phone in my hand after it broke i remember the battery was a red icon, but i was low im just mentioning. Anyway long story short it went dead i brought it up to my room and plugged it into the wall charger. The orange light came on so i went to sleep. I woke up and the light was still on. I plugged it out and the light went off but the phone still wont boot nor go into recovery, safe etc.. Can someone please help me as i don't know what to do.
Jeffrey2k10 said:
OK, i got a desire x off a friend he bought it new two weeks ago but he went on holidays and i swapped him an iPhone.
The phone is unrooted. Last night i sat down while it was in my pocket and my car keys cracked the digitalizer. I was extremely annoyed so i left it down on the table. I had installed a new android launcher team that day but when i had the phone in my hand after it broke i remember the battery was a red icon, but i was low im just mentioning. Anyway long story short it went dead i brought it up to my room and plugged it into the wall charger. The orange light came on so i went to sleep. I woke up and the light was still on. I plugged it out and the light went off but the phone still wont boot nor go into recovery, safe etc.. Can someone please help me as i don't know what to do.
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Click to collapse
First of all, your friend's Desire X is surely bricked. It would take a more direct approach than damaging the digitizer or installing a launcher to actually brick the device.
From my knowledge of electricity i would say the digitizer is short circuiting internally which may explain the reason the electric current from the charger flowing constantly somewhere else other than the battery. This is evident in the fact when we have a mobile device which has almost no charge, and after we plug it in and start using that mobile device, the AC charger keeps the device running and also the screen on, until the battery gain enough charge to take over and start storing charge itself. The scenario seems possible to the extent that your digitizer is short circuiting internally. And it is preventing the battery from gaining enough charge to take over.
The next possible scenario is that the battery has got pushed inside as well. But for this to be possible your car keys have to go through the plastic and reach the battery to be flattened by force internally.
So what you can do is go to any authorized service center and explain just what happened. Of course they would charge you cos this would be out of question to offer warranty. Just replace the digitizer and check.
Good luck.
ayyu3m said:
The Desire X is surely not bricked. It would take a more direct approach than damaging the digitizer to actually brick the device.
From my knowledge of electricity i would say the digitizer is short circuiting internally which may explain the reason the electric current from the charger flowing constantly somewhere else other than the battery. This is evident in the fact when we have a mobile device which has almost no charge, and after we plug it in and start using that mobile device, the AC charger keeps the device running and also the screen on, until the battery gain enough charge to take over and start storing charge itself. The scenario seems possible to the extent that your digitizer is short circuiting internally.
So if you can get a look at how much damage was done, maybe you can repair the digitizer only and be done with.
good luck.
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Click to collapse
Thanks for the reply, The screen isnt actually turning on. Just the light when the charger is plugged in. What exactly should i look for when i open it?
Thanks again.
Jeffrey2k10 said:
Thanks for the reply, The screen isnt actually turning on. Just the light when the charger is plugged in. What exactly should i look for when i open it?
Thanks again.
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Click to collapse
My #1 suggestion is for you to take the desire X to an authorized service center and let them repair it.
Because if you do any other damage while trying to take apart the device, it may damage parts which were not damage originally. This would cost you additionally then. So let the repair guys worry about it. As it is you have enough stress i can understand.
Unless you are sure about disassembling the unit yourself, i DO NOT recommend it. The manufacturers are now sticking to new methods of minimizing the size of the body. So this means a lot of glue and other adhesives between the body, lcd panels, digitizer instead of the traditional hooks between the plastic body and screws to hold the parts together. Believe me, removing away glued parts is very risky if you don't have the proper equipment to raise the temperature to certain degree to melt away the glue or adhesives.
You can check this video : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzRsLDahWVg
ayyu3m said:
My #1 suggestion is for you to take the desire X to an authorized service center and let them repair it.
Because if you do any other damage while trying to take apart the device, it may damage parts which were not damage originally. This would cost you additionally then. So let the repair guys worry about it. As it is you have enough stress i can understand.
Unless you are sure about disassembling the unit yourself, i DO NOT recommend it. The manufacturers are now sticking to new methods of minimizing the size of the body. So this means a lot of glue and other adhesives between the body, lcd panels, digitizer etc.
You can check this video :
thank you I looked at that video already, i have the phone completely apart. i just dont know what I'm looking for
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As i have seen the internal of HTC Touch, Diamond and HD2 only what i would suggest is for you to check for any damages to ANY other parts of the device. This includes
1. the plastic body
2. the mainboard
3. the battery (by default it should be a uniform surface) so check if its pushed in any sides
4. if the lcd has been pushed from the inside leading to an external mark on the back side.
All the best
**edited**
Just had a quick look through my desire X
There is not circuit board on top of the battery compartment. The mainboard is just on top of the device.
So i am sure it is just the LCD/Digitizer
Hm, there were in fact three reports about similar issues on the German android-hilfe.de forums, where the device actually wouldn't turn back on after the battery had reached 0%, the device had been shut down automatically, and had then been charged as usual. Would be interesting whether that issue was a more general hardware/battery failure, and the physical damage reported here was just 'coincidentally', having no direct impact on the battery.
To be honest, I'm quite concerned about this - I always used to let my old Samsung device shut down when its battery reached 0%, hopefully saving some battery life (although this might also be a myth), and had planned to do so with my Desire X as well, but after reading the mentioned reports (and this one, of course), I'd rather recharge the device even before it reaches 0%...
Maybe someone could shed some (technical) light on this... - the mentioned forum reports in the end did not offer other solutions than taking the device to a service center and have it repaired.
ngc2997 said:
Hm, there were in fact three reports about similar issues on the German android-hilfe.de forums, where the device actually wouldn't turn back on after the battery had reached 0%, the device had been shut down automatically, and had then been charged as usual. Would be interesting whether that issue was a more general hardware/battery failure, and the physical damage reported here was just 'coincidentally', having no direct impact on the battery.
To be honest, I'm quite concerned about this - I always used to let my old Samsung device shut down when its battery reached 0%, hopefully saving some battery life (although this might also be a myth), and had planned to do so with my Desire X as well, but after reading the mentioned reports (and this one, of course), I'd rather recharge the device even before it reaches 0%...
Maybe someone could shed some (technical) light on this... - the mentioned forum reports in the end did not offer other solutions than taking the device to a service center and have it repaired.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
my desire x did infact reach 0 and shut down. but when i put on charger it came back on.
m glad my device isnt like what you said. but i think i proved the point those devices have problem.
would be interesting to know if those devices had same problem after an impact.
Related
Is it possible to power an HTC HD2 without a battery or the back cover? I found one about an hour ago in my downtown area, missing a SIM card and missing the microSD card. As noted it doesn't have a back cover or a battery, so my intention was to attach a "standard" 5V/1A cell phone battery charger. I figured out from a picture of the battery that if I've got the HD2 flat on the display and I'm looking at the back, the positive terminal will be the one on the left but, when I attach the power supply (which I tested before this attempt, it works) leads using micro-alligator clips and push the power button (front of display, button furthest on the right, I think, never used one of these HD2's before) I get no response.
Now, the question is either a) am I not getting any response at all because the HD2 can't be powered up in this manner because there's no back cover or b) it's more likely to be completely toast because of the damage it apparently suffered in the drop that shattered the glass. The only damage (aside from the glass) is a very tiny scrape/scuff mark on the top right corner of the bezel - obviously that's where it hit the ground.
I don't own any of these apparently micro-USB style connectors (or is it mini-USB, I can't figure out which is which I suppose). Bleh, I just looked at a pic I found with Google Images, apparently it IS a micro-USB connector.
All blabbering aside, even if I had such a connector or a power supply using such a connector, is the phone going to even power up without a back cover on it or battery inside? I know a lot of devices become totally disabled when the back cover is removed (as my Dell Axim X51v does; as soon as I even throw the lock switch to unlock the back cover that disables the device totally.
Anyone able to provide some tips or suggestions? I have no way of knowing who it belongs to so I'm claiming it, and if I can verify it might work or does still function I might be willing to put some money into getting the glass/digitizer replaced, a new battery, power adapter, etc.
Anything at all would probably be quite helpful.
Thanks...
The HD2 works without back cover!
The HD2 doesnt work without battery...!! I've never heard of a mod to enable switching it on through micro-usb.
Be carefull you could be scammed...buying a phone in that state, because of the hit some other components may be damaged!! It depends on the price and money you're willing to risk!
no problem with powering on without the backcover. did that many times before.
but i guess its not possible without a battery...
DN41
Ah, ok, so the fact that there's the two metal 'dots' on the HD2 that apparently become a connection when the metal battery cover is in place don't affect powering it up, but no battery keeps it dead? Hrmmm...
Ok, if someone that owns an HD2 can confirm that it becomes very useful info. Take the back cover off, take the battery out, and tell me if plugging in a micro-USB cable (either from a computer USB port or from the AC adapter) allows it to function at all, and then try the same thing with the cover on (don't put the battery in, however).
So there's 3 possibilities:
1) It'll work off the micro-USB power with no battery and no cover
2) It'll work off the micro-USB power with just the cover installed but no battery
3) It'll work off the micro-USB power with no cover but with a battery installed
and actually the fourth possibility which doesn't matter in my case:
4) It'll work off the micro-USB power with the cover and the battery installed
Dammit I hate it when I find stuff like this and can't get it functional.
Again, thanks for any suggestions - and I didn't buy this phone, I found it a few hours ago, on the ground as I was walking home. I wouldn't buy something in this cosmetic condition unless I knew it was working even in spite of the cracked glass. I've owned iPhones with horribly shattered glass on them but they still function, even all the multitouch functionality is still working - that's my hope here, that this device will still work just fine and if it does then I'll pay to replace the glass/digitizer.
Thanks
Edit:
I think I just realized that the metal contacts on the inside of the back cover and those 'dots' could be because the HD2 is using that battery cover as a Wi-Fi antenna, plate-style antenna.
I just tested it for you. Without the battery in there is no starting it, period.
Might I suggest though that you ask around and find a mate with a microUSB, (you must have someone that has one), and plug it in when the battery contacts are jumped. It will probably work that way. I'm not going to try it because I have a perfectly good phone and have always mistrusted elec-trickery...
those spring loaded studs have been the subject of much discussion, with no definitive answer,, stop the cover rattling, grounding plate for the antenna, remnants of an unreleased car kit,,, who knows. certainly signal doesn't appear diminished with the cover off, and on the inside of the cover there is no coating on the metal where they connect, indicating a signal being passed so who knows.
i suspect simply attaching power to two contacts isn't enough because the third contact is expecting a signal of some kind? perhaps a connection from the battery charge protection circuits?
you could always buy a cheap copy battery from ebay, and just resell it if it doesn't work, or run a scam on your insurance with it? (did i just say that out loud??)
I'll say this again: I found the phone on the ground on the side of the street while walking home a few hours ago.
I don't use T-Mobile service and I have no intentions of using it as a phone; I already have a phone so I was going to use it as a portable media player sorta like an iPod touch if I can verify it works 100% and just needs a battery/back cover/replacement glass and digitizer. That's my intention at this point.
And I was thinking that yes it won't work at all without a battery so, thanks again for the info. I'll head out this morning to a T-Mobile store (actual T-Mobile and not a reseller) and see what they can tell me. Surely they'll have a battery/back cover and potentially an AC adapter to verify if it's 100% dead of somewhat functional even in spite of the busted glass.
Let's hope it works...
what about searching the owner?
DN41
Well, let's see:
- I can't power it up
- It has no SIM card
- It has no microSD card
- The only way to track the owner would be using the IMEI and I'd have to go to a T-Mobile store to do that, when that's done and they get the number, if the phone was stolen and then dumped in the trash/on the street where I found it, they call the police and I get in a bit of trouble for no good reason
That pretty much covers it.
okay, you're right...
i cant imagine how it landed there...
who would throw it just away?
sure that its a real phone and not a dummy?
DN41
DN41 said:
okay, you're right...
i cant imagine how it landed there...
who would throw it just away?
sure that its a real phone and not a dummy?
DN41
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i was in a thread yesterday where some guy talked about how he dropped his phone by accident whilst 'driving along with it in his hand, with his arm out of teh window', so yea, some people are , , well, insert your own noun here
oh no...how can you hold your arm out of the windows with a 500€ phone in your hand?
i just cant understand some people...that doestn go in my mind...
DN41
samsamuel said:
i was in a thread yesterday where some guy talked about how he dropped his phone by accident whilst 'driving along with it in his hand, with his arm out of teh window', so yea, some people are , , well, insert your own noun here
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Click to collapse
I thought the same!
br0adband said:
they call the police and I get in a bit of trouble for no good reason
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Click to collapse
Not really mate. I found an iphone 4 yesterday and managed to get it back to its rightful owner. Took a couple of hours out of my day but what else could i do?
sike222 said:
Not really mate. I found an iphone 4 yesterday and managed to get it back to its rightful owner. Took a couple of hours out of my day but what else could i do?
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Click to collapse
Well, Yeah, with an iPhone 4 what else WOULD you do if you don't want the surgery to be able to use it! LOL
Also think if it was your phone! I'd be absolutely gutted, and very glad to get it back. But maybe it's unregistered (through the IMEI) or not been reported as missing.
In the UK (don't know about elsewhere) if you report that you found something to the police (I found a £50 note) and no one can show that they own it then it's yours after about 28 days.
Unless you have really dumb cops then you shouldn't get into trouble if you take it in!
On the other hand you may find the battery and/or cover if you look carefully in the area where you found the phone.
Sam.
br0adband said:
Ah, ok, so the fact that there's the two metal 'dots' on the HD2 that apparently become a connection when the metal battery cover is in place don't affect powering it up, but no battery keeps it dead? Hrmmm...
Ok, if someone that owns an HD2 can confirm that it becomes very useful info. Take the back cover off, take the battery out, and tell me if plugging in a micro-USB cable (either from a computer USB port or from the AC adapter) allows it to function at all, and then try the same thing with the cover on (don't put the battery in, however).
So there's 3 possibilities:
1) It'll work off the micro-USB power with no battery and no cover
2) It'll work off the micro-USB power with just the cover installed but no battery
3) It'll work off the micro-USB power with no cover but with a battery installed
[snip]
Thanks
Edit:
I think I just realized that the metal contacts on the inside of the back cover and those 'dots' could be because the HD2 is using that battery cover as a Wi-Fi antenna, plate-style antenna.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think those contacts are just to ground the back cover to stop it causing interference. It doesn't seem to affect the phone if I don't have it on or am using the plastic cover with my big battery.
On a similar theme, does anyone know if it is possible to power the HD2 from the micro USB supply while I swap batteries. I don't want to have to do a soft reset which loses what you are doing. But I'm worried that without the battery to absorb the power there is a risk of damaging the circuits?
I don't want to just try it because I already blew my main board by powering the USB through a cheep adapter and a Nokia charger that supplied too much power and had I to get it repaired/replaced. I'm hoping someone already knows
Sam
samsamuel said:
i was in a thread yesterday where some guy talked about how he dropped his phone by accident whilst 'driving along with it in his hand, with his arm out of teh window', so yea, some people are , , well, insert your own noun here
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
did we ever get an answer as to why that, im going to select the noun "twat" was dangling his hd2 out of the window @ 40mph??
I need closure on that one.....
My girlfriend's Note started acting weird. When she plugs in the charger it randomly stops and starts, sometimes for periods of seconds, sometimes minutes. We checked every combination of cord and charger (AC and car), and they all do the same. We both cleaned out the charger port, but that didn't have any effect. As a matter of fact, just sitting there motionless on the table it will still randomly start and stop charging.
I also noticed that the battery level seems to be off. At one point it was down to maybe 20% (in the yellow). I rebooted and it was up to 30 (in the green). I don't have any real numbers, it was only something I noticed. It's not rooted so I couldn't clear out the battery stats. Instead I drained it down to 0%, charged it all the way to full while it was off. It seemed to help for a day, but the problem came back later.
Could it be battery? Or phone? She has at&t insurance on it, and we're going to run to the (official) store. I just don't know if they send it back or replace it. She can't really be without a phone, so I'm hoping it's the battery (unless they want to replace the phone on the spot).
All we know is you have an at&t phone. What have you done to it?
same problem with Samsung Galaxy Note
Hi there everyone, i'm having the exact the same problem and my galaxy note is acting just like that- weird !!
About two months ago I updated to ICS and after that no issues, only once did it not charge as it was supposed to until i turned it off, removed the battery and put it back in.
Only now has it been charging like explained above -- the charging process as well as battery indications would be very inconsistent -- that is to say, it would charge for some time and then stop unexpectedly, whether turned on or off during the process.
Also, recently my PC would not recognize the phone on Windows 7 anymore, whereas before that it had been recognized seamlessly.
I've been using my galaxy note for about 8 months now, as well as about 2 months on ICS, and only now has there been this persistent issue.
Also, I did not use it inappropriately, rather with extreme care. I also got a phone case and have been using orginal software and hardware only, so the phone has been properly handled.
However, I have been using it pretty much, so it might be "wear and tear" in terms of battery usage, even more so, because it's been regularly charging and discharging in the car or at home, at the same time. Still, what surprises me is that my PC would not recognize it anymore even when it's turned on. Then, at times it would also go to "car mode", although it is not connected to the car dock. These issues have come up just now, as well, so i can imagine it might be a software or even port-related issue.
Unfortunately, at this moment I cannot take it to the store i bought it from to have them check the phone, so that's why I'm trying to figure out the problem myself. After all, if it's software or battery-related i might be able to fix it without having it replaced.
The phone is not branded and free to use with any carrier.
@ Face of Boe:
Did you go to the store then and have it replaced or was it in fact the battery, or did they (you) fix the problem otherwise?
Any help would be highly appreciated.
Chris
Try your preferred mobile repair shop first.
Face Of Boe said:
My girlfriend's Note started acting weird. When she plugs in the charger it randomly stops and starts, sometimes for periods of seconds, sometimes minutes. We checked every combination of cord and charger (AC and car), and they all do the same. We both cleaned out the charger port, but that didn't have any effect. As a matter of fact, just sitting there motionless on the table it will still randomly start and stop charging.
I also noticed that the battery level seems to be off. At one point it was down to maybe 20% (in the yellow). I rebooted and it was up to 30 (in the green). I don't have any real numbers, it was only something I noticed. It's not rooted so I couldn't clear out the battery stats. Instead I drained it down to 0%, charged it all the way to full while it was off. It seemed to help for a day, but the problem came back later.
Could it be battery? Or phone? She has at&t insurance on it, and we're going to run to the (official) store. I just don't know if they send it back or replace it. She can't really be without a phone, so I'm hoping it's the battery (unless they want to replace the phone on the spot).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I had this exact same problem a couple weeks ago...it all started one day at work when I had my phone plugged in (as I usually did if it was in one place for more than 5 minutes), but after turning on my screen for the the first time in an hour or so, I noticed that it hadn't charged at all! The indicator at the top didn't even show that it was plugged in.
Figuring it was just some kind of little glitch, I unplugged it, blew inside the charge port as well as the cable (old Nintendo habits die hard lol). Well as I went to plug it back in, I realized that NOW the indicator showed it was "charging", and my phone had gotten super hot in just the 30ish seconds it took me to blow the port and cable (heh.)
So obviously I freaked out and immediately shut it down, pulled the back, and removed the battery to let the two pieces calm down and make nice - before ultimately putting it back together and booting up after 15 minutes or so.
So the good news was that the "reverse charge" issue was gone...but the bad news was, the charge activity started acting literally word-for-word like your girlfriend's. Intermittent charging when it was sitting still, not charging at all for a period of time, losing more battery than it was gaining while it was plugged in and the screen was OFF...so yeah, it sucked. I did notice that I could push the cord back while it was plugged in and it would stay charging, but obviously I can't sit in one spot holding my phone for 5 hours a day - and that stopped working after a few tries anyway.
I spent countless hours on the internet, googling different phrases to try and find similar instances of this happening - but to no avail. Everyone's story was just a little different...and pretty much everything I found outside of XDA* was written by people over in England who dropped their N7000 in the snow, causing the charge port to be corroded. The conclusion from everything else I found regarding this issue for the i717 was essentially always "the only way you can fix this is to get a new phone, but you're screwed because this glitch causes the phone to look like it has water damage and therefore renders it ineligible for manufacturer warranty claim or even insurance claims".
To make matters worse, not only was my phone effectively unchargeable, but it was discharging at an absolutely absurd rate. I'm talking approximately 20% every TEN MINUTES!
So I got desperate (it's Sunday by now)...all of the cell phone repair places were closed where I live, but I was able to do some searching and found this guy that was surprisingly available at the AT&T store closest to my house. That kept me alive until Monday, when I was able to take it in to the guy who I've been going to ever since the iPhone days (he is FANTASTIC). So he looks at it, takes it apart, and in about 5 minutes he tells me that the small little strip where my charge port attaches to the mother board (or whatever) had a lot of cracks running across it that were causing it to short-out. He said that it's a very common problem with the AT&T Galaxy Note, I guess due to them using a pretty cheap part in that regard. This obviously explained the intermittent charging, the brief "reverse charge", and even the battery drain (if the motherboard was shorting out).
So what did he do?
Replaced the little strip that connects the charge port to the motherboard...took him half an hour...cost me $25. Advised me that, when I plug my phone in from now on, to try as hard as possible to keep the phone still and not move it around. So at least in my case, it was NOT the battery. If you'd rather be cautious and not take the phone into a store if you can avoid it, you can probably get a replacement battery online for just a few bucks and at least eliminate that.
So the moral of the story is: DO NOT try to take the phone in to AT&T store or deal with your warranty/insurance until you take it in to a decent repair place and have them take a look at it.
Hopefully this helps...I'm sure you are wanting (like I was) a software solution, but it is what it is. And just curious, did your girlfriend have any similar "reverse-charge" instances like I described above?
tl;dr: The problem is the charging port, not the battery. Should be an easy and inexpensive (<$50) fix at a legitimate cell phone repair location.
*The silver lining in this whole thing was that it caused me to stumble upon this forum...so I went from stock ROM, stock everything (before my charge port issue) to having flashed about one ROM per day over the last 5 days because I've been so interested in the entire world of customization that I only discovered after seeing a thread with "Gubment Cheeze" in the title (who WOULDN'T at least look at that to see what's up??) here on XDA and starting to read. I've been a 24/7 lurker ever since
I read the last post by cpa poke and I must say it's quite risky to actually have a phone repaired by an unlicensed dealer/repair shop, because you'll cause any warranty left on the item to be effectively void.
I do know it is tempting for any of us to get our phone fixed as soon as possible, but then I think we should keep it cool and try to work out what else we can to do to make it work -- even though it might be temporarily -- until we can return it properly, as according to warranty indications.
Any of you trying to get a "repair fix" might want to consider that it may well be rather short-lived, because the same problem could persist for some reason -- that your repair shop did not recognize. If ultimately you have to get it repaired again, your ("fantastic") repair guy might then not be able to solve the problem and at that point any warranty claim would be quite certainly rejected, either (because of any previous unauthorized modifications to the device).
As far as I'm concerned, I have been testing my device with different chargers, currently it's charging consistently while turned off.
Also, I don't think I have had any of the "battery drainage" problem while charging, rather the battery indications were rather unreliable.
Then, I have read the problem could be solved by changing the battery. So I'll see if that makes a difference as soon as I get a replacement.
Another option will be to factory reset the item. I'll try that as soon as I get a backup of my phone data.
To all of you who are stuck with this issue I suggest you try some of the above: different chargers, removing and reinserting your battery, or else a battery replacement, factory reset.
Also try and leave the phone for some time and try to charge it then while turned off -- that's how I got my phone to charge again (until now), and according to the battery symbol it's almost fully charged -- the issue might still persist after that, but maybe it'll work until I can fix it otherwise, or get a replacement. After all, if it's been handled properly we should expect to get it replaced.
chris110284 said:
I read the last post by cpa poke and I must say it's quite risky to actually have a phone repaired by an unlicensed dealer/repair shop, because you'll cause any warranty left on the item to be effectively void.
I do know it is tempting for any of us to get our phone fixed as soon as possible, but then I think we should keep it cool and try to work out what else we can to do to make it work -- even though it might be temporarily -- until we can return it properly, as according to warranty indications.
Any of you trying to get a "repair fix" might want to consider that it may well be rather short-lived, because the same problem could persist for some reason -- that your repair shop did not recognize. If ultimately you have to get it repaired again, your ("fantastic") repair guy might then not be able to solve the problem and at that point any warranty claim would be quite certainly rejected, either (because of any previous unauthorized modifications to the device).
As far as I'm concerned, I have been testing my device with different chargers, currently it's charging consistently while turned off.
Also, I don't think I have had any of the "battery drainage" problem while charging, rather the battery indications were rather unreliable.
Then, I have read the problem could be solved by changing the battery. So I'll see if that makes a difference as soon as I get a replacement.
Another option will be to factory reset the item. I'll try that as soon as I get a backup of my phone data.
To all of you who are stuck with this issue I suggest you try some of the above: different chargers, removing and reinserting your battery, or else a battery replacement, factory reset.
Also try and leave the phone for some time and try to charge it then while turned off -- that's how I got my phone to charge again (until now), and according to the battery symbol it's almost fully charged -- the issue might still persist after that, but maybe it'll work until I can fix it otherwise, or get a replacement. After all, if it's been handled properly we should expect to get it replaced.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
While I agree that taking it to a repair place should only be reserved for desperate/time sensitive situations, the only reason I chose that route over going through AT&T or an insurance company was that, from everything I'd read, the symptoms alone would likely cause them to assume water damage - thus rendering the same scenario as if the 3rd party repair voided the warranty.
Im having the same problem with myGalaxy S3 today, random intermittent charging..
I Just took off the back cover a few minutes ago and found a little glob of water sitting above the charging port!! Aaah!!
Don't know how it got there, but going to let her dry out and see if it resolves itself.
info:
rooted S3 i9300
2 months old
ROM: Complex-D 2.1.3
Getting random freezes on this ROMfor a few days also, so going to flash a new rom and see if the problem persists
Is it me, or is this a retardly common issue with i717s? I've had this same issue twice. I replaced the charger flex board when I bought the phone in the first place. And now it hasn't been a month and the flex board seems like it's out again.
My phone had this issue and all I did was oder the charging port from parts4repair.com and it cleared the issue up
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I717 using xda premium
Are you using the Samsung charger for your phone? It seems you are over volted and burn your usb port.
rangercaptain said:
Are you using the Samsung charger for your phone? It seems you are over volted and burn your usb port.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Agreed .....and another thought comes to mind..
Non-OEM charger tips, especially car dock chargers and desk chargers have port tips using different material thicknesses.
I am speculating here, but it's likely that the off sizing would produce intermittent charging problems or damage to the device.
Of course, the overcharging effect would certainly account for rapid flex cable burnouts.
Without the cables and a micrometer, impossible to know for sure.
OEM is certainly preferable....g
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I717 using XDA Premium HD app
srkrono said:
My phone had this issue and all I did was oder the charging port from parts4repair.com and it cleared the issue up
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I did the same about a month ago, when I got the phone. Now it's out again.
rangercaptain said:
Are you using the Samsung charger for your phone? It seems you are over volted and burn your usb port.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I didn't know this was anything more than a myth. Though, I'm not sure this is my problem. I can charge the phone - for now - by putting the phone on my bedside table and putting a small weight along the length of the cable so it holds the jack at an angle against the port.
I know I'm gonna get flamed for that last statement.
Hi
My desire x had an update last month, probably coincidental but that night i had plugged it on to charge and in the morning the orange light was on solid still, but phone won't turn on.
Dropped the phone in November and cracked the digitizer for which I have a replacement, but of course it's laminated to the LCD display.
Tried all power and vol holds etc, charging via pc usb, nothing. Will not turn on.
Any help would be great guys
Cheers
Remove your battery and put aside for few hours then reinsert and check
sent from my HTC DX
Thanks, tried that- no luck
I've read something about it, i will search it
Did you put out your battery, put it back and try to start in your bootloader (volume down + power)?
Is your phone on stock?
0zura
Yeah pulled battery for 24 hours. Tried to access boot loader holding for up to 30s- dead. If I plug the usb cable into the pc, I hear the usb connection sound, then about 5s later the dismount sound.
The light just stays solid orange.
Was your battery died during updating. And Time to avail warranty services.
sent from my HTC DX
It is stock. No update as far as I am aware, they don't install automatically
Have somebody in your near the same battery? Maybe the battery is crashed by itself.
Test with another battery, maybe you have to buy a new one...
gesendet mit HTC Desire X + mySENSE-dx RC3.5
dont buy a new battery, try warranty service, I have 2 bateries for desire and both are useless, it kinda never solves the problem
edit: also try the odds, phone is complex device, easily broken, battery si just packed electrolyte...
Just get the handset replaced on warranty and make backups of apps/data/contacts/sms/etc. next time. if none of the above works
I dropped the phone though, so the digitizer is cracked. I have already emailed HTC and had this as part of the response:
Has the phone experienced any shock or exposure to water?
This sometimes can cause problems to arise with battery or charger, as this components contain delicate parts, particularly.
Damage can occur either to the component itself, or to the component's connection to the motherboard.
It can also lead to damage of these components, however due to the slow way in which this type of damage
can manifest itself, the cause may not always be readily obvious.
So they've written a 'get out of jail free' card, even though I cracked it in Oct 2012 and this problem happened a couple of months ago.
I have read the battery could be the problem, tried holding the battery from old Desire against the terminals but nothing.
I'm sure its software related but how the hell do I prove it?
It seriously could be fault of hardware, software problem of this type are rare, I had some problems on desire which I though are caused by software error (everything poited at it), but in the end, it was fault of motherboard, even more funny, in the end it was baterry-motherboard issue
mindlesSheep said:
It seriously could be fault of hardware, software problem of this type are rare, I had some problems on desire which I though are caused by software error (everything poited at it), but in the end, it was fault of motherboard, even more funny, in the end it was baterry-motherboard issue
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Exact Same issue for me with wildfire (buzz) you should take it to a repare shop, just a heads up to op if Its this then consider scrapping the phone as it costed a bomb in my area
Sent from my HTC Desire X using Tapatalk 2
Alright, I think I'll call it a day on this then and write the phone off. I have a new One X which is great as its just a slightly larger version of the DX except you can't expand the memory which is crap.
Thanks for your suggestions guys
dreamscape. said:
Alright, I think I'll call it a day on this then and write the phone off. I have a new One X which is great as its just a slightly larger version of the DX except you can't expand the memory which is crap.
Thanks for your suggestions guys
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
+ Horrible battery
Regards,
navmad
Has anyone tried this? http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1546222
Fellow windows users,
Im having a little bit trouble to fix my nokia lumia 920 white cover.
The phone broke down after a heavy storm at tomorrowland where the phone was touched by humidity.
Nokia care doesn't want to repair my phone because the water marker went of.
Before I handed my phone over to nokia, the only problem was that I couldn't make connection to my carrier.
(Proximus Belgium)
Sometimes I recieved a call but most of the times I had no connection.
After the 'repair' department sent my phone back without fixing it through the presence of water. (Couldn't be much because I only saw a little bit of corrosion on the sim tray. I removed that connection and tested the conductivity with my voltage meter.)
Now I have it back and it doesn't boot anymore.
I've successfully flashed the device with a new firmware from nokia. (It's the proximus red version)
But still I get the charging icon blinking when I try to power it up. The battery should be fully charged in the 12 hours it was connected with the original charger.
I've checked the battery and there is no damage or sign of water damage. The amp meter indicates that the battery is still functioning.
Is there a way to be check what the problem is? Because a blinking battery Icon doesn't explain much.
Maybe use a stronger adapter to "Boost charge with High amps' to rekick some life in the battery?
This nokia lumia cost me 430 euro's and only worked for 2 months so I'm really unhappy with nokia Care.
With friendly regards
Me
Kickstart
To help myself.
What would be the strongest charger that I could plug my cellphone in?
The battery has been dead for 4 weeks due to nokia.
So maybe a High amp kickstart should refill the battery to a level the wall socket could do the rest.
T3ckN1k said:
To help myself.
What would be the strongest charger that I could plug my cellphone in?
The battery has been dead for 4 weeks due to nokia.
So maybe a High amp kickstart should refill the battery to a level the wall socket could do the rest.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think the only way to boost it is to disassemble from the phone and try to charge the battery directly, but all this requires technical & basic electronics skills.
I have similar water damaged 920, after full charge of the battery out side the phone.The phone drained completely even before got to windows phone slogan...this was because of electrical shortcuts in the main board due water corrosion
I think it best to sell the phone if you don't want to deal with ordering spare parts over ebay in order to repair it.
In most cases water damage cannot be repaired. You have to understand it gets in an under everything in the phone. The phone will always get cascading problems as time goes by. It may work for a while but will and I do mean will fail later.
boril said:
I think the only way to boost it is to disassemble from the phone and try to charge the battery directly, but all this requires technical & basic electronics skills.
I have similar water damaged 920, after full charge of the battery out side the phone.The phone drained completely even before got to windows phone slogan...this was because of electrical shortcuts in the main board due water corrosion
I think it best to sell the phone if you don't want to deal with ordering spare parts over ebay in order to repair it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have basic elektronical skills so it wouldn't be that hard.
Now I'm letting the battery charge for 48hours sometimes that helps.
I'll post my findings within 2 days if I can kickstart this thing.
T3ckN1k said:
I have basic elektronical skills so it wouldn't be that hard.
Now I'm letting the battery charge for 48hours sometimes that helps.
I'll post my findings within 2 days if I can kickstart this thing.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you need help don't hesitate to contact me via PM.
Also get Nokia Lumia 920 RM-820_821 L1L2 Service Manual v1.0.pdf will help you a lot or watch videos on youtube how to dissemble your Nokia.
Hi,
My wife's been complaining about her sgs3, i9300a phone a lot lately, so I've been taking some time of to have a long hard look at it.
the phone in itself works quite well, it is somewhat guarded (she tends to drop it a lot but most of the time it's actually in it's case) and we've switched the screen once (well, not the screen, the top half of the phone to be exact)
the phone used to have a stock 4.1.3 (I think) samsung rom on it for the past year, it's been working well untill a couple of months ago I think and it does still function properly on light use
so what is the issue?
if you'll start a game, or anything that'll cause the phone to heat up - the screen would flicker a bit (not always) and the battery will suddenly report to be down to 0%, shutting down the device right after.
this sudden discharge is obviously not real, as the minute I connect it to a charger and boot up the phone it shows it's last charge before the phone was shut down - however the issue keeps on repeating itself over and over again.
If the phone is connected to a wall charger (or a pc via USB cable) this doesn't happen.
I've been trying to install a kitkat on the device (it have been working slowly so she needed an upgrade) yet the issue persists.
I've been reading around the Internet, some claim it's a faulty battery issue so I'm ordering one from eBay, however - I can't shake the feeling it might some other faulty hardware, perhaps a memory chip gone bad? as I can't see the connection between a bad battery and a flickering screen.
Truth to be told - I'm not a fan of android, or samsung, so I don't know much of the history of problems with it (if there is any) and I've been hoping that there is someone around here who might encountered (or heard) about my issue and would be able to shed some light for me.
thanks in advance!
Change the battery first, replacing the motherboard isn't worth it.
boomboomer said:
Change the battery first, replacing the motherboard isn't worth it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah... I'm planning on stealing my boss S3's battery for some testing later on today if he'll ever decide to show up...
perhaps shouldn't have told him that beforehand
I did hope someone encountered and fixed/learned about this problem as the device has 2 years of history at least...
if it'll come to motherboard switching I'll just force the little lady to switch to a real phone such as an HTC, or maybe go to WP
It was the battery..
Perhaps I should've guessed it by the fact it was REALLY hard closing the case... but it was only after I saw a normal battery that I noticed the real difference.
so for future reference to whomever might meet the same behavior - my battery was about 1.5 the size of what it should be and was quite round,
better call those Samsung representatives and get a replacement before it explodes
Anyone has experience with those 4200Mhz batteries? worth the money or should I just get a genuine one (it cost about the same in here, like 4$ more), the reviews are quite mixed.