It is my first post and my English is not very good, so if something is wrong, please correct me.
Some users have reported that when the battery reached 15% of android, mobile phone alerted 'low battery' and battery level drops to 1% and the phone hung up.
But when he began plugged the charger from 15%. And that was not the case for lack of calibrating the battery, has more to do with 'Custom ROMs' and 'kernels'.
1. The solution is simple, just let the battery runs out (15%) and mobile off.
2. Then turn on the phone one more time, so that you make sure that the battery died.
3. Hold the phone off and then remove the battery for about five minutes.
4. After that put the battery, switch on the phone again and put the charger before it shut down. (The mobile will shut down anyway.)
5. Remove the charger and, even with the phone turned off, reconnect it.
6. Wait for the screen 'battery charge' appear.
7. Wait a few seconds and turn on the phone.
8. If everything goes well as my mobile, your phone will start charging from 1%.
9. Complete the charge, disconnect and use the mobile phone until your battery runs out.
10. And the issue is resolved.
PS: You may need to repeat the process once more.
:fingers-crossed:
___plesse if it works (or not) TELL ME.
Thank YOU.
dropdan said:
It is my first post and my English is not very good, so if something is wrong, please correct me.
Some users have reported that when the battery reached 15% of android, mobile phone alerted 'low battery' and battery level drops to 1% and the phone hung up.
But when he began plugged the charger from 15%. And that was not the case for lack of calibrating the battery, has more to do with 'Custom ROMs' and 'kernels'.
1. The solution is simple, just let the battery runs out (15%) and mobile off.
2. Then turn on the phone one more time, so that you make sure that the battery died.
3. Hold the phone off and then remove the battery for about five minutes.
4. After that put the battery, switch on the phone again and put the charger before it shut down. (The mobile will shut down anyway.)
5. Remove the charger and, even with the phone turned off, reconnect it.
6. Wait for the screen 'battery charge' appear.
7. Wait a few seconds and turn on the phone.
8. If everything goes well as my mobile, your phone will start charging from 1%.
9. Complete the charge, disconnect and use the mobile phone until your battery runs out.
10. And the issue is resolved.
PS: You may need to repeat the process once more.
:fingers-crossed:
___plesse if it works (or not) TELL ME.
Thank YOU.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This will work if the problem with the battery is the power meter. These steps are similar to the ones recommended by Sony Service :good:.
Here is how Sony says to do it:
1. Charge the phone to 100% using the wall charger.
2. Remove the power cable and the battery for 10-15 minutes (no power al all to the phone).
3. Return the battery and power up the phone. The battery meter should have dropped by about the same magnitude as your drop off (15% using your example. It may not be exactly the same number but should be about the same.
4. Charge the phone to 100%.
If you have to do it more than once, you probably didn't do step 2 long enough.
use battery calibrate (instruction included). get it on app store. or if you unlocked bootloader and have CMW, just wipe battery in CMW.
none of this solutions isn't working for me
Related
Lately my phone has only been charging to 95%. At 95% it will say the battery is fully charged. I tried to wipe the battery stats but i am still not able to get it to go over 95. Has anyone had this problem, or can anyone give me advice on how to fix it?
If the voltage reads 4.2v, wipe the battery stats and restart the phone. It should read 100% after it boots up.
Make sure you have a backup phone for your SIM, or a phone you can forward your line to for the duration of steps below as it will involve your atrix tethered to power for the better part of the day (I did it during the day at work)
--------------------
Drain your device's battery dry (turn off all power saving and run everything you possibly can etc) To the point where it finally shuts itself off - Do not turn it back on.
Plug it into a wall charger and charge it up from 0 to %100. Just tap the power button every so often to check charge progress. Do not turn your device on. Anything more than a tap on that power button and you will turn your device on. If you turn your device on, the chair you are sitting in will swallow you whole. (Actually it will just hinder this process. If you ABSOLUTELY need to I'm sure it will be fine) Your notification light will also give you an idea of where things are at (red for low, amber for getting there, and green for almost done)
When your device reads %100, turn it on, all the while plugged in. If it still reads anything less than %100, download and install "battery calibration" from the market:
https://market.android.com/details?id=com.nema.batterycalibration&feature=search_result
Keep your device plugged in. Run the app - it will instruct you on what to do. It's very straightforward. Keep your device plugged in until fully charged to %100. It will take a dogs age for the stretch between %95 (or whatever) to %100, but it will eventually get there. Ignore "battery charged" notices, or anything else that contradicts what the app says the actual charge currently is.
When you finally hit %100 charge, and you should, wait another 15 minutes or so.
15 minutes after %100, press the big button on the app that says "calibrate". If you're as lucky as I, you will soon be enjoying approx. 1 day 13 hours run time (moderate use) with your device.
slayerx02 said:
If the voltage reads 4.2v, wipe the battery stats and restart the phone. It should read 100% after it boots up.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
any one know what effect does soft rebooting has on battery stat file?
And how about factory resetting (from the privacy settings) effect on battery stat?
rush_ad said:
any one know what effect does soft rebooting has on battery stat file?
And how about factory resetting (from the privacy settings) effect on battery stat?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
None. Because its not stored somewhere that that process erases it.
Sent from my MB860 using XDA Premium App
I have found so many guides on how to calibrate battery best. This one: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=15450518&postcount=3 Or this one: http://theultralinx.com/2011/07/calibrate-androids-battery.html
Or: just charge until full, wipe batterystats and just let it run out of power, then recharge to full again (that is the easiest one). So would the last one be enough, or do you have to do it the complicated way to get best results?
Also when draining the battery until the phone shuts down (after deleting stats), should it be used normal or can I just run some applications to use up battery fast?
what i used to do was:
charge to full once,
unplug, (and you will see sometimes it goes back to 99%),
plug again for a few minutes,
unplug,
go to recovery and wipe battery stat.
then reboot and use the phone NORMALLY until it shuts off (set the brightness to highest for next step).
BOOT straight into recovery and leave the phone until it dies again because there will still be some juice left.
while off, charge it,
when it gets to 100% while off, unplug,
then plug it again for a few minutes,
then boot up normally.
atlaswingpasaway said:
what i used to do was:
charge to full once,
unplug, (and you will see sometimes it goes back to 99%),
plug again for a few minutes,
unplug,
go to recovery and wipe battery stat.
then reboot and use the phone NORMALLY until it shuts off (set the brightness to highest for next step).
BOOT straight into recovery and leave the phone until it dies again because there will still be some juice left.
while off, charge it,
when it gets to 100% while off, unplug,
then plug it again for a few minutes,
then boot up normally.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ive heard you should never "try" to over charging it by unplugging and plugging back in.
There are a lot of rumors and myths about battery calibration (and a lot of threads on this forum and copy-pastes on other blogs).
Personally I don't believe in long rituals with precise times and percents. Battery has build in controller, that can't be wiped. And Android has battery history file, that can be erased (butdoes it have any sense?).
Please, post link to authoritative source of information about battery calibration, if anyone has it.
Use the phone till its out, power it up via download mode to really drain every last drop. Charge it with the official charger while its off, once charging is full power on the phone let it boot properly and resume to charge maybe for 5mins then your done. Battery stats bin = totaly myth.
brianmay27 said:
Ive heard you should never "try" to over charging it by unplugging and plugging back in.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i hear you and i was reluctant to do that as well. but since new Li-Ion batteries have some sort of "overcharge protection" mechanism on them,
the batteries will stop taking in current automatically once they reach maximum mAh (not the battery stat maximum, the battery itself).
dangers related to charging are incompatible chargers, screwed up wall sockets, surges, etc. Know that companies nowadays keep saying "USE ONLY <company> COMPATIBLE CHARGERS"
because these chargers/cables also have this tech where current just stops once it's full.
well the "theory" was that since the battery stats is kernel related and gives battery "readings", when the number gets < 15, it will give out the warning to charge, then when the number gets to 0, it shuts off the system. This may happen but the battery MAY still have some power left in it, it's just the battery stats that says "hey, i see it zero, turn us off".
This scenario may happen to a screwed up battery stat reading, which is solved by wiping it's top charge number (1650) and the bottom charge number (0). the next boot will create a new
source file for the battery stat, containing no data then upon boot complete, the system will record the current battery level as top charge number to the battery stat. when it drains out, that
will be the new bottom charge number.
i do not have a wikipedia or engagdet source but Team Whiskey (a well known dev/mod team for Vibrant) of the Samsung Vibrant forum here in XDA explained it themselves.
Thanks for this thread. Really useful!
I use this one, nice & simple app,
https://market.android.com/details?id=com.nema.batterycalibration
Hi, I have currently upgraded my Xperia Neo to CM9. I have been experiencing a bit lesser batter life.
Also when i use CpySpy app it doesnt show the time spent by the processor in the specified frequencies. It always shows 0 for all
states. that is definitely not correct. The system can't be idle when i use right? So i'm wondering is there any issue with CM9 or my phone particularly. Also i have already used CM7 and CpySpy was giving me right numbers. I need help to figure out why my battery drains even when my phone is in idle and why there are no numbers in CpuSpy.
Thanks in advance
I can't guarantee, but cpu usage/phone turning to be hot after a while of use/short battery life is something common with most of androids. On my HTC HD2 battery life is twice as short since I started to use android.
If, after rooting or more likely the case after flashing a new rom, you often have battery reporting errors, and re-calibrating the battery along with some steps I will outline for you below will ensure that your battery is getting a full charge, and the battery reporting accuracy is right on. I run my device in performance mode all the time, and with a CPU overclock of 1.25GHz and various tweaks, I have about a day an a half to a day and a quarter of full runtime from my battery. This is with moderate to heavy usage (calls, emailing, text, gaming, web browsing, etc.) so you should have no problems getting acceptable battery performance after following these steps:
1. Take the case off your device (one of the latter steps involves taking the battery out from the phone while it's plugged in. Make sure your case won't stand in the way.)
2. Install Battery Calibration app from the market
3. Plug in your device to charge while it's on, wait till it gets to a 100%
4. When the charge is 100%, open the BatteryCalibration app and lookup what the charge is in MV while at 100%. Write it down.
My Atrix 2 was showing ~3400MV while at 100%, which is definitely not the maximum capacity.
5. Discharge your device completely until it shuts off.
A good way of doing this quickly is by turning on wifi, and a video player.
6. Without turning on the phone plug it into a wall charger and let it get to 100%
7. When it's at 100%, without unplugging it from the wall charger, take off the battery cover, and take the battery out.
Your phone will "reboot" and show a Missing Battery icon.
8. Without unplugging the phone from the wall charger or turning it on, put the battery back in and wait until the phone recognizes the battery.
9. Your battery should now be recognized by the phone, and showing a charge % significantly lower than 100%.
Mine showed only 5%.
10. Let it sit there charging for 2-3 hours (or more).
My phone wouldn't charge past 10%, but yours might. The numbers don't matter much as the phone is definitely getting additional charge that could have been lost while flashing ROMs, etc.
11. After 2-3 hours (or more), turn the phone on while holding the volume down button and get into CWM.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
12. Wipe battery stats in CWM, reboot.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
13. When the phone turns on, go into Battery Calibration app again and look up your MV numbers -if you were like me, they should be significantly higher than before. After this whole process I had 4351MV at 100%, comparing to 3400MV before calibration.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
14. Before going to sleep - Install Watchdog Task Manager Lite from the market. Go into it's preferences, set CPU threshhold to 20%, check "Include phone processes", check "Monitor phone processes", check "Display all phone processes", set system CPU threshhold to 20% as well.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
15. Make sure your wifi and data connections are off. Now finally unplug the phone from the charger.
Go to bed, let your phone sleep too.
16. Success! Next morning check where your battery % is at and if you followed the instructions correctly / got lucky like me, your battery life should be 90% or more.
I went to bed with 98% and woke up to 94%. So, I consider this mission a success.
Sent from my MB865 using xda's premium carrier pigeon service
Apex_Strider said:
If, after rooting or more likely the case after flashing a new rom, you often have battery reporting errors (as mentioned above), and re-calibrating the battery along with some steps I will outline for you below will ensure that your battery is getting a full charge, and the battery reporting accuracy is right on. As far as power cycling, I don't know that it does much good. I run my device in performance mode all the time, and with a CPU overclock of 1.25GHz and various tweaks, I have about a day an a half to a day and a quarter of full runtime from my battery. This is with moderate to heavy usage (calls, emailing, text, gaming, web browsing, etc.) so you should have no problems getting acceptable battery performance after following these steps:
1. Take the case off your device (one of the latter steps involves taking the battery out from the phone while it's plugged in. Make sure your case won't stand in the way.)
2. Install Battery Calibration app from the market
3. Plug in your device to charge while it's on, wait till it gets to a 100%
4. When the charge is 100%, open the BatteryCalibration app and lookup what the charge is in MV while at 100%. Write it down.
My Atrix 2 was showing ~3400MV while at 100%, which is definitely not the maximum capacity.
5. Discharge your device completely until it shuts off.
A good way of doing this quickly is by turning on wifi, and a video player.
6. Without turning on the phone plug it into a wall charger and let it get to 100%
7. When it's at 100%, without unplugging it from the wall charger, take off the battery cover, and take the battery out.
Your phone will "reboot" and show a Missing Battery icon.
8. Without unplugging the phone from the wall charger or turning it on, put the battery back in and wait until the phone recognizes the battery.
9. Your battery should now be recognized by the phone, and showing a charge % significantly lower than 100%.
Mine showed only 5%.
10. Let it sit there charging for 2-3 hours (or more).
My phone wouldn't charge past 10%, but yours might. The numbers don't matter much as the phone is definitely getting additional charge that could have been lost while flashing ROMs, etc.
11. After 2-3 hours (or more), turn the phone on while holding the volume down button and get into CWM.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
12. Wipe battery stats in CWM, reboot.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
13. When the phone turns on, go into Battery Calibration app again and look up your MV numbers -if you were like me, they should be significantly higher than before. After this whole process I had 4351MV at 100%, comparing to 3400MV before calibration.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
14. Before going to sleep - Install Watchdog Task Manager Lite from the market. Go into it's preferences, set CPU threshhold to 20%, check "Include phone processes", check "Monitor phone processes", check "Display all phone processes", set system CPU threshhold to 20% as well.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
15. Make sure your wifi and data connections are off. Now finally unplug the phone from the charger.
Go to bed, let your phone sleep too.
16. Success! Next morning check where your battery % is at and if you followed the instructions correctly / got lucky like me, your battery life should be 90% or more.
I went to bed with 98% and woke up to 94%. So, I consider this mission a success.
Sent from my MB865 using xda's premium carrier pigeon service
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Great, what should be. :good:
Hi as stated my question is NOT to know how many of you experience charging that takes too long, but is there a SOLUTION for it?
I am using a desire s, it used to take 2hours 30min(from 15%-100%) but now a days it takes close to 5 hours to fully charge.
I've read many thread with similar problem but non seem to be able to find the solution.
I doubt it is battery related issue as i got this phone together with my friends and theirs has no issue like this.
I've tried :
1)full wipe
2)different rom(s)
3)different kernel
4)battery stat wipe
5)different charger(both are htc)
ps : I've post this in DesireS Q&A but did not get any solution.
How are you charging your phone: USB to PC it via wall charger? If it's taking longer than usual turn off the phone. I've found that this sped up the charge dramatically! By doing so, you can also see a battery simulation on the screen showing the charging process.
Also, if you're charging vis USB, the requirements are 5 volts from a USB connector. But the problem is amperage. Wall chargers can supply up to 1 amp (some will supply more, but you don't want more for a phone), while many computers will only supply 500 milliamps out of a USB connector. Thus the phone (battery) will charge faster with a higher amperage. If that doesn't do any good, you may have a bunk battery or some kind of hardware issue...
Sent from my MB865 using xda's premium carrier pigeon service
I am using wall charger. It seems consistent to charge slower at around 70% then speed back up at 90%. Are u sure that this is a symptoms of a spoiled battery?
To me(an accountant not a technicians) it seems like the "smart" phone is tell it to charge slower at 70%.
Sent from my Desire S using xda premium(nah dun have the money to buy premium)
Same problem
I have the same problem, first when I bought my SE x10 mini pro. It charged in 1.5 hours but nw it takes about 3 hours. I don't know the reason but I'm trying to find out how to solve this problem.
I'm not entirely certain its a case of bad battery, but it does sound a bit suspicious. If you're feeling up to it, you can try this: (it's worth a shot.)
If, after rooting or more likely that case after flashing a new rom, you often have battery reporting errors and re-calibrating the battery along with some steps I will outline for you below will ensure that your battery is getting a full charge, and the battery reporting accuracy is right on.
1. Take the case off your phone (one of the latter steps involves taking the battery out from the phone while it's plugged in. Make sure your case won't stand in the way.)
2. Install Battery Calibration app from the market
3. Plug in your phone to charge while it's on, wait till it gets to a 100%
4. When the charge is 100%, open the BatteryCalibration app and lookup what the charge is in MV while at 100%. Write it down.
My Atrix 2 was showing ~3400MV while at 100%, which is definitely not the maximum capacity.
5. Discharge your phone completely until it shuts off.
A good way of doing this quickly is by turning on wifi, and a video player.
6. Without turning on the phone plug it into a wall charger and let it get to 100%
7. When it's at 100%, without unplugging it from the wall charger, take off the battery cover, and take the battery out.
Your phone will "reboot" and show a Missing Battery icon.
8. Without unplugging the phone from the wall charger or turning it on, put the battery back in and wait until the phone recognizes the battery.
9. Your battery should now be recognized by the phone, and showing a charge % significantly lower than 100%.
Mine showed only 5%.
10. Let it sit there charging for 2-3 hours (or more).
My phone wouldn't charge past 10%, but yours might. The numbers don't matter much as the phone is definitely getting additional charge that could have been lost while flashing ROMs, etc.
11. After 2-3 hours (or more), turn the phone on while holding the volume down button and get into CWM.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
12. Wipe battery stats and reboot.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
13. When the phone turns on, go into Battery Calibration app again and look up your MV numbers -if you were like me, they should be significantly higher than before. After this whole process I had 4351MV at 100%, comparing to 3400MV before calibration.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
14. Make sure your wifi and data connections are off. Now finally unplug the phone from the charger.
Go to bed, let your phone sleep too.
The next morning, use your phone as normal throughout the day. Then when it comes time to charge again, see if that does anything for your battery life and/or charging times...
Sent from my MB865 using xda's premium carrier pigeon service
I liked your current charge curve..
bump
ps : i did try out #5 but no success
best way is shut down device when charging
Sent from my GT-I9300 using xda app-developers app
Yes is charges quickly when the phone is off, but what if i am expecting a call or some sort. Could it be a script some where to tell the phone when should it start slow charge or something similar?
hi guys! i'm running cm7.2 on my su660 (it's a kang build which is ported from p990 official CM build). and i have a problem on charging the phone. when the phone have 10% of battery left, i plug in the charger, the phone show the charging symbol . but when i leave it sleep and come back after 'bout 3 hours, it still show 10%. but the voltage in sparepart is aproximate 4200 mV. so the battery is fully charged but the rom didn't regconize it. but then after some minutes turning the screen on, the rom show that phone is fully charged. so i guess that the battery percentage counter doesn't work why the phone is pluged in and sleep. so this is a rom issue? can i fix it myself?
PS: sorry for my poor English because i'm not a native English speaker. i'm from VietNam. i tried my best to explane my case. hope u can understand me!
If, after rooting or more likely that case after flashing a new rom, you often have battery reporting errors, and re-calibrating the battery along with some steps I will outline for you below will ensure that your battery is getting a full charge, and the battery reporting accuracy is right on. As far as power cycling, I don't know that it does much good. I run my device in performance mode all the time, and with a CPU overclock of 1.25GHz and various tweaks, I have about a day an a half to a day and a quarter of full runtime from my battery. This is with moderate to heavy usage (calls, emailing, text, gaming, web browsing, etc.) so you should have no problems getting acceptable battery performance after following these steps:
1. Take the case off your device (one of the latter steps involves taking the battery out from the phone while it's plugged in. Make sure your case won't stand in the way.)
2. Install Battery Calibration app from the market
3. Plug in your device to charge while it's on, wait till it gets to a 100%
4. When the charge is 100%, open the BatteryCalibration app and lookup what the charge is in MV while at 100%. Write it down.
My Atrix 2 was showing ~3400MV while at 100%, which is definitely not the maximum capacity.
5. Discharge your device completely until it shuts off.
A good way of doing this quickly is by turning on wifi, and a video player.
6. Without turning on the phone plug it into a wall charger and let it get to 100%
7. When it's at 100%, without unplugging it from the wall charger, take off the battery cover, and take the battery out.
Your phone will "reboot" and show a Missing Battery icon.
8. Without unplugging the phone from the wall charger or turning it on, put the battery back in and wait until the phone recognizes the battery.
9. Your battery should now be recognized by the phone, and showing a charge % significantly lower than 100%.
Mine showed only 5%.
10. Let it sit there charging for 2-3 hours (or more).
My phone wouldn't charge past 10%, but yours might. The numbers don't matter much as the phone is definitely getting additional charge that could have been lost while flashing ROMs, etc.
11. After 2-3 hours (or more), turn the phone on while holding the volume down button and get into CWM (if installed) or use Rom Manager (is device is supported).
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
12. Wipe battery stats in CWM, reboot.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
13. When the phone turns on, go into Battery Calibration app again and look up your MV numbers -if you were like me, they should be significantly higher than before. After this whole process I had 4351MV at 100%, comparing to 3400MV before calibration.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
14. Before going to sleep - Install Watchdog Task Manager Lite from the market. Go into it's preferences, set CPU threshhold to 20%, check "Include phone processes", check "Monitor phone processes", check "Display all phone processes", set system CPU threshhold to 20% as well.
Do not disconnect it from the charger still!
15. Make sure your wifi and data connections are off. Now finally unplug the phone from the charger.
Go to bed, let your phone sleep too.
16. Success! Next morning check where your battery % is at and if you followed the instructions correctly / got lucky like me, your battery life should be 90% or more.
I went to bed with 98% and woke up to 94%. So, I consider this mission a success.
Sent from my MB865 using xda's premium carrier pigeon service