I've looked everywhere and can't find a root nor any threads can someone help me out
Just rooted mine with http://kingroot.net
It's just root, no recovery or bootloader so far, but after deleting bloatware and installing Sense 7, it's a perfect and snappy phablet ☺☺☺
I unlocked my bootliader on my Fierce XL 5045n, now what?
I just noticed a "allow BootLoader to be unlocked" option in developer options. Still can't get root though. But that should definitely help getting a custom recovery done. I still can't get root, tried numerous times, apk and with Windows. I'm stock lollipop 5.1.1 and have the box checked to allow bootloader to be unlocked in developer options but still nothing. Any ideas?
LazMike, did you try Kingroot?
nyttliv7 said:
LazMike, did you try Kingroot?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, I did, thanks, didn't work at first but a newer version did the trick but some apps are denied permission from Kinguser even though I grant it and it shows they are granted, it also made my phone super laggy. Cant wait for a recovery and some custom ROMs.
That's weird? My phone got even snappier... But I deleted quite a bunch of apps though. My ram is showing like 1gb free most of the time. I'm using greenify, maybe that helps as well? But of course, it will be great when the real development starts for this phone ☺
LazMike said:
Yes, I did, thanks, didn't work at first but a newer version did the trick but some apps are denied permission from Kinguser even though I grant it and it shows they are granted, it also made my phone super laggy. Cant wait for a recovery and some custom ROMs.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What version did you use?
I think it's the newest. 4.5.2, a older version wouldn't work, I keep getting permission denied for certain apps, even though they are granted and shows they are as well. I also keep losing root and Kingo has to redo it.
Ok so here's some tips for people who wanna root:
>-Download Kingroot 4.6.0 and use that to root. It may take a few tries but it'll root
>-In general settings, turn off smart authorization so it won't constantly ask for permissions that you already granted
>-If you want your Fierce XL to be faster and less battery consuming, download Kernel Auditor from the Play Store. When it's installed, grant root permission for it, go to the menu, tap where it says "CPU", and where it says " CPU Governor", click on it. It should have an option that says "powersave". Click on that one and you're good to go
>REMINDER: You need to root first to do all of this
psycho_deth6 said:
Ok so here's some tips for people who wanna root:
>-Download Kingroot 4.6.0 and use that to root. It may take a few tries but it'll root
>-In general settings, turn off smart authorization so it won't constantly ask for permissions that you already granted
>-If you want your Fierce XL to be faster and less battery consuming, download Kernel Auditor from the Play Store. When it's installed, grant root permission for it, go to the menu, tap where it says "CPU", and where it says " CPU Governor", click on it. It should have an option that says "powersave". Click on that one and you're good to go
>REMINDER: You need to root first to do all of this
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's of course a matter of personal taste and needs, but I don't agree with the choice of Powersave Governor. I use 3C toolbox Pro to change OOM settings to a level were most services "dies" after a set time of non use, which gives a bit snappier experience and less pressure on battery. Of course you need to be careful with OOM (ram) to not "kill" to fast, loosing more multitasking power.
My battery got better and better, and now after a week of heavy use from 100% down to 5%, it lasts from 8 to 14 hours, depending on usage. Fairly good for a midrange phone.
And I do prefer the built in Cpu Governor (interactive). It's a good balance between snappiness and battery. Powersave on the other hand, will obviously save battery, but for sure also make the system slower. But as I said before, it's all up to the user and his needs and expectations.
"Performance Governor:
This locks the phone's CPU at maximum frequency. While this may sound like an ugly idea, there is growing evidence to suggest that running a phone at its maximum frequency at all times will allow a faster race-to-idle. Race-to-idle is the process by which a phone completes a given task, such as syncing email, and returns the CPU to the extremely efficient low-power state. This still requires extensive testing, and a kernel that properly implements a given CPU's C-states (low power states).
Powersave Governor:
The opposite of the Performance governor, the Powersave governor locks the CPU frequency at the lowest frequency set by the user.
Interactive Governor:
Much like the OnDemand governor, the Interactive governor dynamically scales CPU clockspeed in response to the workload placed on the CPU by the user. This is where the similarities end. Interactive is significantly more responsive than OnDemand, because it's faster at scaling to maximum frequency.
Unlike OnDemand, which you'll recall scales clockspeed in the context of a work queue, Interactive scales the clockspeed over the course of a timer set arbitrarily by the kernel developer. In other words, if an application demands a ramp to maximum clockspeed (by placing 100% load on the CPU), a user can execute another task before the governor starts reducing CPU frequency. This can eliminate the frequency bouncing discussed in the OnDemand section. Because of this timer, Interactive is also better prepared to utilize intermediate clockspeeds that fall between the minimum and maximum CPU frequencies. This is another pro-battery life benefit of Interactive.
However, because Interactive is permitted to spend more time at maximum frequency than OnDemand (for device performance reasons), the battery-saving benefits discussed above are effectively negated. Long story short, Interactive offers better performance than OnDemand (some say the best performance of any governor) and negligibly different battery life.
Interactive also makes the assumption that a user turning the screen on will shortly be followed by the user interacting with some application on their device. Because of this, screen on triggers a ramp to maximum clockspeed, followed by the timer behavior described above."
nyttliv7 said:
It's of course a matter of personal taste and needs, but I don't agree with the choice of Powersave Governor. I use 3C toolbox Pro to change OOM settings to a level were most services "dies" after a set time of non use, which gives a bit snappier experience and less pressure on battery. Of course you need to be careful with OOM (ram) to not "kill" to fast, loosing more multitasking power.
My battery got better and better, and now after a week of heavy use from 100% down to 5%, it lasts from 8 to 14 hours, depending on usage. Fairly good for a midrange phone.
And I do prefer the built in Cpu Governor (interactive). It's a good balance between snappiness and battery. Powersave on the other hand, will obviously save battery, but for sure also make the system slower. But as I said before, it's all up to the user and his needs and expectations.
"Performance Governor:
This locks the phone's CPU at maximum frequency. While this may sound like an ugly idea, there is growing evidence to suggest that running a phone at its maximum frequency at all times will allow a faster race-to-idle. Race-to-idle is the process by which a phone completes a given task, such as syncing email, and returns the CPU to the extremely efficient low-power state. This still requires extensive testing, and a kernel that properly implements a given CPU's C-states (low power states).
Powersave Governor:
The opposite of the Performance governor, the Powersave governor locks the CPU frequency at the lowest frequency set by the user.
Interactive Governor:
Much like the OnDemand governor, the Interactive governor dynamically scales CPU clockspeed in response to the workload placed on the CPU by the user. This is where the similarities end. Interactive is significantly more responsive than OnDemand, because it's faster at scaling to maximum frequency.
Unlike OnDemand, which you'll recall scales clockspeed in the context of a work queue, Interactive scales the clockspeed over the course of a timer set arbitrarily by the kernel developer. In other words, if an application demands a ramp to maximum clockspeed (by placing 100% load on the CPU), a user can execute another task before the governor starts reducing CPU frequency. This can eliminate the frequency bouncing discussed in the OnDemand section. Because of this timer, Interactive is also better prepared to utilize intermediate clockspeeds that fall between the minimum and maximum CPU frequencies. This is another pro-battery life benefit of Interactive.
However, because Interactive is permitted to spend more time at maximum frequency than OnDemand (for device performance reasons), the battery-saving benefits discussed above are effectively negated. Long story short, Interactive offers better performance than OnDemand (some say the best performance of any governor) and negligibly different battery life.
Interactive also makes the assumption that a user turning the screen on will shortly be followed by the user interacting with some application on their device. Because of this, screen on triggers a ramp to maximum clockspeed, followed by the timer behavior described above."
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You're kinda right, powersave does kinda suck sometimes. I wish they had the "Conservative" governor. That works for me
Anyways, this phone has all we need to become a perfect one, as soon as we get our custom recovery ☺
I'm searching through alcatel and MSM8909 forums to see who's behind their recoveries ☺☺☺
DO NOT TRY TO INSTALL XPOSED
YOU WILL BRICK YOUR PHONES
Sent from my 5054N using Tapatalk
yea kingroot is being a pain I have 1 GB internet speed i can download anything fast except this stupid 15.3mb file when i finally got done realized it was the chinese version now have to wait another hour hope it works though
Is anyone familiar with the built in recovery mode? What limitations does it have?
I'm not sure, but if the following similarities are enough, then maybe this thread can help us experimenting?
Fierce xl:
Qualcomm MSM8909 Snapdragon 210
Quad-core 1.1 GHz Cortex-A7
Adreno 304
PIXI 3 (5) 4g:
Qualcomm MSM8909
Quad-core 1.1 GHz
Pixi 3 (5.5) LTE:
Qualcomm MSM8909 Snapdragon 200
Quad-core, 1.1 GHz Cortex A7
Adreno 304
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=3193624
Can someone upload the stock dialer apk and odex for this phone?
Sent from my 5054N using Tapatalk
Remove kingroot entirely so my xl is stock again can anyone help me
I'm trying to remove the kingroot root entirely from my phone everything I get or send a picture message it does not download and open or send ever since the I ingrown was installed also emojis worked at first but no long show up please help with removal of all kingroot settings apps and return to store bought settings
mamirie2015 said:
I'm trying to remove the kingroot root entirely from my phone everything I get or send a picture message it does not download and open or send ever since the I ingrown was installed also emojis worked at first but no long show up please help with removal of all kingroot settings apps and return to store bought settings
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
were you using the newest version of kingroot? I've had none of these issues
AesopRock127 said:
were you using the newest version of kingroot? I've had none of these issues
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As far as I know I was but I unrooted my phone but still can't download incoming pix or see emojis the emojis keyboard is there just don't show them
Related
Hello, I have an HTC thunderbolt, rooted with CM7, and installed setcpu and used autodetect and I put the CPU govern to "conservative" with minimum GHz 245 and maximum 1.8GHz and I am just wondering if this is safe? because I read some threads about Compatible kernels and I jave no idea what that means, they were also talkimg about undervolting, which agaim I do not know means, anyways thanks for reading
Watoy said:
Hello, I have an HTC thunderbolt, rooted with CM7, and installed setcpu and used autodetect and I put the CPU govern to "conservative" with minimum GHz 245 and maximum 1.8GHz and I am just wondering if this is safe? because I read some threads about Compatible kernels and I jave no idea what that means, they were also talkimg about undervolting, which agaim I do not know means, anyways thanks for reading
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If your device will run reliably at 1.8GHz, then there's not much to worry about as long as the voltage isn't too high. High voltages and heat can shorten the SoC's life or kill it altogether. Generally, I don't recommend running that fast because the performance increase isn't as great from 1.6GHz to 1.8GHz as it is from 1.41GHz to 1.6GHz. These cores weren't meant to run any faster than 1.5GHz really, and anything past that doesn't increase the performance as much as the numbers might suggest.
Also, a conservative governor probably isn't ideal if you're willing to run a device that fast. That governor would seldom, if ever, use that kind of speed. I'd suggest smartass, smartassV2, ondemand, or interactive if you're looking to see a good boost in performance.
If you're looking for an app to view and adjust voltages, IncrediControl works well. For all the nitty-gritty of overclocking, I'd recommend reading my OC guide. It's in the "Second Post" of my Q&A thread. If you've got any questions, feel free to hit me up.
So does over clocking just speed things up? What are the real benefits
Boggus said:
So does over clocking just speed things up? What are the real benefits
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I look at it like this. My screen eats up most of my battery. The less time it's on, the better. Overclocking uses more power for the CPU, but the display spends less time telling you it's waiting. It doesn't really add functionality, just speed and efficiency.
Hello,
I'm writing this thread to know which processor options would be optimal in our minis. The best settings, which give me the best performance/battery, I've found are:
CPU Governor: SMARTASSV2 (Default)
Min Freq: 19MHz
Max Freq: 748MHz
Undervolt: TRUE
I'm also using Apex Launcher. Which settings are you using?
Note: This are just my results, be careful when you change your processor settings.
fuchini said:
Hello,
I'm writing this thread to know which processor options would be optimal in our minis. The best settings, which give me the best performance/battery, I've found are:
CPU Governor: SMARTASSV2 (Default)
Min Freq: 19MHz
Max Freq: 748MHz
Undervolt: TRUE
I'm also using Apex Launcher. Which settings are you using?
Note: This are just my results, be careful when you change your processor settings.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Whats the purpose of Undervolting when you have it's max frequency as overclock?
zvdelossantos said:
Whats the purpose of Undervolting when you have it's max frequency as overclock?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Because it undervolts on every frequency below 600, and his minimum is 19, so when the phone is idle or doesn't need all of the processing power he saves battery
The SmartAss governor is very good at picking the right frequencies for any given job, so it doesn't allways run on 748Mhz, not even when you're using the phone.
SmG67 said:
because it undervolts on every frequency below 600, and his minimum is 19, so when the phone is idle or doesn't need all of the processing power he saves battery
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is the same very purpose of SMARTASSV2 to undervolt your device when idle or on sleepmode and overclocks it when on process. So ticking the undervolt wont affect your device because the one that manage the frequency will be the COUgovernor.
zvdelossantos said:
That is the same very purpose of SMARTASSV2 to undervolt your device when idle or on sleepmode and overclocks it when on process. So ticking the undervolt wont affect your device because the one that manage the frequency will be the COUgovernor.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The SmartAss Governor only governs the frequencies, not the voltage that the Processor uses. there is a difference between the speed the cpu runs on (Mhz) and the amount of Electricity (Volts) it gets fed
Say Qualcomm has said it needs 5 volts to run at the stock frequency of 600Mhz, then the processor will always get 5 Volts, no matter which frequency it uses.
Undervolting will feed it less than the 5Volts when the frequencies are lower, SmartAss won't do that, it will run the 19Mhz still on 5Volts.
(Voltages are examples, i don't know the exact values, but I know that running on 122 or less will be stable on less than half of the nominal power)
SmG67 said:
The SmartAss Governor only governs the frequencies, not the voltage that the Processor uses. there is a difference between the speed the cpu runs on (Mhz) and the amount of Electricity (Volts) it gets fed
Say Qualcomm has said it needs 5 volts to run at the stock frequency of 600Mhz, then the processor will always get 5 Volts, no matter which frequency it uses.
Undervolting will feed it less than the 5Volts when the frequencies are lower, SmartAss won't do that, it will run the 19Mhz still on 5Volts.
(Voltages are examples, i don't know the exact values, but I know that running on 122 or less will be stable on less than half of the nominal power)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nice yes yes. good reply. now I know whats the use of undervolting. thanks for the explanation
SmG67 said:
The SmartAss Governor only governs the frequencies, not the voltage that the Processor uses. there is a difference between the speed the cpu runs on (Mhz) and the amount of Electricity (Volts) it gets fed
Say Qualcomm has said it needs 5 volts to run at the stock frequency of 600Mhz, then the processor will always get 5 Volts, no matter which frequency it uses.
Undervolting will feed it less than the 5Volts when the frequencies are lower, SmartAss won't do that, it will run the 19Mhz still on 5Volts.
(Voltages are examples, i don't know the exact values, but I know that running on 122 or less will be stable on less than half of the nominal power)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
nice to see some piece of truth over here (not perfect, but well explained)
de-noobing is good from time to time
xda is overcrowded of false answers given by people thinking they know but don't
anywhere, at anytime, newbies asking get fake answers from people wanting to help but failing to do so , due to lack of knowledge.
as everyone, i might be one of these, but try not to be.
make sure you know what you are talking about before spreading your (incomplete or false) knowledge
this was my thought of the day
matmutant said:
nice to see some piece of truth over here (not perfect, but well explained)
de-noobing is good from time to time
xda is overcrowded of false answers given by people thinking they know but don't
anywhere, at anytime, newbies asking get fake answers from people wanting to help but failing to do so , due to lack of knowledge.
as everyone, i might be one of these, but try not to be.
make sure you know what you are talking about before spreading your (incomplete or false) knowledge
this was my thought of the day
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Would you mind to add that to FAQs to avoid false answers?
Tom.K said:
Would you mind to add that to FAQs to avoid false answers?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
of course i don't
do you mean only the explanation about oc/uv ?
i can add it, note that a while ago i wrote pieces of information about those things
Hey, thanks a lot for all the replies. I had no idea why my settings worked like i wanted.
I have successfully rooted my T200 via Farmaroot, and got some utilities like cpuset on it to check for frequency.
On the Octocore MT6592, I notice some unique things:
In any other setting than hotplug, and utilizing the cfq scheduler the phone underperforms with Antutu benchmark with any other setting.
Both my min and max frequency at set at 1663.
The phone runs the stock build:
Android 4.2.2
Kernel 3.4.49
thl.T200.158A.20140221.JB9.FHD.EN.COM.16P256_MT659W_V2.0.13
However, reading through the mediatek's website for the chipset, it appears it can handle a max frequency of 2Ghz. For testing purposes I'd like to set that. And give it a try.
Can someone walk me through how I can do that?
Not possible. This is set at the factory and as far as we know, no one has managed to overclock MTK SoCs.
Great choice of phone though. I had the THL T200C (720p 16GB) for awhile and it is a very good phone.
thanks
Chinaphonearena said:
Not possible. This is set at the factory and as far as we know, no one has managed to overclock MTK SoCs.
Great choice of phone though. I had the THL T200C (720p 16GB) for awhile and it is a very good phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks. Did you manage to try and use something like cpuset and get better performance. No combination of settings has worked well for me thus far minus hotplug and setting to hotplug and cfq
For me it performed fine. But the T200C is 720p, not 1080p. What kind of performance issues are you having?
performance
Chinaphonearena said:
For me it performed fine. But the T200C is 720p, not 1080p. What kind of performance issues are you having?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Its of interesting : If you look at cpuset the hotplug governor leaves the other 7 cores idle. Then spins them up. Why not give them a little juice then max out on a heavy workload?
Also the performance on Antutu for the T100 shows consistently higher numbers. Mine comes in in between the HTC one and Samsung S4. While that;s admirable, id like to see better numbers more consistent with the T100 that puts it above.
after waiting impatiently for the arrival of your op2 , many are disappointed with the low battery standby....specially if you are using LTE.
issues :
1) even having such a large battery, getting poor battery life.
2) even if the phone is idle, battery drains :crying:
so after having it for almost 2 weeks, i have learned most of the cpu tuner and battery saving apps wont work with op2, its not because of software, basically snapdragon 810's big little architecture is new and apps in the market are not compatible with this octacore new chipset.
and because of very less manufacturers are using this SOC as we now know why... and they were right... it heats up a lot!!! so app developers have not concentrated an specific app for this SOC.
so after lots of mix and matches, finally have come up with a stable solution as follows :
a) your phone should be rooted.
b) install 3c cpu manager from playstore.
c) open minimum 6 apps in background maximum the better.
( remember if no apps are running in background then cpu manager will show only maximum 1.555 ghz. max frequency and 384 mhz low frequency single setup only and big little architecture dual setup wont be shown ie: 810 has 4 cores running @ 1.555 ghz max and other 4 cores @ 1.76 ghz max. and both setups at 384 mhz minimum. )
d) open cpu manager, there should be 2 different setups, if not then open more apps in background, simply change the governor to ON-DEMAND, from interactive and set it on and reboot, as i have noticed with interactive governor even during standby, processor does not stays idle at lower frequencies.
after changing the governor, i have noticed that during standby cpu frequencies are in idle or at the lowest. which highly improvises the battery standby life and haven't noticed any performance degradation.
you can even limit the higher cores frequencies from 1.76 ghz to 1.55 ghz... improving up-to some limit of over heating issues and better standby time.
these are just the findings i discovered with my phone, so don't blame me if anything goes wrong, do it at your own risk.
buntybauva said:
after waiting impatiently for the arrival of your op2 , many are disappointed with the low battery standby....specially if you are using LTE.
issues :
1) even having such a large battery, getting poor battery life.
2) even if the phone is idle, battery drains :crying:
so after having it for almost 2 weeks, i have learned most of the cpu tuner and battery saving apps wont work with op2, its not because of software, basically snapdragon 810's big little architecture is new and apps in the market are not compatible with this octacore new chipset.
and because of very less manufacturers are using this SOC as we now know why... and they were right... it heats up a lot!!! so app developers have not concentrated an specific app for this SOC.
so after lots of mix and matches, finally have come up with a stable solution as follows :
a) your phone should be rooted.
b) install 3c cpu manager from playstore.
c) open minimum 6 apps in background maximum the better.
( remember if no apps are running in background then cpu manager will show only maximum 1.555 ghz. max frequency and 384 mhz low frequency single setup only and big little architecture dual setup wont be shown ie: 810 has 4 cores running @ 1.555 ghz max and other 4 cores @ 1.76 ghz max. and both setups at 384 mhz minimum. )
d) open cpu manager, there should be 2 different setups, if not then open more apps in background, simply change the governor to ON-DEMAND, from interactive and set it on and reboot, as i have noticed with interactive governor even during standby, processor does not stays idle at lower frequencies.
after changing the governor, i have noticed that during standby cpu frequencies are in idle or at the lowest. which highly improvises the battery standby life and haven't noticed any performance degradation.
you can even limit the higher cores frequencies from 1.76 ghz to 1.55 ghz... improving up-to some limit of over heating issues and better standby time.
these are just the findings i discovered with my phone, so don't blame me if anything goes wrong, do it at your own risk.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This has nothing to do with apps, just poor drivers on the kernel side, scheduler isn't properly coded for this SoC, and the fact that there is no dynamic hotplugging options available without causing the phone to reboot under certain circumstances doesn't benefit us any. Check out some of the custom kernels, as they may increase your idle battery life, on my own kernel I saw .5% drain per hour max. For reference I saw about 20 hours idle and sitting at 89% on my kernel.
DespairFactor said:
This has nothing to do with apps, just poor drivers on the kernel side, scheduler isn't properly coded for this SoC, and the fact that there is no dynamic hotplugging options available without causing the phone to reboot under certain circumstances doesn't benefit us any. Check out some of the custom kernels, as they may increase your idle battery life, on my own kernel I saw .5% drain per hour max. For reference I saw about 20 hours idle and sitting at 89% on my kernel.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i really appreciate your findings with the kernel, but my post is intended for people like me who does not wants to mess up with a stock kernel, so that future OTA updates can be patched without much hassle.
as you see, oxygen os is quite new and incomplete when compared with other's have to offer. so i expect lots of future updates immediately by the OP to improve and stabilize the OS.
I am giving snapdragon battery guru a try, it's for Qualcomm processors. But I'm not very experienced in this stuff. I think it has helped but if someone with more experience wants to give it a try. Maybe they can shed some new light on this subject.
This is the result with on-demand governor settings when phone is idle. with stock kernel and stock frequencies.
Ondemand has always been my fvorite for all past phones. in op2 however it always reverts back to original after interactive. the best battery saver for any phone is swithching to 4.4.2. Azimg batteru life. unfortunately notpossble with op2
buntybauva said:
i really appreciate your findings with the kernel, but my post is intended for people like me who does not wants to mess up with a stock kernel, so that future OTA updates can be patched without much hassle.
as you see, oxygen os is quite new and incomplete when compared with other's have to offer. so i expect lots of future updates immediately by the OP to improve and stabilize the OS.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Being rooted alone will prevent OTA updates. You have to flash the full stock ROM when there's an update anyway which would overwrite the kernel.
A great way to reduce heat generated on the xperia 1 iii/5 iii also gain bit more battery life.
There was a debate on why the snapdragon 888 heats up and the 2 reasons most told was ''Samsung's manufacturing process'' and that the "GPU was overclocked to 800+ Mhz to excel in benchmark"
I reduced the GPU freq to 491 Mhz, I had top temp 45 Celsius, before it went past 50 Celsius . So in the end reduced a bit of CPU and GPU and got good battery life and way less hot.
First root phone.
Then install
3c cpu manager - Android Apps on Google Play
Enjoy millions of the latest Android apps, games, music, movies, TV, books, magazines & more. Anytime, anywhere, across your devices.
play.google.com
Any settings from this application is temporary, as you restart the phone the frequency are back to default, only change maximum freq nothing else don't change the governors.
My settings:
CPU 1: Max freq = 998 Mhz
CPU 2: Max Freq = 1.2 Mhz
CPU 3: Max Freq = 1.3 Mhz
GPU : Max Freq = 419 Mhz
Try and post the experience and if any improvement (Mention with region model numbers)
:-Since rooted might want to try call recording , great app. Since native sony doesn't support call recording in many regions.
Releases · chenxiaolong/BCR
A Basic Call Recorder for rooted Android devices. Contribute to chenxiaolong/BCR development by creating an account on GitHub.
github.com
Tried your settings but after reboot it doesn't stick it reverts back to original settings
Mangtas_666 said:
Tried your settings but after reboot it doesn't stick it reverts back to original settings
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes it wont stick, untill you flash modified kernel it doesn't stick but if you dont reboot it wont go. Also after setting the frequency, wait for the phone to sleep once then temperature stays to a max and for me the battery life increased, without any performance degrade.
Yeah the issue is there is no modified kernel out there for our device. Kirisakura kernel does not fully support our xperia 1 iii. Sony haven't released their source code.
Try the application and if you dont like to keep the application you can remove it, still it keeps the frequency you set, till you restart the device. Main for heating up in phone is the GPU, as per what i learned, reducing its frequency itself , reduced heat a lot. Try and let know your SOT and heat temperature avg.
Yeah i have EXkernel manager it indeed lessen the heat specially when gaming.
Kirisakura kernel supports our device now..