I have problem with my battery in Huawei Y6ii when I recovered my phone to stock rom
When battery have 94-96% battery has over 4.3v (4.326v) and when battery has 40% has only 3.6v
When I charge my battery to 100% my phone can explode or when 2% can corrupt?
Does calibration may battery explode my Y6II?
I can't check battery voltage with multimeter beacuse battery is glued to the housing
the values you getting may not be correct
normally battery it self have over/under voltage , over current protection and the device also have the same things
so there is nothing to worry about
And when I charge battery with 40% charge module has 48°C on charge temperature sensor and housing is very hot
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Hi guys,
i want to ask - my phone charger has got these parameters -
input : 100-240VAC 50-60Hz 140mA
output : 5.0VDC 850mA
battery parameters :
BST-38
970mAh 3.6Wh
isn´t the charger too strong for the battery ?
charging my battery to 100% takes about an hour,sometimes less.
after charging the battery is quite hot.after 5-10 minutes the battery gets down to 80%, and it is stable from 80%.
i am charging just via USB now, because of i think that the charger is too strong and i think it can reduce battery life...?
what do you think ?
Yeah, it is strange.
The battery drains pretty fast after charging to 100% but later it is stable. Although I didn't notice that battery is hot, I think that charger charges battery too fast which is not good for battery IMO.
Mekki99 said:
Yeah, it is strange.
The battery drains pretty fast after charging to 100% but later it is stable. Although I didn't notice that battery is hot, I think that charger charges battery too fast which is not good for battery IMO.
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No, its not charging too fast. Lipoly batteries have pretty tight specifications and the phone switches the voltage itself, for terms of compatibility a usb voltage is used (so less hardware is needed to step voltages from different sources). It also means you can charge from your pc without having a bypass cable like older model phones.
The mA output of the charger doesnt really matter. A high mA means the voltage will be more stable where as a low mA supply could cause undesirable voltage fluctuations.
A lipoly battery cannot be slow charged or trickle charged, the chemistry doesnt work that way. Slow charging could actually cause the battery to explode or in the very least make its performance poorer.
The battery appears to drain quickly in the first 10% but its an illusion caused by the software on the phone which measures the mAh drop. A lipoly battery may discharge from 1200mA to 1000mA in 10 mins and reach a plateau where is holds 900-1000mA for several hours. All that is required is to reset the battery stats so the phone can generate a new profile over several recharge cycles.
As I said, lipoly charge until near capacity and stop. They dont trickle charge, the charging circuit actually switches off. Those people who leave their phones plugged in 8 hours overnight do it no favours as it justs cycles the charger on and off, this could actually skew the battery stats giving a false reading in the first 10%.
The best thing is to charge until full and then remove from the charger, you can always charge it again in the morning before you go out to boost the %. For the best battery life you should maintain a charge above half as this keeps the chemistry from breaking down. Never ever let it go flat! When the phone registers 0% its not, its a safety mechanism and it will still have above half the rated mAh. Charge a dead lipoly and it will explode violently.
Using alternative charging methods of a lipoly is VERY dangerous. People have lost houses or even their lives by fiddling with them. They are not a forgiving as lion, nimh or nicad. With that said lipoly are cheap, reliable, have a small form factor and offer a high output in comparison.
The best device for charging the battery is the phone charger as it has the highest mA and most stable voltage. The PC comes second as most are only rated 500mA and can have voltage fluctuations in the range of 10% or more. Third... Nothing, there is no third - only flames and misery.
Sent from my U20i using Tapatalk
Hi, I was asking myself if it was possible to copy batterystats.bin from a calibrated x10i to have our own x10i calibrated.
I explain : I see that file like a file with values that have the percentage of the battery with the duration and stuff like that, so copying it to have the right values.
Can work or not ? influenced by kernel or rom ? What do you think ?
Li-Ion batteries just need a good charge for approx 8-12hrs when new and first installed and having this process repeated for at least 4-5 charges.
The phone doesn't allow the battery to over change and cuts out and then starts changing again once the charge drops to a chargeable threshold.
This allows the battery to achieve it's maximum charge.
Li-Ion batteries should never be drained or allowed to run flat and should be charged regularly.
If you completely discharge a lithium-ion battery, it is ruined.
Li-Ion battery life is between 2-3 years.
I would let the battery sort itself out as all the battery status is based on the battery itself.
If the battery is old and on it's last legs, it'll have less charge than a newer battery.
P.S. If you plan to keep and use the XPERIA X10i for some time, it's well worth buying a Mugen Power 1800mAh battery.
Dr Goodvibes said:
Li-Ion batteries just need a good charge for approx 8-12hrs when new and first installed and having this process repeated for at least 4-5 charges.
The phone doesn't allow the battery to over change and cuts out and then starts changing again once the charge drops to a chargeable threshold.
This allows the battery to achieve it's maximum charge.
Li-Ion batteries should never be drained or allowed to run flat and should be charged regularly.
If you completely discharge a lithium-ion battery, it is ruined.
Li-Ion battery life is between 2-3 years.
I would let the battery sort itself out as all the battery status is based on the battery itself.
If the battery is old and on it's last legs, it'll have less charge than a newer battery.
P.S. If you plan to keep and use the XPERIA X10i for some time, it's well worth buying a Mugen Power 1800mAh battery.
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how does that answer to my question ? Do they sell new x10i ? meh
Many users have problem regarding the battery gets discharged 90% to 20% in few minutes.So here is the simple solution...
Callibrate your battery using battery callibrator...https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.nema.batterycalibration
1.first charge your phone upto 100%.
2.click on callibrate.
3.unplug the charger..
4.allow battery to discharge(Don't use too heavy app to do it just normal use)
5.after discharging again fully charge the battery..
6.Your Battery is now callibrated...
I recently purchased the original LG battery charging pack with an included battery.
So i charge the batteries exclusively using the external charger. When the battery level of the phone goes to around 20-30% I swap in the charged battery. Now the problem is, even though the new battery is charged, the percentage is the same as before i switched out the batteries.
So let's say i swap at 33%, the new battery also reads 33% after the boot.
Is there a way to recalibrate the battery meter?
Found the solution:
The battery swap was done too fast, so the phone didn't realize there could be a new battery inside.
I tried again taking out the battery, waiting maybe 20 sec, then rebooted. Now the battery percentage is accurate again!
Hi guys does anyone know how we can limit voltage when we charge ur phone?
What i use is rooted phone with ACC + AccA ront end but some bug you always have to check because most time AccA doesnt apply limit voltage as i ask.
Any better solution?
Why you need to limit the voltage? If you want to help battery to stay in good health for longer you should limit the charge current instead. Easiest way to do that is to use older charger with lower wattage. I usually charge my pixel 6 from my laptop which has type c ports with usb power delivery support and are limited to 12 watts so charge current never exceeds 2.1 ampers. I have also tested my old power bank and cable and there power is limited to even lower 7.5 watts or 1.5 ampers of current.
On battery university they said, the voltage from the charge is the problem not the amp speed, for example when your phone is at 3.8v(30%) and you charge with a quick charge 3amp at 4.05v(not 4.25v) you quickly recharge until 60%(4v) and you slowly and you reach 4.05v(+-70%) and you can let your phone charging longer you want the voltage never go over 4.05v and at 4.05v the said atfter 2000 recharge cycle you still have 90% of brand new battery capacity.
Your phone said full charge at 4.25v but with lithium ion it overcharging and that really dommage you battery life.
So in real is not the % of capacity because when you charge your phone to 80% diring the charge process the voltage use to charge is 4.35v and that is bad for the battery
BU-808: How to Prolong Lithium-based Batteries
BU meta description needed...
batteryuniversity.com
"Every 0.10V drop below 4.20V/cell doubles the cycle but holds less capacity. Raising the voltage above 4.20V/cell would shorten the life. The readings reflect regular Li-ion charging to 4.20V/cell."