Calibrate Battery thread - This is how you do it! - Epic 4G Android Development

There have been about eleventeen thousand questions across multiple threads on how to calibrate the battery properly...figured it probably should be a sticky in here if possible.
You have to know how to get into Recovery mode. You can do this with Quickboot when the phone is on, or the powered off phone method:
1. Power off phone or pull battery and replace.
2. Hold all three of these buttons down: Vol-Down, Camera button (lower left as you look at the phone) and Power on button).
3. You will see a small graphical menu come up. Most of us are using Clockwork, so I will focus on that - it will be a green menu.
For the battery wipe, Go to Advanced, navigate the menu with the vol up/down keys, and select using the camera button.
There are three ways so far:
The Drain Way:
1. Drain it down until fully dead.
2. Charge normally to full.
3. Reboot to Clockwork recovery and wipe battery stats (under advanced, on second page), reboot phone.
4. Turn everything on, flashlight, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, Pandora, the whole nine, to quickly drain it completely dead.
5. Charge normally to full.
The Powered Off Charge way:
1. Charge your phone 100% while it’s on
2. Unplug it from the charger, power off, then charge it up to 100% with it in a powered off state.
3. Unplug charger from phone. Power it on, and then charge it to 100% while the phone is on.
4. Unplug the charger and then reboot into Clockwork, go to advanced and clear the battery stats.
5. Power on, charge to full, and then enjoy.
Third option (thanks squshy 7), I paraphrased it and wrote it out a bit for ease.
Maybe we can call it the Mr. Miagi Charge way....aka Power On, Power Off, Charge On, Charge Off way lol
(the parentheses are the state of the phone)
1. Start with the phone powered on.
2. (Phone on) Charge battery until the LED turns blue
3. (Phone on) Unplug the phone from the charger, wait until the LED turns off
4. Power off the phone.
5. (Phone off) Plug the adapter into the phone, charge it up until the LED turns blue
6. (Phone off) Unplug, wait until the LED turns off
7. Power the phone on.
8. Wait until the phone is booted back up all the way, and then power it off again
9. (Phone off) Plug the adapter into the phone, charge it up until the LED turns blue.
10. Boot the phone into recovery mode
11. Go to Advanced, and then choose Wipe Battery Stats.
12. Power the phone on and use normally.

Still a noob, but what would exactly need you to have to Calibrate Battery? Also what exactly does it do for the user?
P.S I'm sure I could look this up but it would be nice to see it in your thread for others to see

turtlenator694 said:
Still a noob, but what would exactly need you to have to Calibrate Battery? Also what exactly does it do for the user?
P.S I'm sure I could look this up but it would be nice to see it in your thread for others to see
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well it's really a matter of semantics...you're not calibrating the battery, per say...it's actually calibrating how android is reading the battery. (these phones use Li-ion batteries, which don't use memory, so they themselves never actually need "calibrated" like some older types of rechargeables)
But...as far as what this means to you, its kind of a big deal! It improves battery life in letting android know when your battery is actually at 100%. When flashing new kernels and ROMs, its very likely that the phone will read your battery at full, when in reality its probably less. So it would seem like your phone isn't getting as good battery life (when in actuality it just hasn't been charged fully but you don't know that because android reads it as full because it hasn't been calibrated )
also, without a calibration, you might notice your battery gauge draining oddly...for example, you might see it quickly drop from 100 to 89, then drop steadily to 72, and then hang for a while at 71 (these are all just made up numbers)
so it means alot! but everybody has different methods and i've never seen anything officially released by spring or samsung to confirm methods...
I will say this though...I've read plenty about how since these Li-ion batteries don't have memory, the DRAINING method, while maybe correctly calibrating your battery, actually HURT the long-term life of your battery.
so heres what ive always done:
(the parentheses are the state of the phone)
(phone on) charge battery till LED blue
(phone on) unplug, wait till LED off
[POWER OFF]
(phone off) plug in, wait till LED blue
(phone off) Unplug, wait till LED off
[POWER ON]
When completely booted, power off again
(phone off) plug in wait till LED blue,
boot into recovery, wipe battery stats
unplug, reboot phone and use
it's always worked so try it out

Actually I'm pretty sure it doesn't fully charge to prevent over charge.. and the whole deal with you guys chargings 2-3 times after the light turns blue is just killing the life of your battery.
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA App

My question why is this in devolpment?
Fyi: both methos work but the complete drain does kill battery life. The pluging in multiable times dont. Android nows wheb to stop charging the battery to prevent over charge.
Sent from my SPH-D700 using Tapatalk

something must be wrong....
With my battery because I've done the above procedure and my battery doesn't even last 5 hours. Its starting to get annoying. Any ideas?

XtaC318 said:
Actually I'm pretty sure it doesn't fully charge to prevent over charge.. and the whole deal with you guys chargings 2-3 times after the light turns blue is just killing the life of your battery.
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If it can stop at 92 percent to prevent overcharging, then it can do the same thing when it reaches 100 percent, no matter how many times you plug it in.
I don't know of many, if any li ion battery packs made today that don't have circuitry in them that prevents overcharging.

I put it in development because when you load roms, generally battery is a big concern. I cant tell you how many times ive searched for the same topic all over, I just figured it would be as helpful to others as it would have been to me had it been here and been a stickie at the top.

I've always thought battery calibration was more of a placebo effect, but I have no data either way. On a related note, here's an interesting article about battery stats and charging that was posted a week or so ago:
Android Police: Your Battery Gauge is Lying to You...

Having a battery keep at a full 100% for a long time is not good for li-on batteries. The 10% between 90 and 100% is basically used as a safety buffer. That's why the charge drops between 100 and 90 is much faster than the drops from 80 to 0. even though there ways to increase the actual capacity of the battery by using the methods above, you will still see a quicker drop from full to 90 almost instantly after unplugging the charger. I am in no way saying that those methods don't work in helping the phone read the actual charge of the battery, but they do help increase capacity a little bit. by rearranging the electrons in the battery. There actually is an article on google and on xda that backs it up. I'll try finding it
Sent from my Samsung-SPH-D700 using XDA App

Thank you a ton for posting this. Ive been trying to find a good thread on this all over the place and there never seems to be one. So thanks again.

will the "Drain Battery" way work with a droid1 with the default battery?

doublea500 said:
will the "Drain Battery" way work with a droid1 with the default battery?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Will work on any android device
Sent from my SPH-D700 using Tapatalk

mysteryemotionz said:
Will work on any android device
Sent from my SPH-D700 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thanks believed it or not, you really helped me

mysteryemotionz said:
My question why is this in devolpment?
Fyi: both methos work but the complete drain does kill battery life. The pluging in multiable times dont. Android nows wheb to stop charging the battery to prevent over charge.
Sent from my SPH-D700 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lol.. wow alright.
Yes COMPLETELY draining a battery is really bad for a battery; infact if you do so you may end up with a 'bricked' battery.
But the phone also knows not to 'over drain' so with the method of clearing batt stats there's no harm done..actually. allowing your phone to die before charging is healthier than plugging it in before it dies.
I won't argue on the other note anymore; well simply because I don't know enough to continue just know I won't be taking that path
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA App

Thanks for the response. But also if you have a separate charger because you have multiple batteries, do you need to have to go through any of this? Or will the charger charge them to their true full state?

It will charge them to 100%. You'll notice it holds 100% for a lot longer.
Sent from my SPH-P100 using Tapatalk

The only thing that needs to be done to calibrate the battery is either flash at full charge or charge to full then delete batterystats, all this drain to dead and charge this way and that is pointless, though u will all argue otherwise, pointlessy
Sent from my Epic 4g

Yes thank you very much! I'm gonna give this a shot probably tonight after the Christmas Eve service and see what happens.

You should definitely add that NONE of this matters if your first usages out of the battery aren't proper. When you get the phone, you need to kill the battery before charging.. charge for 10-12 hours w/the phone off or in a dock, kill battery.. repeat 2 more times to condition the battery physically.

Related

[HOW-TO] - Battery Calibration

There has been much confusion and frustration surrounding our battery life and these custom roms. Some of us have great battery while others are having horrid problems.
I am writing this guide in the hopes it will help all of you with problems getting that great battery life.
This is a guide written from my own experience and technical understanding.
First, Your phone should drain, on average, 1% per hour or less while in standby mode (screen off). If you are not getting this average, you need to calibrate your battery.
ALWAYS flash a new rom with your phone at 100% battery - no exceptions!
i know some guides say to run battery down to 2% and then charge, but i never had much luck with this.
1) Before you flash your rom, charge your battery to 100% with the phone ON.
2) Once it says fully charged, turn the phone off and plug it in and wait for the on screen display to say 100% (this will take 5 to 10 min)
3) Turn the phone back on, and plug it in and charge till it says 100%
4) turn off the phone and charge again while off until the on screen battery indicator says 100% (again this will take 5 to 10 min)
5) repeat steps 1 thru 4 as many times as you feel comfortable, I recommend at least twice (I do it 3 times)
6) when you are satisfied with the charge, and the phone is still OFF with the indicator saying 100%, unplug the phone, remove the battery, and place the phone in download mode (hold vol down and plug into the PC)
7) flash your package (this is done in odin with the battery removed)
8) The first boot after the flash needs to be into Clockwork Recovery, wipe battery stats at this time (most roms will boot into recovery automatically, if not, boot into recovery manually)
9) after you have wiped your battery stats, wipe cache and other data (if the rom you are flashing requires this, if not, skip this step)
10) Boot the rom to the homescreen.
11) from this point on, you will use your phone like normal until the phone completely shuts off. this SHOULD take a while. you should see improved battery life during this stage. If not, dont panic, just run the battery down until the phone shuts off
12) once the phone shuts off (try to time this to happen at bedtime) plug the phone in and allow it to charge in the OFF position
13) once it is at 100% again, use the phone like normal and enjoy your new battery life.
IF YOU ARE DOING THIS WHILE NOT FLASHING A NEW ROM
Do steps 1-4 as many times as needed, I recommend at least twice, i do this 3 times
on the last charge up (your phone should be off while charging during this step) unplug the phone and boot directly into recovery and wipe battery stats. then proceed with the rest of the guide.
TO TEST THIS
charge to phone to 100%, try not to mess with it for an hour or so.. (light usage at most) you should still be at 100% or 99% after an hour. If you are at 95% or below, then the calibration has failed. (unless you have been using the phone or are in a very low to no signal area).
this calibration method is crucial to good battery life. Before I started doing this i was getting very bad battery life. Click on my username and look at my previous posts.. you will read about me *****ing badly about my battery, this is what I did and it has worked amazingly well.
I hope this helps
I combined a lot of techniques ive seen in other threads and some websites and then created this technique which seems to work really well.
I have used this technique and can confirm, it works well if done properly.
From my Charge - XDA Premium
Are the first few steps what is referred to as "bump charging"?
I think this has worked quite well. I flashed Humble 1.2 (at 40% battery) last night, charged up, then started this procedure. After I got done, I took it off the charger and after 15 minutes of trying a new game, listening to a minute of music, and checking various things, I was still at 100%. i left it off, went to bed with wi-fi on, and woke up at 95%. Awesome. My all-day phone is back.
szgeti said:
Are the first few steps what is referred to as "bump charging"?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yup glad that this works for folks
Sent from my SCH-I510 using XDA App
What happens after the calibration process? do i have to do this everytime i charge my battery or does like normal mean i can just leave it charge whenever. Also with what frequency should i be doing this? once a month calibration?
Just did this... 1 hour 15 mins. and still at 100% Sent two text messages out and played Words with Friends for a minute. Thanks!
Did this and it didn't work advice on what I am doing wrong I did the bump charge 2 times ran the phone down 100% and am now looking at 88 percent of next to no use after about an hour and a half of having the phone on.
Sent from my SCH-I510 using XDA App
thecontrolm7cl said:
Did this and it didn't work advice on what I am doing wrong I did the bump charge 2 times ran the phone down 100% and am now looking at 88 percent of next to no use after about an hour and a half of having the phone on.
Sent from my SCH-I510 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am in the same boat with you.....I'll just have to accept the fact that I will have to charge every 6 hours, which was a 2 hour step up from the TB.
This works, going on 17 hours and still at 65%.
Sent from my SCH-I510 using XDA App
brian1972ct said:
I am in the same boat with you.....I'll just have to accept the fact that I will have to charge every 6 hours, which was a 2 hour step up from the TB.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What I am curious to know is what is usage like for the people that this worked for. Don't get me wrong I'm not doubting the op but I am a pretty heavy user and even so I'm not really experiencing this awesome battery life everyone talks about when I'm not using it heavily
Sent from my SCH-I510 using XDA App
For all of you that are getting the great life, what percentage does it list for display? This is under settings > about phone > battery use.
I'll have to try this method. My battery life is actually worse now after I tried doing the drain to 2% method. I'll report back with my observations.
Are we talking 3G or 4G here?
I would find it useful when people are talking about how good (or bad) their battery life is to know if they are in a 4G area and have 4G turned on, or are they using 3G only?
Trying to figure out how bad a hit 4G takes on my phone...
Thanks.
knodalyte said:
I would find it useful when people are talking about how good (or bad) their battery life is to know if they are in a 4G area and have 4G turned on, or are they using 3G only?
Trying to figure out how bad a hit 4G takes on my phone...
Thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So I tried this out yesterday...I don't have a rooted phone so I could not wipe battery stats (does anyone know how to do this without rooting your phone?)...but I did follow steps 1-4 three times and I have gone 23 hours on my charge without having to plug it in. I am in a 4g area and had 4g and background services on for the full 23 hours. Had bluetooth, GPS, and wifi turned off. I sent a couple texts, used whatsapp to send texts, used google voice to send texts, made 3 phone calls (about 4 to 5 min each) played angry birds for about 20 min, played words with friends for 10 min, surfed the web on and off, was on tapatalk and browsing forums for about 20 min and I installed a new keyboard and web browser on my phone in those 23 hours.
I am very curious to know if this will improve battery life after that first initial bump charge.
If you do a regular charge after depleting the charge, do you still see improved battery life?
triton302 said:
I'll have to try this method. My battery life is actually worse now after I tried doing the drain to 2% method. I'll report back with my observations.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well... did this too with no luck. I'm just going to have to deal with the fact that this is a power hungry phone.
triton302 said:
Well... did this too with no luck. I'm just going to have to deal with the fact that this is a power hungry phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You may have a defective phone or battery.
hooskins said:
You may have a defective phone or battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'll try another battery... but I've already been through too many DC's and I'm not returning this one. I have no issues with it at all, just this battery problem.
msticlaru said:
6) when you are satisfied with the charge, and the phone is still OFF with the indicator saying 100%, unplug the phone, remove the battery, and place the phone in download mode (hold vol down and plug into the PC)
7) flash your package (this is done in odin with the battery removed
I dont understand this, you can go to download mode without battery? Or flash a rom with no battery?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
BatTusAi said:
msticlaru said:
6) when you are satisfied with the charge, and the phone is still OFF with the indicator saying 100%, unplug the phone, remove the battery, and place the phone in download mode (hold vol down and plug into the PC)
7) flash your package (this is done in odin with the battery removed
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I dont understand this, you can go to download mode without battery? Or flash a rom with no battery?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes. The phone will pull the necessary power for download mode and the Odin flash from the USB port. Just be sure to use a primary USB port (usually the ones on the back of the computer), rather than a hub, as the hub tends to cause problems.

[Q] Battery Inconsistencies?

Hey guys, is anyone else here experiencing the battery level going up when you restart the phone?
If my battery is at 70%, and I restart it, it'll be at 76% or even higher and remain that way for quite a while (remains a consistantly drain, not a single major drain in a short period of time)
This is something that's been happening since I was stock (Retail device from T-mobile store on launch date)
Here's some info:
-S-OFF using Revolutionary, and then later upgraded to 4.0.0.9 via terminal emulator
-Rooted stock (no rom uploaded)
-1900 mha Anker battery
-Battery stats wiped
-UncleSpoon's battery icon mod
even after all that, it'll still do it. So is it just me, or is everyone else experiencing this?
Yes, you have to re-calibrate your battery stats.
No, the CWM menu option to wipe battery stats is not right, for some reason.
Go get this free app: Battery Calibration
Charge your battery all the way up and let it sit charging for a few minutes after you see the light turn green (while turned on and booted up)
After it's been green for a few minutes, open this app and click the big "calibrate" button, and then un-plug it from the charger.
Let it run down until it turns itself off, without plugging it in. This means no usb to the computer, either - and don't turn it off manually.
After it turns itself off from lack of juice, plug it in (wait about 30 seconds) and then turn it back on. If you turn it on too quickly weird things may happen, depends on how depleted the battery is. (usually there is 1 or 2 % left so it's ok)
Leave it plugged in and turned on until fully charged. After that, you can feel free to play with it, but you should run it up and down a few more times without charging in-between. The first one is critical to do this way, though, or you are just wasting your time.
You MUST be rooted, or it will not work. (said for others who may need this info)
Tip to drain battery - screen brightness all the way up, screen to not turn off, and turn the flashlight app on. Leave it sit for a few hours.
Tip to charge quickly while on: Turn all wireless and data communication off, tap power button to turn screen off (keeping phone on)
Good luck, it'll solve the problem though.
I used battery calibration to wipe my battery stats (I did it in recovery on my 3G Slide, so I'm aware of that alternative method)..
I've let my stock battery get to 0% but that was pre-root.
After reading all the charging problems with the CWM, I was a bit afraid to attempt the 0% drain on the new Anker.
Are you running 4.0.0.9, and does it charge fine? I'd hate to deplete an Anker since I have no external battery charger.
RazoE said:
I used battery calibration to wipe my battery stats (I did it in recovery on my 3G Slide, so I'm aware of that alternative method)..
I've let my stock battery get to 0% but that was pre-root.
After reading all the charging problems with the CWM, I was a bit afraid to attempt the 0% drain on the new Anker.
Are you running 4.0.0.9, and does it charge fine? I'd hate to deplete an Anker since I have no external battery charger.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Removing the stats only doesn't calibrate the battery, check the calibration guide in my sig, for a correct method that works for any android device.
Read this too
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1168036
Ace42 said:
Removing the stats only doesn't calibrate the battery, check the calibration guide in my sig, for a correct method that works for any android device.
Read this too
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1168036
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Seriously, that's a good read.
I agree.
What I recommended was better then just wiping battery stats with CWM, but nowhere near as good as what Ace42 linked us up to.
I'd recommend reading those threads and doing that instead, I am more then happy to be corrected and shown a better way.
(FYI - I depleted a stock battery completely, both in CWM 4.0.0.8 and 4.0.0.9 to test the charging issue. You will always be able to charge it in the phone, even if you bring it completely to dead.
The idea that you can't is a myth, and was a concern until it was proven not to be true.)

[Q] New battery from T-Mo, how should I calibrate?

Just got a new battery from T-Mo today, as my battery life has been depressing since 2.3.4 update a month ago. With the old battery, I tried 5 cycles in a row of fully discharging, and fully charging while off. No difference, Juice Defender, m a y b e a little difference...been searching around for an hour, and remember a few things from reading XDA over the past month. So many different techniques, most for rooted phones, mine is completely stock(and I do plan on rooting soon still researching/learning), 1st thing I did when I took it out of the mail, was put it in the phone, and charge it while phone is off. Green LED has been on for 3 hours now. I'm scared to turn it on!! How do I calibrate this baby and make sure to the best of my ability this battery stays good?? Sorry for essay on one question.
wow, 56 views...0 replies. Nice.
I read one of the MANY threads yesterday on this, a guy said to someone, something along the lines of..."use the search, there are countless threads on this...and you can find this, like I did"...
This is what he said.
Charge the batt all the way while off(wall), then unplug, plug back in, light will be amber, then change to green. Repeat this process till The amber light doesn't come on anymore.
SO, I did this...about 100 times. It would go amber, blink, amber, then to green with no blink. Then sometimes it would go amber, and blink to green. back and forth. Seriously about 100 times. It never would initially light green. Amber everytime.
So I finally gave up, went to sleep. Still getting mediocre battery life today.
Where is help when you need it??
Drain it until it turns off, plug in, turn phone back on and let it charge to 100%, unplug, drain until it dies, repeat process 3 or 4 times. Download calibration app from market and use it when 100 % is reached.
Sent from my HTC Sensation 4G using Tapatalk
1) Turn your device ON and Charge the device for 8 hours or more
2) Unplug the device and Turn the phone OFF and charge for 1 hour
3) Unplug the device Turn ON wait 2 minutes and Turn OFF and charge for another hour
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That was the official reply from HTC during the EVO 4G days
So instead of fully charging while off, fully charge it while it's on? And, the calibration app, is this a general statement, like any app, or a specific one?
Rhiannon224 said:
Drain it until it turns off, plug in, turn phone back on and let it charge to 100%, unplug, drain until it dies, repeat process 3 or 4 times. Download calibration app from market and use it when 100 % is reached.
Sent from my HTC Sensation 4G using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
_DavidWebb said:
So instead of fully charging while off, fully charge it while it's on? And, the calibration app, is this a general statement, like any app, or a specific one?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's called Battery Calibrator. This is the process I found on the forums, it works, on stock battery I average 5 hrs screen time and can get over a day on one charge. On the Anker I get even better, I have been methodical about conditioning batteries and I am getting great battery life.
Sent from my HTC Sensation 4G using Tapatalk
Yo, when u see that green red led combo, know that your phone is telling u that battery is overheating/overcharging. It's colorful for a reason, telling u to stop.
Sent from my HTC Sensation
nrvnqsrxk said:
Yo, when u see that green red led combo, know that your phone is telling u that battery is overheating/overcharging. It's colorful for a reason, telling u to stop.
Sent from my HTC Sensation
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It is not red, it's amber(orange/yellow) And it was on this thread that I read to use that technique - http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1139092
He says "use search, it can only help you"
well, like I originally said, I have seen numerous techniques on calibrating. Just trying to find a solid one. That guy @KillaHurtz had a lot of thanks and seemed to know what he was talking about, but like I said, I tried his technique 100 times and couldn't get the results he was saying "repeat until no amber light showing", and that was after leaving the phone on charge(while off) 3 hours after it already turned green.
So one says, do this...another says...that is overheating/charging your phone....
are you mistaking my amber for red? I seriously hope I was not damaging a brand new battery before even turning my phone on with it.
Apple recommends this: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1490
1. Plug in the power adapter and fully charge your PowerBook's battery until the light ring or LED on the power adapter plug changes to green and the onscreen meter in the menu bar indicates that the battery is fully charged.
2. Allow the battery to rest in the fully charged state for at least two hours. You may use your computer during this time as long as the adapter is plugged in.
3. Disconnect the power adapter while the computer still on and start running the computer off battery power. You may use your computer during this time. When your battery gets low, the low battery warning dialog appears on the screen.
4. At this point, save your work. Continue to use your computer; when the battery gets very low, the computer will automatically go to sleep.
5. Turn off the computer or allow it to sleep for five hours or more.
6. Connect the power adapter and leave it connected until the battery is fully charged again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Rhiannon224 is right. I don't repeat the process 3 or 4 times like she does, but once a month I let my phone run down until it turns itself off. Then I leave it off and charge it overnight. I get better than average battery life, although I don't get 5 hours of screen-on time with the standard battery or with the EVO3D battery (1730 mAh). I easily make it through my normal usage for a day -- 20 to 30 emails (gmail and HTC Mail app set to push), facebook and weather sync every hour; Plume sync every 30 mins, 20 or so texts, 15 to 20 mins of phone calls, some Slacker radio, short sessions of Cordy or Angry Birds to waste a little time.
_DavidWebb said:
It is not red, it's amber(orange/yellow) And it was on this thread that I read to use that technique - http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1139092
He says "use search, it can only help you"
well, like I originally said, I have seen numerous techniques on calibrating. Just trying to find a solid one. That guy @KillaHurtz had a lot of thanks and seemed to know what he was talking about, but like I said, I tried his technique 100 times and couldn't get the results he was saying "repeat until no amber light showing", and that was after leaving the phone on charge(while off) 3 hours after it already turned green.
So one says, do this...another says...that is overheating/charging your phone....
are you mistaking my amber for red? I seriously hope I was not damaging a brand new battery before even turning my phone on with it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hah, sorry for the late response. When I said red, I was referring to amber. There are only 2 LED colors for the Sensation. Have you tried disconnecting the charger, turning off the phone, then connecting again? If it wasn't at full cap, it'll go back to being amber. Do this too many times, you'll notice it'll start flashing green and amber, signalling that the battery is getting overcharged.
If your phone is on and charging and you get say a text/email or other notification, you will get the green/amber flashing as well. I'm not sure if the battery is overheating of it will flash multiple colors or not however owning a sensation I can tell you from experience that my phone has been hot to the point where it is uncomfortable to hold charging or not and the only time I have seen an orange/green flashing combo is when it was charging and I had a notification. Orange by itself means charging. Green by itself means fully charged. Hope that helps with the confusion. For the battery life, if your phone is rooted, I recommend using faux clock to manage your CPU levels and keep your battery life up. If not, try lowering the brightness of your screen in order to make the battery life last longer. My phone gets me through a full day without charging (pre and post rooting) and I'm on it quite frequently and all I do is use my phone as usual and drain it until it dies once or twice a month to help prevent the "memory effect". Hope this helps!
Sent from my HTC Sensation XE with Beats Audio using XDA App

Calibrating battery.

So i charged to 100% and callibrated and left the phone on the side for a while as ive heard battery callibration works better when battery is naturally drained. However, its been a week and its still at 100% -_____-. i dont plan on waiting a month or so just to make sure its perfectly callibrated. Is there a better way to do this? . Thanks guysss
Sent from my SGH-T959V using XDA Premium App
Light-라이트 said:
So i charged to 100% and callibrated and left the phone on the side for a while as ive heard battery callibration works better when battery is naturally drained. However, its been a week and its still at 100% -_____-. i dont plan on waiting a month or so just to make sure its perfectly callibrated. Is there a better way to do this? . Thanks guysss
Sent from my SGH-T959V using XDA Premium App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Naturally drained? Regular use is needed to drain the battery. An unused battery (I have a couple) will take months to drain. Just use the phone as you do in your every day usage. Let it get down to about 5 to 10% then fully charge and calibrate.
you cant calibrate a lithium ion battery. in fact draining them is bad for the battery. however if youre having problems with the phone not reading the battery percentage correctly you need to wipe the batterystats.bin using either clockworkrecovery or just download the battery calibration app from the market.
regP said:
you cant calibrate a lithium ion battery. in fact draining them is bad for the battery. however if youre having problems with the phone not reading the battery percentage correctly you need to wipe the batterystats.bin using either clockworkrecovery or just download the battery calibration app from the market.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Really? Cycling the battery a few times for better performance is a myth?
xAshxMoneyx said:
Really? Cycling the battery a few times for better performance is a myth?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yes for lithium battery it is. the older ni-cd batteries required this.
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/how_to_prolong_lithium_based_batteries
infact..this result shows that you should charge often. 10-15% discharge..and charge cycles provided the longest battery life.
this article is very very good!
That's good information. While I didn't know all that I did find the whole calibration idea a waste of effort. I've tried calibrating the battery on a couple phones and my battery life has never increased. The most that ever happens is I'll find myself away from home with no charger and have to quit playing with phone so I have enough juice left in case of an emergency.
Sent from my LG-P999 using xda premium
regP said:
you cant calibrate a lithium ion battery. in fact draining them is bad for the battery. however if youre having problems with the phone not reading the battery percentage correctly you need to wipe the batterystats.bin using either clockworkrecovery or just download the battery calibration app from the market.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No, Lithium-ion batteries do not have a memory effect.
Technically, you are not calibrating the battery, you are calibrating your phone's battery gauge. The easiest way to do that is with the Battery Calibration app.
1. Open the Battery Calibration app screen. With the phone on, charge to 100%, then let the phone continue charging for another 15 min.
2. Press the "Calibrate Battery" button on the app (deletes batterystats.bin), Close Battery Calibration app then TURN THE PHONE OFF IMMEDIATELY!
3. Disconnect AC charger
4. Remove battery
5. Wait 30 seconds, then re-insert battery
6. Charge phone with phone off for half an hour
This tops off the charge on the battery.
7. Disconnect charger and turn phone on
As the phone turns on it will create a new batterystats.bin and record the high battery voltage as 100% battery.
8. Use the phone normally and run it down to 0% when the phone shuts off.
The phone now knows the curve of this battery as it relates to your phone's ROM
9. Charge the phone for ten minutes, then turn the phone on and let it continue charging to 100%
This lets batterystats.bin know your phone's charging curve
10. At 100%, remove charger
Now use the phone normally. You will be happy to get an extra few hours use of your phone.
If you really want to get the most out of your battery, get the Battery Monitor Widget Pro app. It keeps a close watch on your battery and also allows you to change batterystats.bin files for different batteries.
And always remember to Give Thanks if you find this helpful!
EEngineer said:
No, Lithium-ion batteries do not have a memory effect.
Technically, you are not calibrating the battery, you are calibrating your phone's battery gauge. The easiest way to do that is with the Battery Calibration app.
1. Open the Battery Calibration app screen. With the phone on, charge to 100%, then let the phone continue charging for another 15 min.
2. Press the "Calibrate Battery" button on the app (deletes batterystats.bin), Close Battery Calibration app then TURN THE PHONE OFF IMMEDIATELY!
3. Disconnect AC charger
4. Remove battery
5. Wait 30 seconds, then re-insert battery
6. Charge phone with phone off for half an hour
This tops off the charge on the battery.
7. Disconnect charger and turn phone on
As the phone turns on it will create a new batterystats.bin and record the high battery voltage as 100% battery.
8. Use the phone normally and run it down to 0% when the phone shuts off.
The phone now knows the curve of this battery as it relates to your phone's ROM
9. Charge the phone for ten minutes, then turn the phone on and let it continue charging to 100%
This lets batterystats.bin know your phone's charging curve
10. At 100%, remove charger
Now use the phone normally. You will be happy to get an extra few hours use of your phone.
If you really want to get the most out of your battery, get the Pro app. It keeps a close watch on your battery and also allows you to change batterystats.bin files for different batteries.
And always remember to Give Thanks if you find this helpful!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
out of all battery calliberation posts ive seen till now but this one makes complete sense. this even gave me an idea how this "caliberation " works.
again, thanks
dragonflame8712 said:
out of all battery calliberation posts ive seen till now but this one makes complete sense. this even gave me an idea how this "caliberation " works.
again, thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
agreed :good:

Battery level LIES!

My 727 (AT&T) is rooted stock rom. The battery indicator gets 'stuck' a lot of the time. It happens in both a widget and the default battery indicator in the status line.. They will both show 100% and I know full well that they CAN'T be at 100% after sitting around all afternoon off the charger. I restart the phone and immediately it drops to 42% ...
Anybody else seen an issue like this?
A lot all over. Do a search
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I727 using XDA App
what i suggest you do is calibrate the battery.
1 plug it in and charge it to 100%
2 turn off the phone and charge it until it says 100%
3 unplug and turn it on and leave it for 3min.
4 turn it off and plug it in and let it sit until it says 100% again
5 repeat step 3
6 unplug turn on the phone and use it until it hits 0% and turns off
7 plug in the phone and let it charge to 100%
now use as normal and after a few days your battery will read more accuratley and more importantly, will last longer. keep in mind your battery does lie to you but just use the phone and you'll start getting more out of it.
moving forward, charge whenever you can. Lithium ion batteries will last longer if they're charged often (like at 60%-40%).
designfears said:
what i suggest you do is calibrate the battery.
1 plug it in and charge it to 100%
2 turn off the phone and charge it until it says 100%
3 unplug and turn it on and leave it for 3min.
4 turn it off and plug it in and let it sit until it says 100% again
5 repeat step 3
6 unplug turn on the phone and use it until it hits 0% and turns off
7 plug in the phone and let it charge to 100%
now use as normal and after a few days your battery will read more accuratley and more importantly, will last longer. keep in mind your battery does lie to you but just use the phone and you'll start getting more out of it.
moving forward, charge whenever you can. Lithium ion batteries will last longer if they're charged often (like at 60%-40%).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, I even downloaded the utility that removes the battery life file, and creates a new one. I guess I need to try one of these procedures again.. I honestly think it is more to do with a bad application, no matter what the battery life meter should not 'hang', and if it does for more than a few minutes, then it should be able to recover by forcing a restart of the app... *sigh*...
This is a common issue with this phone. Look up "battery stuck at 100%" in Google and you'll find quite a few results. Supposedly it's an issue with certain chargers not giving out proper levels so it trips out some indicator chips in the battery and/or phone.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I727 using xda premium
Just reboot your phone and use the stock charger and cable from now on.
I had this issue with the rooted kernel (can't remember which one) but after downloading "battery calibration" from the market and following the in-app instructions the problem was solved.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I727 using XDA App
yeah battery calibration app on market worked for me as well

Categories

Resources