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

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
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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
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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
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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.
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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

Related

Calibrate Battery thread - This is how you do it!

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
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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.

[Q] Battery Lag?

Hey guys, I have a problem with my Sensation. Whenever I fully charge it and then remove it from the charger, use it for like an hour or two, the phone still thinks the battery is 100% charged. When looking inside the battery usage, it shows the graph with 0s underneath it, while in the previous screen where you see the apps battery usage it says 2h 5m 13s or something like that.
This wouldn't really be a problem, but when I started up Maps Navigation and plugged the charger in the car, it wouldn't charge because it still assumed the battery was 100% charged!
Any of you also having this problem? Thanks in advance!
atticus182 said:
Hey guys, I have a problem with my Sensation. Whenever I fully charge it and then remove it from the charger, use it for like an hour or two, the phone still thinks the battery is 100% charged. When looking inside the battery usage, it shows the graph with 0s underneath it, while in the previous screen where you see the apps battery usage it says 2h 5m 13s or something like that.
This wouldn't really be a problem, but when I started up Maps Navigation and plugged the charger in the car, it wouldn't charge because it still assumed the battery was 100% charged!
Any of you also having this problem? Thanks in advance!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Does it stay 100% forever? Then you may have the inexhaustible battery... (not sure if this is grammaticaly correct )
I wouldn't consider this a problem. You can download a battery monitoring app from the market and see what's going on with your phone and if the 100% that it's rerporting is correct. Also, check that the battery contacts are clean.
Not sure my phone does that but it can be on half charge then when I reset phone it's gone up a notch. This morning it didn't look like it had charged although it had been plugged in. When I switched it was on orange then it did the charging animation for a few seconds without charger plugged in then stopped on full. Odd.
Mine stays on 100% for a couple of hours too, has done since I got it.
I think perhaps HTC are "cheating" (or using "creative coding", whichever expression you prefer) in the way they report the battery percentage. Make the battery appear better than it is. Just a theory, of course.
This morning it didn't look likeit had charged although it had been plugged in. When I switched it was on orange then it did the charging animation for a few seconds without charger plugged in then stopped on full. Odd
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That happens to me a lot too. Woke up this morning, phone had been charging for nearly 5 hours, but was only on 82%. After a couple of minutes of the screen being on, it had leapt to 100% and stopped charging.
Also, once the battery is below about 20%, it will sometimes drop 2-3% at a time. Odd.
Looks like they totally screwed the battery meter hardware or something in the software. Remembers me of my iPod touch
Experienced the say.. hopefully either it will auto be fine due to charge cycle or via updates
Sent from my HTC Sensation Z710e using XDA App
The Battery driver that LG used for the G2X has the same problem,a simple reboot fixes it,hope this helps "temporarily" that is.Cheers
Not just the sensation - my wildfire does the same yet my galaxy tab doesnt
Sent from my GT-P1000 using XDA App
sjgore said:
Mine stays on 100% for a couple of hours too, has done since I got it.
I think perhaps HTC are "cheating" (or using "creative coding", whichever expression you prefer) in the way they report the battery percentage. Make the battery appear better than it is. Just a theory, of course..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for your answer, so it's probably a general problem that may be fixed by either HTC or the Cooks that make ROM's for our beautiful new phones
Can you tell me how long it takes for your phone to fully charge?My phone needs 3-4 hours to fully charge..is this normal?!
Hmm mine doesn`t lag but it takes times to charge. Usually with my hd2 take around less than 2 hours to fully charge now with sensation around 3 hours
Sent from my HTC HD2 using XDA App
Using it almost half an hour,battery felt from 100% to 99%...And I checked the battery useage,it isn't wrong..
Official Asia ruu 1.28.707.2
Although it is dual core,I think the battery life is much better than DHD..
Sent from my HTC Sensation Z710e using XDA App
I received my phone yesterday and charged it for 4-5 hours throughout the day. Last night it was close to 100% while I was playing with it (off the charger). I then charged it over night for 9 hours. This morning the battery says it's at 50% but has 15 hours left.
Weird :\
Charge the battery with the power turned off overnight, in the morning unplug the charger, turn the phone on, and shutdown again, and plug the charger back for 30
mins phone still turned off. After that start using the phone normally, this way you calibrate the phones battery meter properly.
EnhancerFIN said:
Charge the battery with the power turned off overnight, in the morning unplug the charger, turn the phone on, and shutdown again, and plug the charger back for 30
mins phone still turned off. After that start using the phone normally, this way you calibrate the phones battery meter properly.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks mate! I'll do that tonight

Battery drain and charge

I want to know if anyone else is experiencing this. Every morning when I unplug my TB to go to work, within 5 minutes my battery drops from 100% to 91% or something close. The phone is completely stock. Then, when I plug the phone back in at work it seems to charge at a normal rate until it hits the 99% mark. At that point it takes like 30 minutes to get to the 100% mark. What is going on?
Sent from my thunderbolt
Please use the search function as this same question comes up about once a week.
Your phone trickle charges after getting to full to keep your battery in good shape. Your phone basically charges all the way drops about 10% then recharges all the way back up slowly.
Sent from my ThunderBolt using XDA App
The phone does that as a safety measure. Look up bump charging and such. If you really want to walk out at full strength, charge your phone while off til green LED, unplug power and plug it back in, it'll take a few minutes to get to green led again, do this a few times.
Just so you know I did do a "bump charge" search. I must be an idiot cuz I find it really difficult to use the search function on this site. Thanks for your input, I got more info on these two replies than I did from the search.
Ok, I just found this
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=871051
It really helped me understand how the battery is working.

Battery Calibration without root?

I know you need to be rooted to calibrate a battery, but I am wondering of there is another way. Or possibly the Sensation software is jacked.
I have ahd my phone on its charger for hours. It shows full, but a battery monitor app states its only 97%. After reading, this seems to be a common issue.
I have already charged full, and pulled battery, reset phone and still the same.
I am no battery expert. Any suggestions?
dubie76 said:
I know you need to be rooted to calibrate a battery, but I am wondering of there is another way. Or possibly the Sensation software is jacked.
I have ahd my phone on its charger for hours. It shows full, but a battery monitor app states its only 97%. After reading, this seems to be a common issue.
I have already charged full, and pulled battery, reset phone and still the same.
I am no battery expert. Any suggestions?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Using the SEARCH function can only help you, battery expert or not. There have been many threads covering this.
1. Charge your phone til it hits 100% then turn it off while plugged in.
2. Remove charger until LED is inactive
3. Replace charger & the light should be orange/amber, charge til green again.
Repeat 2 & 3 until there is no amber light showing
Rinse, repeat a few times. If it goes from green to green right away just leave it for a half hour or so OFF and charging. Hope that helps, if not search just like I did

Sensation LED blinking but phone not turning on

My phone turned on with my friends battery but when I insert my battery the phone only blinks a red led and won't turn on. It happened shortly after installing bricked kernel and 4ext recovery
Sent from my HTC Sensation XE with Beats Audio using XDA Premium App
adiallo77 said:
My phone turned on with my friends battery but when I insert my battery the phone only blinks a red led and won't turn on. It happened shortly after installing bricked kernel and 4ext recovery
Sent from my HTC Sensation XE with Beats Audio using XDA Premium App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi,
That would suggest that your battery is flat.
Why don't you plug the charger in for half an hour ,then try booting again.
Yeah like above said your battery is dead, as soon as the light stays solid it means you can start your phone. Depending on how badly its drained itll take like 15 mins while being plugged into AC. This usually happens to me while playing a game and i dont notice the low battery lol
exactly the same thing happened to me just now...
Strange thing thou was that the phone was connected to the charger all night long and I just removed it from the charger
Charging right now... lets wait a bit
-update
Charger seems to have died in action.....
what was your outcome adiallo77 ?
-update 2
Charger started to work fine again ...
I'm confused now
I had the same problems when I first install cwrecovery, after a night in the charger it was working fine again
I just started having this problem with my phone. The battery is not charging at all, my phone won't turn on, but the red light is blinking. I have been reading and trying all day everything I could find in xda, but still no results. I can't remember which ROM I installed last, but it has stock kernel, ICS probably virtuous.
This usually happens when your battery has drained completely.
Here's what you need to do. Put your phone on an hour long charge before trying anything.
Don't put the phone for charge on the PC or in the car, but use the standard wall charger that was provided with the phone. Whatever happens, don't pull the phone off charging.
After an hour of charging is completed, switch on your phone as you normally would, without unplugging the charger. Your phone should be fine.
Let it charge to 100%, calibrate your battery and perform a restart to maintain the right graduation for battery levels.
kgs1992 said:
This usually happens when your battery has drained completely.
Here's what you need to do. Put your phone on an hour long charge before trying anything.
Don't put the phone for charge on the PC or in the car, but use the standard wall charger that was provided with the phone. Whatever happens, don't pull the phone off charging.
After an hour of charging is completed, switch on your phone as you normally would, without unplugging the charger. Your phone should be fine.
Let it charge to 100%, calibrate your battery and perform a restart to maintain the right graduation for battery levels.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i left it yesterday the whole night plugged-in, did it again this afternoon, and still nothing happens, only the blinking orange led
pacotort said:
i left it yesterday the whole night plugged-in, did it again this afternoon, and still nothing happens, only the blinking orange led
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Have you tried a different battery?
Have you checked if the battery fits tightly?
EDIT: Too many of these recently. We need to find the source!
kgs1992 said:
Have you tried a different battery?
Have you checked if the battery fits tightly?
EDIT: Too many of these recently. We need to find the source!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i don't have an extra battery but the one i have does fit. I'm gonna see if i can find me another battery borrowed.
Does the orange light continue to blink after a few minutes? I had this problem a while ago but the light would blink for about a minute and then stop, then the battery wouldn't charge and my phone wouldn't turn on.
What I ended up doing was putting my battery into my Desire HD and charging it for 15 min (aligning the pins and just holding the battery down since its too big to fit in the HD and letting it charge) and then I put it back into my sensation and it would pick up charge.
I would suggest getting an external charger and letting the charger bring your battery up to 5-10 percent then putting it back into the sensation and try to charge it/see if your phone will turn on.
The same thing has just happend to my gf's sensation XE, she left it on all night charging, now it wont turn on, tried everything. Its all stock since day one. might have to send it back, her last HTC phone broke too (wildfire), Any tricks to try and get it to turn on?
The lights come on at the bottom keys, but no display ?

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