I've looked around and either most people are confused as to whether they're talking about battery temps or CPU temps or cannot come up with a definitive answer.
I'm looking for an answer on CPU temps and not one of those "I've seen a phone get up to 1000 degrees once and still work" I mean I'd like to know what a phone can consistently(hours at a time) run at without causing damage.
Reason I ask is when I tether my CPU is at 140 F and the Battery is at 109 F. Now I'm not too overly concerned about the battery I'm fairly confident that 109 isn't damaging it. I am concerned about the CPU though as I have no clue when the "danger zone" is tripped temperature wise. If someone could enlighten me it would be appreciated.
When it's gets that hot, I'll remove my battery and let it sit for 20 minutes. Then I'll swap it out for another new battery off the wall charger.
Sent from my SCH-I535 using xda premium
AndroidGraphix said:
When it's gets that hot, I'll remove my battery and let it sit for 20 minutes. Then I'll swap it out for another new battery off the wall charger.
Sent from my SCH-I535 using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Usually at this point I remove the back cover and place the phone upside down in front of a fan which cools it but I would like to know if this is even necessary....
Higher temperatres for batteries are not good for them at any time, they will speed up the degredation of the battery itself. That being said, it routintely gets 109 degrees in the summer where I live and I rarely have a battery problem, you will noticed a shorter life span on batteries both while they are being used and over several charge and discharge cycles. The battery will naturally heat up while charging, especially using the rapid-charge methods most phones use right now or when charging from a very low charge.
As far as the CPU goes, 140 degrees is about 60 C, most CPU's can tolerate up to around 70-75 C without causing problems. Also, IIRC most boards have a cutoff if the device gets too hot to operate, I know the iPhone does so I would imagine that Android devices do as well.
That leaves it a matter of your own comfort, if it is too hot for you to actully hold onto and use - that I have seen before, in which case the best method for cooling it off is to actually turn the phone off, remove the battery and let it sit at room temperature until the device cools. Using a fan will work but is far less effective. The use of power-saving mode can also help because a good portion of heat in the battery while discharging is due to the CPU and Power Saving mode sets the CPU to favor lower processing speeds, which of course lowers heat. This does assume you're not doing something with your phone that will tax the CPU.
titanshadow said:
As far as the CPU goes, 140 degrees is about 60 C, most CPU's can tolerate up to around 70-75 C without causing problems. Also, IIRC most boards have a cutoff if the device gets too hot to operate, I know the iPhone does so I would imagine that Android devices do as well.
That leaves it a matter of your own comfort, if it is too hot for you to actully hold onto and use - that I have seen before, in which case the best method for cooling it off is to actually turn the phone off, remove the battery and let it sit at room temperature until the device cools. Using a fan will work but is far less effective. The use of power-saving mode can also help because a good portion of heat in the battery while discharging is due to the CPU and Power Saving mode sets the CPU to favor lower processing speeds, which of course lowers heat. This does assume you're not doing something with your phone that will tax the CPU.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Are you confident about the CPU temps??? I put the fan on my phone because I still want to do the same functions I am doing(mainly tethering using upload and download)
Most of what I've found on the chip are pointing to temps around 70c
Sent from my SCH-I535 using xda app-developers app
hmmm
Just flashed to CleanRom and my cpu is OC'D TO 1.99 GHZ. I was wondering, it feels kinda warm, so what temperature should be normal?
Another thing to keep in mind about batteries and high temperatures is that the negative effect from the high temperature is at it's worst the higher the charge level. So if it's going to be getting hot--it's best to not keep it plugged in constantly.
jvu316 said:
Just flashed to CleanRom and my cpu is OC'D TO 1.99 GHZ. I was wondering, it feels kinda warm, so what temperature should be normal?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I run about 120f when I've been using my phone regularly. Otherwise the post above yours defines dangerous level.
grin0048 said:
Another thing to keep in mind about batteries and high temperatures is that the negative effect from the high temperature is at it's worst the higher the charge level. So if it's going to be getting hot--it's best to not keep it plugged in constantly.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This thread isn't about batteries at all.
Brian Gove said:
This thread isn't about batteries at all.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
AndroidGraphix said:
When it's gets that hot, I'll remove my battery and let it sit for 20 minutes. Then I'll swap it out for another new battery off the wall charger.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
to which you responded:
Brian Gove said:
Usually at this point I remove the back cover and place the phone upside down in front of a fan which cools it but I would like to know if this is even necessary....
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
titanshadow said:
Higher temperatres for batteries are not good for them at any time, they will speed up the degredation of the battery itself. That being said, it routintely gets 109 degrees in the summer where I live and I rarely have a battery problem, you will noticed a shorter life span on batteries both while they are being used and over several charge and discharge cycles. The battery will naturally heat up while charging, especially using the rapid-charge methods most phones use right now or when charging from a very low charge.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So, uhh, really? Not about batteries at all?
Anyway, who cares, you mentioned your battery also getting hot in the OP (I realize that wasn't your primary concern), someone else posted something about batteries and heat, so I thought it relevant to add a little something to that particular discussion.
grin0048 said:
to which you responded:
So, uhh, really? Not about batteries at all?
Anyway, who cares, you mentioned your battery also getting hot in the OP (I realize that wasn't your primary concern), someone else posted something about batteries and heat, so I thought it relevant to add a little something to that particular discussion.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Really read the first post. I directly asked about CPU temps. Not battery temps.
Brian Gove said:
Really read the first post. I directly asked about CPU temps. Not battery temps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
And I decided to ADD to already established discussion on battery temps in this thread, and you...well, you just continue being your pleasant self Brian Gove :good:
Related
I'm posting this for informative purposes. This is not to ***** about anything or prove anyone wrong. These are simply my findings and my conclusion. I was a sales person for wireless carriers for 8 years and saw this stuff a lot and I would stress test phones before swapping because I hated giving people refurbished crap for them to come back and complain about the same overheat issue. This experience led me to think before doing a device swap.
my G2x battery got hot from day one. From my monitoring I noticed the following.
1. The phone itself was not really hot. Just general radiation from the immediate battery area and it cooled off quickly after battery removal while battery would stay hot for a good 15-20 minutes.
2. Battery temp would hit 106 degrees.
3. Battery life just plain sucked. Charging it 2 to 3 times a day on light use.
T-mobile replaced my battery and after one full day of on and off abuse running 6 quadrants in a row at Max overclock amongst other things and with a thick non breathable case in the back the temp never got over 99 degrees. Prior to swap just reading and posting on xda would spike temps and that was with no case.
So before you decide to do anything pay close attention to what exactly is getting hot. Is the actual device hot or is it just the battery. Is the device a tad warmer simply due to the battery being too hot? Get a battery monitor installed to see the temp. Check your settings such as overclocking undervoltage etc.
T-Mobile just wanted to swap everything but since my phone was not hot and I had a good screen and never a boot or reboot issue even before root and bloat installed etc so I didn't want to take a chance and get a **** device. They also told me it was OK that k needed to charge it 3 times a day. I said with triple the usage on my G2 I almost never needed to charge it at all mid day. While each device varies, one third the battery life on one third the usage is simply not right no matter how you look at it.
So I say pay attention to detail before returning your device especially if your device is a good one because it would suck to get a **** device in exchange for your good one just because of a battery.
EDIT. I do want to add that my battery has spiked to 103.8 degrees while basically doing CPU intensive stuff While charging the entire time. When not on the charger it did not spike as high. After a short time after charge hit 100% it dropped over 1.5 degrees pretty quickly.
G2x with faux AOSP
The fact that you wrote "a lot" instead of "alot" showed me your post was worth reading.
Sent from my SGH-T959 using XDA App
stefan.buddle said:
The fact that you wrote "a lot" instead of "alot" showed me your post was worth reading.
Sent from my SGH-T959 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What? Really? Lol thanks for the info! I've noticed my battery getting hella hot when using navigation and a car charger. I could barely even hold the thing...
Sent from my LG-P999 using XDA App
crx4xharder said:
What? Really? Lol thanks for the info! I've noticed my battery getting hella hot when using navigation and a car charger. I could barely even hold the thing...
Sent from my LG-P999 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OEM car charger or some wallywolrd special?
G2x with faux AOSP
stefan.buddle said:
The fact that you wrote "a lot" instead of "alot" showed me your post was worth reading.
Sent from my SGH-T959 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The fact that you wrote that leads me to believe you miss a lot of really important information because someone wrote "alot" as opposed to "a lot". Someone who writes "alot" isn't worth your time or energy?
I've had my thunderbolt for awhile now and ive been noticing how hot it gets when streaming movies I downloaded a battery temp widget and at ruined it gets above 107 wstreaming movies or downloading, I do live in Atlanta and it is on the high 90,s but I didn't seem to b noticing this on my incredible. I'm rooted and have been running diffrent time running gingeritis v1.0 now
If you're that worried, quit overclocking. Also, not all the heat is from the cpu; some is given off by the internals related to the antenna, but shouldn't be a problem unless it's used excessively over a long period of time. I've had it overheat and reset from doing a large download over LTE for a few hours.
Not really concerned more curious to wether everyone else is seeing fast heat up to
It's almost 100 degrees out, you are streaming movies and OC'd, and you are wondering if the phone getting hot in conditions like this is abnormal
shaggy5991 said:
I've had my thunderbolt for awhile now and ive been noticing how hot it gets when streaming movies I downloaded a battery temp widget and at ruined it gets above 107 wstreaming movies or downloading, I do live in Atlanta and it is on the high 90,s but I didn't seem to b noticing this on my incredible. I'm rooted and have been running diffrent time running gingeritis v1.0 now
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You have to remember that most of that heat is generated because of the reactions within the battery to supply power to the phone. So the more draw you put on the battery the hotter it's going to get. Lithium batteries are notorious for running high temps when being charged/discharged. It's part of the price you pay to have more capacity is a smaller space.
I flown RC heli's for years, so I'm very familiar with how lithium batteries react. They pack alot of power in minimum space, but they can be dangerous is certain situations (that's why cars like the Prius still do not use them in production because of the fire risk).
Just a bit of info to think about.
There's a good thread on xda that's has documented on several test that LTE is the cause of the overheating. The test was done on stock ruu with no OC. Of course being Oc'd doesn't help your case, but I've noticed LTE in weak areas can raise battery temperature up to 107 degrees Fahrenheit without streaming video or having any rogue applications running. I've also reduced cpu speed to 744 mhz with no luck. Hopefully new RUU releases will address this problem.
I'll post the thread when I get a chance.
EDIT
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1109880
4G LTE Rapid Power Burn Issue
raider3bravo said:
There's a good thread on xda that's has documented on several test that LTE is the cause of the overheating. The test was done on stock ruu with no OC.
I'll post the thread when I get a chance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't believe that is the cause at all, as I have 4G, and use it, where I live all day, and OC to 1.4, I have never had overheating problems at all. He was outside in almost 100 degree weather, streaming movies, there isn't a fan cooling the phone, that temperature is normal.
I'm outside during the week in 80-85 degree weather, streaming music on a sunny day and my phone gets hotter than normal, because it is working harder than normal.
The OP is downloading or streaming movies in hot weather when it gets hot. 2 data & processor intensive tasks, you can't expect it to stay cool at normal temperature in conditions like that.
g00s3y said:
I don't believe that is the cause at all, as I have 4G, and use it, where I live all day, and OC to 1.4, I have never had overheating problems at all. He was outside in almost 100 degree weather, streaming movies, there isn't a fan cooling the phone, that temperature is normal.
I'm outside during the week in 80-85 degree weather, streaming music on a sunny day and my phone gets hotter than normal, because it is working harder than normal.
The OP is downloading or streaming movies in hot weather when it gets hot. 2 data & processor intensive tasks, you can't expect it to stay cool at normal temperature in conditions like that.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's certainly another factor I didn't consider.
I understand all that I've played with all the processor speeds and observed how of reacts in difrent situations compared to the incredible and even on 3g under all same conditions it heats up at a way faster rate, not saying the reason its overheating isn't my fault nor do I ever let it get past a safe level just wondering
OP, trust me your phone is not "Overheating" at 107. If it gets to 125/130+ then you have a problem but these phones were built to withstand the temps you are seeing.
Basically, don't worry about it.
The biggest thing i have noticed is that when i recharge with the power cord at home, it don't get hot. But when i recharge with a cig adaptor, it runs pretty hot. But on the flipside of that, If i use my wifes cig charger that came with her LG ally, it don't overheat. These phones are drama queens about charging
bamaredwingsfan said:
The biggest thing i have noticed is that when i recharge with the power cord at home, it don't get hot. But when i recharge with a cig adaptor, it runs pretty hot. But on the flipside of that, If i use my wifes cig charger that came with her LG ally, it don't overheat. These phones are drama queens about charging
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That may be because of the quality of the chargers you are using. Electrical power is kind of like water. The bigger the pipes the better the flow. If you have a good pipeline, less heat because the battery doesn't have to work so hard pulling the electricity in.
A wall charger (spec'd for your phone) is probably the best choice, you wife's cig charger may just be a bit better quality with thicker gauge wiring.
I know this is a pretty simplified explanation, but hopefully it makes sense.
Dnakaman said:
That may be because of the quality of the chargers you are using. Electrical power is kind of like water. The bigger the pipes the better the flow. If you have a good pipeline, less heat because the battery doesn't have to work so hard pulling the electricity in.
A wall charger (spec'd for your phone) is probably the best choice, you wife's cig charger may just be a bit better quality with thicker gauge wiring.
I know this is a pretty simplified explanation, but hopefully it makes sense.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Also having direct sunlight on your phone probably makes a difference.
Sent from my ADR6400L using XDA App
miketoasty said:
OP, trust me your phone is not "Overheating" at 107. If it gets to 125/130+ then you have a problem but these phones were built to withstand the temps you are seeing.
Basically, don't worry about it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i've gotten close to 130 on several Thunderbolts. and it's not even that hot in SoCal yet. i've seen over 1200ma before a few times. this was on non-rooted Thunderbolts.
Dnakaman said:
That may be because of the quality of the chargers you are using. Electrical power is kind of like water. The bigger the pipes the better the flow. If you have a good pipeline, less heat because the battery doesn't have to work so hard pulling the electricity in.
A wall charger (spec'd for your phone) is probably the best choice, you wife's cig charger may just be a bit better quality with thicker gauge wiring.
I know this is a pretty simplified explanation, but hopefully it makes sense.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
it's also possible that the Ally requires less power. The Thunderbolt is spec'd for charging at 5V/1A. If the Ally is 5V/800ma, then it would not get as hot when charging the Ally. Out of curiosity, what does the charger spec as voltage/amperage?
miketoasty said:
OP, trust me your phone is not "Overheating" at 107. If it gets to 125/130+ then you have a problem but these phones were built to withstand the temps you are seeing.
Basically, don't worry about it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My TBOLT gets pretty warm, but I've never had any real problems with it. I did however when I was on the Incredible. I agree, I wouldn't worry about it.
Sent from my Nexus 5 using XDA Free mobile app
In short: I think your battery is fine.
In long: Batteries are incredibly complex units, with slight allowable tolerances on the actual total mAh charge the battery can hold. I don't know the tolerances these batteries are built to, but they are not exactly 2300 mAh. I don't use the app you took a screen-shot of and the numbers aren't explained, so they mean nothing to me. I have no idea what they are trying to tell me, though I could make some assumptions that are probably wrong to some extent.
Also, an important thing to remember about lithium batteries is they do not tolerate a full discharge. This will damage the battery (irreparably). OEM's implement a floor at somewhere around 5-10% battery charge to prevent the consumer from either accidentally or intentionally fully discharging the battery. This is why the device will boot up on a low battery (after low battery shutdown). But it will immediately initiate shutdown again to prevent battery damage (or at least limit it). There is a great thread about lithium batteries in phones here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1168036. The point I'm making here is that app will never show a complete 2300 mAh of battery usage because the batteries circuitry will not allow it. So, if I understand that apps numbers correctly your battery capacity is probably ok.
Keep in mind this post was by a 3rd party and not a battery engineer, but most of the advice is pretty sound (I'm not a battery engineer either, but I am a Mechanical Engineer and most of his comments pass a sanity check).
Thanks for the long reply. I'm puzzled by this really because my SOT is barely 2.5 hours on a good day. I currently lack a SIM (waiting on one) and I have been just using airplane mode with WiFi on. My drain with screen off is somewhere around 2%. I am running M rooted with elementalx and I have a -50mv under clock across the board. I'm also using the conservative governor at the moment. I have greenified everything except Facebook and my last power cycle only showed the screen, system and WiFi as the only things consuming battery. My screen brightness is cranked way down. On battery I can pretty much see it dropping at a rate of 30%/hr with the screen on. If I under clock to 1.2ghz I get closer to 20%/hr. Currently I can't even get through a 16 hour day with light usage. I'm reading consistent reports of 4-5 hour SOTs with some power conservation and frankly I don't know what more I could do other than under clock to 500mhz which I must say us pretty laggy. Yeah I know draining to 0 is bad, but it looks like I don't have much choice right now or I could just leave it on charge all day. Awesome. I think I should try swapping the battery. My current problem is finding a good source for a genuine oem battery.
Sent from my Nexus 5 using XDA Free mobile app
I think this is the worst battery life I've ever had from a phone. I'm pretty sure my G1 was nowhere near this bad but I do remember eventually moving to an extended battery.
Sent from my Nexus 5 using XDA Free mobile app
Is fast charging on the S7 ok for the battery or it damages it by time ? I mean i want my phone to hold on for at least 3 years.
Should i disable this option to increase the total battery health ?
With or without fast charging...batterys dont last 3 years.
Sent from my SM-G930F using XDA-Developers mobile app
olafsand said:
With or without fast charging...batterys dont last 3 years.
Sent from my SM-G930F using XDA-Developers mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Umm yes they do... They last way longer than that actually. They just won't have the capability to hold the full charge amount (in mAh) anymore.
InsanePostman said:
Umm yes they do... They last way longer than that actually. They just won't have the capability to hold the full charge amount (in mAh) anymore.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It may not have dawned on you yet but that battery does not "hold the full charge amount (in mAh) anymore" is in most users mind the very definition of "my f****** battery is gone"!
With the all the pressure on the manufacturers to make the batteries small and the urge to build faster units the usable battery lifespan takes a hit. Even a 20% shorter battery charge time feels frustrating when heavy users may already struggle to make it last a full day with some phones.
So, "way longer than that" (3 years)…? I don’t think so!
So as a conclusion should I DISABLE FAST CHARGING OR NOT?
RootNightmareX said:
So as a conclusion should I DISABLE FAST CHARGING OR NOT?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have never heard anyone being able to prove fast charging causing shortened battery life. There are a lot of guessing around, but the only difference I have seen is that the phone gets slightly warmer to the touch both after fast charging with cable and wireless. Not so hot so that I would suspect damage. After all, since the charging ends a lot faster the total amount of heat surely isn't higher than that with slow charging. Using the phone will sometimes make it warmer than this.
One could perhaps suspect a higher risk for fire with fast charging, but there is no proof for that either.
The choice is yours!
RootNightmareX said:
So as a conclusion should I DISABLE FAST CHARGING OR NOT?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you want battery to last longer you do not need to disable anything, instead follow these steps
1. Charge battery to 80 - 85% and not 100%. Stop leaving it overnight.
2. Don't let it fall to 0%, keep it between 20 - 80% charge.
3. Do use phone while charging. You do not want battery heating up.
4. Top up the battery in between your day but keep it within the range above.
5. Keep phone away from to much subglight or warm temperatures. Heat is the biggest enemy of Li-on batteries.
Sent from my SM-G930F using Tapatalk
takerhbk said:
If you want battery to last longer you do not need to disable anything, instead follow these steps
1. Charge battery to 80 - 85% and not 100%. Stop leaving it overnight.
2. Don't let it fall to 0%, keep it between 20 - 80% charge.
3. Do use phone while charging. You do not want battery heating up.
4. Top up the battery in between your day but keep it within the range above.
5. Keep phone away from to much subglight or warm temperatures. Heat is the biggest enemy of Li-on batteries.
Sent from my SM-G930F using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This might have been true many years ago for on old generation of batteries and phones, not for the batteries and smart phones of today. You cannot damage the battery by over charge, there is automatic over charge protection.
You equally cannot do harm to the battery by using it all the way down. There is protection against this also. The system will sense when it is approaching the level that will do any damage at all to the battery and shut down.
No need to worry, just use your phone. There is nothing you can do to make the battery better or worse!
gerhard_wa said:
This might have been true many years ago for on old generation of batteries and phones, not for the batteries and smart phones of today. You cannot damage the battery by over charge, there is automatic over charge protection.
You equally cannot do harm to the battery by using it all the way down. There is protection against this also. The system will sense when it is approaching the level that will do any damage at all to the battery and shut down.
No need to worry, just use your phone. There is nothing you can do to make the battery better or worse!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So i can enable fast charge and full charge/discharge the phone without any risk?
gerhard_wa said:
This might have been true many years ago for on old generation of batteries and phones, not for the batteries and smart phones of today. You cannot damage the battery by over charge, there is automatic over charge protection.
You equally cannot do harm to the battery by using it all the way down. There is protection against this also. The system will sense when it is approaching the level that will do any damage at all to the battery and shut down.
No need to worry, just use your phone. There is nothing you can do to make the battery better or worse!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No you are getting it wrong. Don't leave overnight not because it over charges but the fact that you don't want to go upto 100%. Plus everytime you go to 0 battery loses it one cycle. Whatever I say is based on Google research and latest research so it still holds true. For battery longevity never take it to extreme and avoid heating it.
RootNightmareX said:
So i can enable fast charge and full charge/discharge the phone without any risk?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You should Google or see YouTube videos. What I advise you is based on that research. Almost 99% people advise what I said. Rest is upto you.
Sent from my SM-G930F using Tapatalk
takerhbk said:
No you are getting it wrong. Don't leave overnight not because it over charges but the fact that you don't want to go upto 100%. Plus everytime you go to 0 battery loses it one cycle. Whatever I say is based on Google research and latest research so it still holds true. For battery longevity never take it to extreme and avoid heating it.
You should Google or see YouTube videos. What I advise you is based on that research. Almost 99% people advise what I said. Rest is upto you.
Sent from my SM-G930F using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So the most recommanded tips are: stay at 25-75% battery and try to not heat battery and disable fast charge?
RootNightmareX said:
So the most recommanded tips are: stay at 25-75% battery and try to not heat battery and disable fast charge?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Disable fast charging if it heats up your battery too much. Otherwise no need.
Sent from my SM-G930F using Tapatalk
gerhard_wa said:
It may not have dawned on you yet but that battery does not "hold the full charge amount (in mAh) anymore" is in most users mind the very definition of "my f****** battery is gone"!
With the all the pressure on the manufacturers to make the batteries small and the urge to build faster units the usable battery lifespan takes a hit. Even a 20% shorter battery charge time feels frustrating when heavy users may already struggle to make it last a full day with some phones.
So, "way longer than that" (3 years)…? I don’t think so!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is a generalization based upon nothing but your personal opinion. All I said is that batteries absolutely last longer than 3 years.
Try this app.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.digibites.accubattery&hl=pt_PT
It gives information about charge/discharge and also battery health based on your use.
my phones battery temperature is always above 37c and when charging it goes up to 44c and it makes me worry about the battery cause high temperature is bad for lithium batteries. Is this normal? What can i do about this.
No replies?
adi.97 said:
my phones battery temperature is always above 37c and when charging it goes up to 44c and it makes me worry about the battery cause high temperature is bad for lithium batteries. Is this normal? What can i do about this.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've already said this to you in another thread, stop opening new threads and these type of questions could be asked in the general thread , maybe?? Would also get a faster response there. Also please just sell your u11 as it seems you and only you have these "problems." And I'm reporting you, again.
Sent from my HTC U11 using Tapatalk
No problems here, ran Waze along with UAPP attached to Dragonfly Black to aux for 1.5 hours. I don't have girlie hands, but still Temp was probably around 38c. 44c is not something to worry about.
schmeggy929 said:
No problems here, ran Waze along with UAPP attached to Dragonfly Black to aux for 1.5 hours. I don't have girlie hands, but still Temp was probably around 38c. 44c is not something to worry about.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I see, my phones temperature is 37c now. When charging it gets hot. And that's worrying because it will damage the battery faster
adi.97 said:
I see, my phones temperature is 37c now. When charging it gets hot. And that's worrying because it will damage the battery faster
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What are you worrying for, it is not a Samsung.
schmeggy929 said:
What are you worrying for, it is not a Samsung.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I worry about the battery getting worse and lasting less than before
adi.97 said:
I worry about the battery getting worse and lasting less than before
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That will happen no matter what.. enjoy your phone... get new one after year or two.
This guy just likes to troll, don't pay any attention to him. Look at his post history.
For the record, 44C is on the higher side but my M7 regularly hit 48C and had the same battery life it did out of the box a year later. There are varying degrees of battery quality. You'll kill your battery more leaving it to trickle charge all the time than from 44C temps. You'll also kill it faster the more times you charge it to 100% than the temps will.