Battery 100 to 0 in 1 sec - AT&T, Rogers HTC One X, Telstra One XL

Hi, I'm using the AT&T One X with Team Venom ViperXL 2.0 rom.
This morning (while it was still connected to the charger) I received a call, got stuck (I couldn't use it at all until the call was dropped) then I noticed the home-widget clock was showing the correct time, while the statusbar clock was 35 minutes behind
I've rebooted the device, and noticed that although it was connected to the charger all night I had 0% battery.
all this time the device was scorching hot (like when playing a game and charging at same time).
I've poster a screenshot of the battery usage.
What could have caused this and how do I stop this from happening again?
Thanks for any help

I would let the phone drain completely then do a full over night charge while the phone is is off, do this cycle a couple of times.
Did you notice you have some bad wake locks?
You should use better battery stats and find out what's stopping your phone from deep sleeping like it should.
Sent from my GT-I9100 using xda app-developers app

Obagleyfreer said:
I would let the phone drain completely then do a full over night charge while the phone is is off, do this cycle a couple of times.
Did you notice you have some bad wake locks?
You should use better battery stats and find out what's stopping your phone from deep sleeping like it should.
Sent from my GT-I9100 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
those aren't bad wake locks... I'd say that couple discharge and charge cycles like you said will fix it.
Sent from my One X using xda premium

I guess wake lock isn't the right term. It does appear that when the phone screen is off the phone is still awake though......
Sent from my GT-I9100 using xda app-developers app

Thread moved to Q&A. Please keep all question related threads there. Thank You.
Thread Moved
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice"
Sent from my Galaxy Note (i717), using XDA Premium.

Thanks everyone. I've done one discharge-charge cycle, will repeat the next couple of nights.
I'll update if the problem comes back

Its just a metering error, not real life battery drain. I'm not an electrical engineer or anything. But I don't see how its possible for that much power to be discharged without a huge amount of heat or light, or the device being grounded.
The only thing I've seen clear this up, is a factory reset.
Charge cycles to calibrate the meter can't hurt. But I'd caution against discharging to "zero" (phone shutoff). Discharging to 10-20% is plenty accurate enough. Over-discharge of Li ion batteries can render the battery unable to take a charge. While the voltage doesn't truly drop to zero, it can drop enough to shutoff the safety circuit. I've seen it happen to this and other Android phones in the past (person drained to shutoff, then the battery won't charge).

redpoint73 said:
Its just a metering error, not real life battery drain. I'm not an electrical engineer or anything. But I don't see how its possible for that much power to be discharged without a huge amount of heat or light, or the device being grounded.
The only thing I've seen clear this up, is a factory reset.
Charge cycles to calibrate the meter can't hurt. But I'd caution against discharging to "zero" (phone shutoff). Discharging to 10-20% is plenty accurate enough. Over-discharge of Li ion batteries can render the battery unable to take a charge. While the voltage doesn't truly drop to zero, it can drop enough to shutoff the safety circuit. I've seen it happen to this and other Android phones in the past (person drained to shutoff, then the battery won't charge).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You might be right about the flash and bang, but the phone seemed to charge like it was really on 0%. maybe the read of 100% was wrong and the reboot fixed it; but why would it be on 0% if it was plugged in to the AC all night? That's also an indicator of a problem, right?

gilgreen said:
You might be right about the flash and bang, but the phone seemed to charge like it was really on 0%. maybe the read of 100% was wrong and the reboot fixed it; but why would it be on 0% if it was plugged in to the AC all night? That's also an indicator of a problem, right?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
A similar problem was discussed thoroughly in another thread. One person mentioned that its possible there is a short between the battery layers. But I would think such a thing would make this event happen more frequently in the case of a hardware failure such as that.

redpoint73 said:
A similar problem was discussed thoroughly in another thread. One person mentioned that its possible there is a short between the battery layers. But I would think such a thing would make this event happen more frequently in the case of a hardware failure such as that.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I sure hope it's not the case. I really like it and fixing it will probably not be the best option...
Sent from my HTC One XL using xda app-developers app

Related

Only charges up to 95%

Hi guys,
I've noticed that if I plug my phone to the wall charger, when it reaches 95% it just stops charging. I can unplug it and plug it again, and I can reach 100% by repeating the process multiple times, but not in one sitting?
Is this normal? Does it happen to you? Does it get better?
Same here
(Using SuperAosp-ST 4.4)
i have that 2
I got to 98 once !
Sent from my Nexus S using XDA Premium App
Wow. So, is this some kind of feature or what?
frandavid100 said:
Wow. So, is this some kind of feature or what?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
as far as i know, its an known bug
Its by design - charging the battery to only 95% level & then the following discharge. It elongates the battery life. It should never charge to level's exceeding the above.
It's not a bug.
Most batteries lifespan drop if being on high voltage too long (100%)
So usually manufacturers will try to let it state it is fully charged before it even reach 100% to extend the lifespan of the battery.
But if you really want to see it charged fully you can do a battery stats wipe in recovery after a ROM flash. It will be able to charge to 100% fully.
Hope that helps.
navlem said:
It's not a bug.
Most batteries lifespan drop if being on high voltage too long (100%)
So usually manufacturers will try to let it state it is fully charged before it even reach 100% to extend the lifespan of the battery.
But if you really want to see it charged fully you can do a battery stats wipe in recovery after a ROM flash. It will be able to charge to 100% fully.
Hope that helps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
tried this methode, but no success.
i come from a X10 and SE build in a charging algorithm: battery charged fully, hold this value for one hour and let the battery fall till it reaches 90% and charge again.
do you mean such methode to extend battery life??
the phone from my boss (i9020) charges to 100%, my (i9023) only to 96%
96% is ok, as i said, being in high voltage often kills the battery. 96% keeps it's lifespan much longer.
Being said that, even extremely low voltage kills the battery too. So usually your phone will die before the battery reach 0%
Not this again
From the FAQ post, in this very forum, which should be read before posting a new thread:
Q: I unplugged my phone, and my battery dropped from 100% to 95% immediately, or it won't/takes along time to charge past 99%, what gives?
The answer leads to this informative article about what your battery gauge is telling you, and why 100% is probably not what you want ...
http://www.androidpolice.com/2010/12/14/your-battery-gauge-is-lying-to-you-everything-you-need-to-know-about-bump-charging-and-inconsistent-battery-drain/
shamarama said:
Not this again
From the FAQ post, in this very forum, which should be read before posting a new thread:
Q: I unplugged my phone, and my battery dropped from 100% to 95% immediately, or it won't/takes along time to charge past 99%, what gives?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
While I thank you for your reply and linking to that article, that is a related issue but not exactly the same. The usual behaviour is for the battery to indicate a 100% charge and then drop to a lower level, as you bolded in your post. The behaviour I'm talking about is it never going over 95%.
Not a big difference, but enough to notice the change and ask about it. Don't you think?
I myself own a GT-I9020T & have never seen the charge levels exceed beyond 95%.
You are right, your description is subtly different than the post in the FAQ. I have to admit laziness in assuming that they would be one and the same 'problem' ... apologies if they're not.
Well, you did give useful info even though you thought it was an old, tired question. I can't see a reason to give apologies there
Turn the tethering on while charging; it'll charge the battery up to 100%
I think my Vibrant had the same issue / feature. It's probably a Samsung feature and not a bug.
Sent from my Nexus S using XDA Premium App
Mine hits 100pct sometimes but will always stop charging until it drops below 90. A good feature to save the battery. Makes 0 sense for it to be charging every time it drops 1pct for hours at night while on the charger.
I'm wondering if people seeing a difference in the overall charge cap is a matter of rom? I've been using cm for practically ever but I know some people are on stock. I'm sure it's possible something is modded in there to make sure it hits 100 before it stops.
Just a thought.
On nexus s with stock rom I was able to charge to 100%
bolabola118 said:
Turn the tethering on while charging; it'll charge the battery up to 100%
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
LOL can someone confirm that?
richrach said:
On nexus s with stock rom I was able to charge to 100%
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
maybe thats the problem, because the phone of my friend also charges to 100% (completly stock) mine only to 96% (NSCollab)

Battery issues! Running out of ideas. Can someone help? (SOLVED)

I can't seem to figure out whats wrong with my phone. I have a draining issue with my battery and i don't know if my battery indicator is not accurate. I used odin and went back to stock on a full indicated battery. Then I flashed VB and adrenaline shots 1.4-1 and camera tweak and scrolling mod and booted the phone and let set for 10 minutes before I reloaded all my apps. My battery was indicating it was at 100% ok so i unplugged the battery and wham it dropped to 79% plugged it back in and it started charged from where it left off at 79%. After a few min and the phone goes to sleep mode and indicates 100% i unplug the phone and it charged from where it left off at 79%. So i kept unplugging it and plugging it back in every few minutes till i got to 100%. So sounds ok now but i had to reboot my system and wham again down to 79% and even with the uv settings my battery drains fast. I tried calibrating the battery and also charged it with the phone being off and no results. All I want is a full charge as I work long shifts lol. thanks and i hope this is understandable the way i tried to describe it.
Also Thanks to the devs on here who dedicate their time to making this device do what it was meant to do..
Try letting the phone die completely. After about ten minutes power it back on then let it die completely again. Leave it off for an hour then plug into wall charger. Let it charge to 100% while off. After it hits 100% unplug it and leave it sit for an hour while off. Then turn it on and use normally.
hechoen said:
Try letting the phone die completely.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not to contradict hechoen - but take note that Samsung recommends against completely discharging your battery in the manual for the phone.
+1 (edit: on previous calibration routing)
also you may try to "jump start" MAX17042 (fuel gauge) chip... when your phone at 100% on a charger (verify this by looking at battery voltage - OS Monitor / Misc tab. or other similar apps) - voltage should be around 4.15 - 4.2V. When you disconnect charger - what would be the voltage then? If around 4.0V then may be your battery is going south.
To "jump start" FG - turn off the phone, pull battery out and wait for 5 - 10 min. - just to be sure internal circuits got completely discharged.
When you install battery, FG chip will use "average" model for new lipo... see if it makes difference.
Yeah I've heard that this kind of batteries last longer if charged continuously (short and often charges) instead of full charges after letting it die. Something about battery cycles or some.
I'd recommend fully charging and battery calibration from market. Also, reflash rom but not tweaks yet, and see how it behaves. Then install tweaks/mods and see if the battery continues to decrease rapidly. If it does, get an app for battery info, check its health.. Your battery might be dying for good.
Sent from my SGH-T959V using XDA App
mikeflash said:
battery calibration from market.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Google has also debunked the battery calibration myth. There is a thread about it in the General Section with a link to the article.
To add to the recommendations...
Check how often your phone is set to sync. Big battery drainer. Auto starting apps. And display brightness.
if all fails you could try to reflash and see if that fixes it
Sent from my SGH-T959V using XDA App
lumin30 said:
Google has also debunked the battery calibration myth. There is a thread about it in the General Section with a link to the article.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
+1 on that too... glad to see that finally common sense based on knowledge prevails "Battery Calibration by wiping batterystats file" apps myths.
lumin30 said:
Google has also debunked the battery calibration myth. There is a thread about it in the General Section with a link to the article.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wait, I didn't say battery calibration is going to make your battery last longer. It doesn't do that.
But it's a fact that after installing a rom a battery calibration is needed. Normally, developers code their install scripts to perform a battery calibration when installing the rom, so this is not needed afterwards, I still do it anyways when charging the first time to 100%.
I for one had the issue for the first time when installing a rom (don't remember which one) and after rebooting or shutting down the phone, the battery would go from >90% to <20% for no reason at all. Someone here at XDA suggested battery calibration app (or, manually at CWM/advanced, clear battery stats) and the issue was gone. Maybe the rom is misreading battery data and that could cause this kind of issues... which a battery calibration would fix it.
Just saying.. if there's an option for it in CWM, then chances are it is needed for some reason!
Vlad_z said:
+1 on that too... glad to see that finally common sense based on knowledge prevails "Battery Calibration by wiping batterystats file" apps myths.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Indeed. It's on our wiki, too, under the batterystats.bin Buzz Word entry.
So i think I needed to do a factory reset. I re flashed vahnilla black and then did a factory reset in the rom. Before I re flashed the rom I
had 60% as soon I restarted the phone on the freshly flashed rom it dropped to 1% then I did a factory restart within the rom and when I rebooted the battery indicated 20% and I am in 16% charge now, only went down 4% within the last 6 hours. So I will run it till it dies tonight and charge it with the phone off to see the results tomorrow.
Thanks Raver for the help in this matter. Will keep everyone posted on the end results.
Sent from my SGH-T959V using xda premium
lumin30 said:
Not to contradict hechoen - but take note that Samsung recommends against completely discharging your battery in the manual for the phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No contradiction at all. You shouldn't fully discharge all the time. But once in a while it's actually good for the battery. Especially lithium ion. Take a look at this. For those of you who don't like to read that much just skip to the bottom.
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/inner_workings_of_a_smart_battery
hechoen said:
No contradiction at all. You shouldn't fully discharge all the time. But once in a while it's actually good for the battery. Especially lithium ion. Take a look at this. For those of you who don't like to read that much just skip to the bottom.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Forgot link?
thomas.raines said:
Forgot link?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sure did. Sorry about that.
vwgtiturbo1 said:
So I will run it till it dies tonight and charge it with the phone off to see the results tomorrow.
Thanks Raver for the help in this matter. Will keep everyone posted on the end results.
Sent from my SGH-T959V using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
so you call hechoen (guy who posted calibration routing) Raver...
Vlad_z said:
so you call hechoen (guy who posted calibration routing) Raver...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
no actually raver answered a few questions for me through pm. but hechoen thank you and i will do that when my battery is fully charged. thanks again to everyone for the info! will update tomorrow!
I fully charged my battery last night while it being off and let it sit for a hour before turning it on. Well great seemed to now indicate it's fully charged after a hour I threw on adrenaline shots 14-1 with camera and scrolling mod. Let it air for 30min went into recoveryand fix perms. When I rebooted the phone the battery dropped again from 80 to 60 and then went back up to 75. Then I rebooted again it dropped to 25% and then I rebooted again and now it indicates 59% I believe this battery is heading south. What do you guys think?
Sent from my SGH-T959V using xda premium
....................
drywolf said:
How old is the battery. If it is a quality battery it should take between 500 and 900 recharges. Do you own a volt meter?
Also calibrating your battery should be done occasionally. Not to somehow make your battery last longer, but to clear out the old data and use new data to show your batteries usage. Just like resetting the computer in your car that shows average MPG. Fresh input will give you a better idea of what your car is getting today and same goes for your battery stats.
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/battery_calibration
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have calibrated the battery. Everything seems to of been working fine until I added adrenaline shots. Once I rebooted after installing adrenaline shots my battery started acting up again. I pulled the battery out for 10 min and popped back in and now I'm indicating 56% after 4 hours of heavy use with wifi on. :/
Sent from my SGH-T959V using xda premium
Is this a factory battery? Or a aftermarket ebay/amazon battery?
Im sure people will disagree but some of those aftermarket batteries are not the greatest quality.
Do you live in a town that had a battery store, like the interstate battery shop or something of the likes? Most of those places can do a brief diagnostic of the battery and tell you if it is bad. Or if you have a volt meter fully charge it and test it that way.
It really sounds like the battery is being stupid. There should not be any reason installing A.S. could cause a instant battery drain. If that were the case your phone would be so hot you could not hold it. Because draining that much juice in that little of time would indicate you have a short or something of that nature.

How to make your battery last longest?

So I just got my galaxy s3. I haven't turned it on yet. But I heard that you were supposed to charge it fully and then let it die. Then charge it fully again and then start using it. That when. Doing this you will optimize your battery so it will charge faster, hold a charge faster, and just last longer.
Is this myth or fact? And if fact how do I do the steps so I get it right?
Thanks for the help and sorry for any mistakes it was typed on my phone that has aa small touchscreen.
Sent from my HERO200 using xda premium
Yeah running it fully out of battery like that harms the life of the lithium ion cell
Always?
AshtonTS said:
Yeah running it fully out of battery like that harms the life of the lithium ion cell
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Now is this ALWAYS the case?
To clarify what I am asking I am saying does it always harm the life of the lithium ion cell by letting die fully? Like even after 6 or 8 or 12 months of owing the phone (or any device), not just one the first charge. This could be very useful for further reference...:good:
There are some things can help increase life of litium batteries. First, don't let it go down to 0% as mentioned, keep not lower than 50%. Once per month it is recommended to discharge battery to 0% and then charge it to 100% again for device callibration.
This is a good question. I always thought that by discharging and charging batteries at full cycles, you would make their total useful life last longer.
In fact, this happened to me with a notebook, which I used to play with and charging at the same time. In the end, the battery lasted for a few minutes and I had to sell it.
But in all: is this really true? I would also like to know if is truth or myth.
UnawareQuagsire said:
This is a good question. I always thought that by discharging and charging batteries at full cycles, you would make their total useful life last longer.
In fact, this happened to me with a notebook, which I used to play with and charging at the same time. In the end, the battery lasted for a few minutes and I had to sell it.
But in all: is this really true? I would also like to know if is truth or myth.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes yes!!
This happened too (as funny as it is) my grandma. She would ALWAYS have her little nnotebook plugged in and eventually it drained. I found out because one day I took it off the plug a d it died while I was on facebook after around 7 minutes.
So I bought a new battery and now she charfes iit and takes it off the plug to use it and twice a month she lets it die and it has worked
Sent from my HERO200 using xda premium
1) don't keep live wallpapers
2) keep the brightness to the lowest possible
3) don't charge while playing games or even use the phone
4) don't use apps which run in the background and drain the batter
5) all the suggestions given in the above posts lol
Sent from my MT27i using xda app-developers app
Don't let it die to zero.
When it warns you at 15% just charge it.
Sent from my U8150 using XDA
Allanitomwesh said:
Don't let it die to zero.
When it warns you at 15% just charge it.
Sent from my U8150 using XDA
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sir i just want to ask If we charge our battery even if its above 20% or if the battery icon is not yet colored red will it affect our battery life in the future? Or we should only charge our battery when it is below 20-15% ?
lanlan_10 said:
Sir i just want to ask If we charge our battery even if its above 20% or if the battery icon is not yet colored red will it affect our battery life in the future? Or we should only charge our battery when it is below 20-15% ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Charge it anytime you want.
Sent from my U8150 using XDA
snipesome said:
So I just got my galaxy s3. I haven't turned it on yet. But I heard that you were supposed to charge it fully and then let it die. Then charge it fully again and then start using it. That when. Doing this you will optimize your battery so it will charge faster, hold a charge faster, and just last longer.
Is this myth or fact? And if fact how do I do the steps so I get it right?
Thanks for the help and sorry for any mistakes it was typed on my phone that has aa small touchscreen.
Sent from my HERO200 using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It is true if you have a phone like Nokia 3310 if you do not have a NiMH battery do not do that you will lose time also you do not need to "format" a Li-Ion battery
read about lazy-battery effect on Wikipedia
rooting you phone to underclock/undervolt should also help out battery life pretty significantly ^_^
Lithium ion cells do not suffer from the "memory" effect as older rechargeable batteries. You do not have to let the battery run all the way down then fully charge it again to get the best performance that way, that was for the older types of batteries (again so you wouldn't get that "memory" effect) matter of fact its rather harmful to the battery to run it all the way down.
Charge the battery as often as you want no matter at what level it is. If you are going to do some high power **** (play a game, watch a movie) then plug it if if you have a charger around. The longer the battery stays at a high level the better for it. Try not to let your battery run your phone at a low state (charge it asap). Its ok to leave it on the charger even after its fully charged. Your phone and charger are smart enough to know when to start/stop charging the battery. This will ensure a long life for your battery.
...as for your phone...simple rules...if you are not using it( DATA, WIFI, GPS, SYNC, BLUETOOTH) then turn it off. Screen is the biggest battery drainer...KEEP IT ON AUTO!...darker themes really help alot...make your screen go off at 30 sec. or less. Have fun with your new phone homie.
mrrobc97 said:
Lithium ion cells do not suffer from the "memory" effect as older rechargeable batteries. You do not have to let the battery run all the way down then fully charge it again to get the best performance that way, that was for the older types of batteries (again so you wouldn't get that "memory" effect) matter of fact its rather harmful to the battery to run it all the way down.
Charge the battery as often as you want no matter at what level it is. If you are going to do some high power **** (play a game, watch a movie) then plug it if if you have a charger around. The longer the battery stays at a high level the better for it. Try not to let your battery run your phone at a low state (charge it asap). Its ok to leave it on the charger even after its fully charged. Your phone and charger are smart enough to know when to start/stop charging the battery. This will ensure a long life for your battery.
...as for your phone...simple rules...if you are not using it( DATA, WIFI, GPS, SYNC, BLUETOOTH) then turn it off. Screen is the biggest battery drainer...KEEP IT ON AUTO!...darker themes really help alot...make your screen go off at 30 sec. or less. Have fun with your new phone homie.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This helps a lot than
ks. I think I am going to make a video on the stuff that has been shared on this thread. My YouTube is the same as my xda. Snipesome. I have 2600 subs and partnered. Is anyone more qualified who would like to mske it instead?
Sent from my HERO200 using xda premium

My battery is weird

My battery has been acting funny lately. Some nights I go to bed with the battery at 100% and when I wake up it's still at 100%. Other nights it loses 10-15% (in about 9 hours). I don't have anything running in the background that I'm aware of that would cause such a discrepancy. A couple nights ago the battery lost 10-12% overnight with the phone turned off! Still the phone was apparently awake all night. How is that possible?
I'm too lazy right now to post a screenshot since xda only accepts urls.
The same here after flashing a new custom rom.
After turning on the phone and making this screenshot percentage immediately went down for 10 to 15 %.
You can check things like that pretty good with apps like Battery Monitor Widget.
Did both of you try to recalibrate the battery?
Do a full cycle charge to 100% use it till 10% then wipe battery stats and charge phone to 100 again
Sent from my HTC One S using xda premium
k1llacanon said:
Do a full cycle charge to 100% use it till 10% then wipe battery stats and charge phone to 100 again
Sent from my HTC One S using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Why would you only go down to 10? Might as well drain the battery completely. It's not going to damage anything unless you let it sit around dead for weeks, possibly even months.
It's never good to completely drain a lion battery
Sent from my HTC One S using xda premium
k1llacanon said:
It's never good to completely drain a lion battery
Sent from my HTC One S using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Actually, for a proper cell calibration, it is best to drain the battery completely. Many agree and I have never heard a dev say that draining it dead hurts the battery. It is essential for each cell to be empty in order to properly and fully charge a li-ion battery (without this, % figures will be non-calibrated over time). Just like it is of good practice to let the device charge and extra hour or so once the indicator light turns green (to ensure 100% after trickle mode).
Rule 1: Battery calibration does absolutely nothing. Deleting battery stats will never, ever do a single thing to help your phone's battery calibration.
Rule 2: Standby drain is almost always because of partial wakelock or kernel wakelock. Install Betterbatterystats to figure out what the issue is.
Rule 3: If your phone is in a good reception area and still experiences heavy standby drain, charge the phone until it reaches max voltage (4.2 or 4.3), then use it until it shuts off, then go to hboot until it shuts off, then charge to full again, preferably with the phone off. Wait about an hour after you first see the green light to turn it on.
After that, enjoy. If you still have issues, I would suggest backing up everything and attempting an ruu flash with the battery at 100%.
I failed to mention it, but I haven't rooted or installed a custom rom.
I'll try better battery stats to see what I can find out with that.

[Q] Generic Android Battery Problem

My SGH-S730m (no device forum for this phone yet) battery percentage was at around 80% when I turned it off. It was placed in a pocket with another device. I can 100% confirm it was off for a complete 4 hours.
When I turned it on, the battery level was at 5%.
The battery still charges, the phone still works. The battery has not exploded yet, and is currently at 45% charge. I am using samsungs OEM battery (it came in the box with the phone). I have had this phone for just more than 2 months now.
What the heck happened? Is my fuel guage messed up?
Have you ever tried battery calibration?
1. Charge phone to 100%
2. Discharge to 0%
3. Let phone sit for 5 minutes
4. Plug it in without turning the phone on
5. Charge without break to 100%
6. Repeat 2-3 times
I also is same...
RaptorKC said:
Have you ever tried battery calibration?
1. Charge phone to 100%
2. Discharge to 0%
3. Let phone sit for 5 minutes
4. Plug it in without turning the phone on
5. Charge without break to 100%
6. Repeat 2-3 times
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thats the correct !
thx
RaptorKC said:
Have you ever tried battery calibration?
1. Charge phone to 100%
2. Discharge to 0%
3. Let phone sit for 5 minutes
4. Plug it in without turning the phone on
5. Charge without break to 100%
6. Repeat 2-3 times
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That might be a fix, but im looking for the reason behind this problem.
Does anybody know what went wrong? My phone still works (if that even means anything).
Sometimes it happens that the chip goes mad. It happens with every android phone. You're lucky that you have removal battery. Some devices is difficult to do the above trick. I think when you do a full charge and disconnect the battery from the phone for 5 minutes it will be good again. I'm not kind of advice let battery go to 0 because you can ruin li ion battery with a full discharge.
Sent from my GT-I9300 using xda premium
andronald said:
My SGH-S730m (no device forum for this phone yet) battery percentage was at around 80% when I turned it off. It was placed in a pocket with another device. I can 100% confirm it was off for a complete 4 hours.
When I turned it on, the battery level was at 5%.
The battery still charges, the phone still works. The battery has not exploded yet, and is currently at 45% charge. I am using samsungs OEM battery (it came in the box with the phone). I have had this phone for just more than 2 months now.
What the heck happened? Is my fuel guage messed up?
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How long did you have this phone?
Can't you get it exchange for a new one in case the phone has a problem?
I don't know where you from but in Europe you have 6 months for battery and 2 years for phone.
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testadeferro said:
I don't know where you from but in Europe you have 6 months for battery and 2 years for phone.
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What I meant was, if it's still within it's warranty period you should get it exchanged.
If not, swap your battery with someone and see if it's your phone or the battery.
Indeed.
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I won this phone for $7 at a stack-em machine. I doubt it has warrenty.
Sorry pal I can not answer that. But try the exchange battery suggestion from the other user. And try mine for calibration.
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Is this a one time only issue or did you get that a lot?
One time only can be from a stuck process in your phone
If you get that a lot => try the warranty
wargre said:
Is this a one time only issue or did you get that a lot?
One time only can be from a stuck process in your phone
If you get that a lot => try the warranty
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Click to collapse
One time issue. I noticed that the phone was getting really hot (even though it was off).
testadeferro said:
...I'm not kind of advice let battery go to 0 because you can ruin li ion battery with a full discharge.
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Nope, you can't. It reads 0% while actually it's voltage is way above 0mV (actually somewhere above 3V) and that's a preventive so that you can never discharge it even close to full discharge because going over 0.5V below the nominal voltage would ruin most Li-Ion batteries so it simply doesn't even allow you to do that. And besides, from where do you think it draws the juice to blink the LED when you try to turn the phone on after a "full discharge"?
andronald said:
One time issue. I noticed that the phone was getting really hot (even though it was off).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You should buy a replacement battery then ASAP, they're pretty cheap these days. You don't want Li-Ion packs overheating and the liquid inside them catching on fire.
Li-ion battery are intended to work between 40 and 100 working below that is in most cases the ruin of a battery. And experts say even 98 % slhould be optimal full charge not evem full.
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testadeferro said:
Li-ion battery are intended to work between 40 and 100 working below that is in most cases the ruin of a battery. And experts say even 98 % slhould be optimal full charge not evem full.
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Can you please quote some sources and prove that this is not just a speculation by yourself? I understand the physics of electricity and the foundations of marketing and economy well enough to say that what you wrote is utter nonsense.
Just read the thread from gokhanmoral from here. On galaxy s3 original development thread.
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I already know what the problem is. What I want to know is "what" happened to the battery.
Why, would the battery die so quickly when the phone was off? Why, was my li-ion battery discarging the energy as heat? (which would expain the heat while it was off). Why, does my phone still work?
Years ago, I fried a pocket pc by using a 10A charger instead of the usb 0.5A standard (is it 0.5mA? - I cant remember anymore). The battery didnt actually explode, but it got HOT! Really hot. I came back 10 minutes later to discover that my battery was discharging while plugged in..
I fried my fuel guage hardware. Tried to save it, but there was no way. Even after unplugging the 1 pound beast from the charger, the phone was discharging around %4 every 30 seconds. I learned my lesson from that horrific event (I loved that phone so much).
Now, who "actually" knows what happened to my battery? Anyone? I dont need a fix - so dont bother posting if your going to tell me to buy, sell, or repair, and not tell me why.

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