So to start off I'm kind of a noob at this... So bare with me but I recently just got the 32gb white(not like it matters) S3 SCH-I535 by Verizon of course and I just rooted it yesterday. The ROM I have on here is basic like just the ROM its self but the ROM I'm running is SuperChargedWizBuild3 and my question is what do I have to do to under clock this to get a good battery life and still some performance. I have ktwerker and played with it myself..... Made the phone run hella slow so I decided to ask instead of putting it in a loop.
In ktweaker just set the Max CPU speed as low as you want. The lower you set it the leas voltage it will use and the slower the phone will run. You have to find the best balance for you.
Also you can undervolt each step to save power as well. When the phone starts to hiccup you undervolted too much.
Hope this helps.
Sent through mental telepathy...or my unlocked SGS3
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So I just got a brand new D2G and thanks to the info in this forum I rooted it and installed fission rom and FRM...Im loving the phone, its fast, smooth and beautiful but the battery is AWFUL. I have read all the info about how to get the most out of your battery and everything on these forums but mine is waaaay worse than anyone has said before.
For instance, last night my phone was charging oernight, at 6 am when i woke up to pee it was at 100% so I unplugged it and went back to sleep, come 10 am when i woke up my phone was down to 15%!!! From just sitting there with the screen off...
Ive set the network to CDMA/Evduo automatic, installed Jrummy's overclock app...Can anyone explain in detail what exactly the settings in the overclock app mean? "set scaling frequencies at boot, cpu scaling frequencies etc?" for instance if I set scaling frequencies not at boot to ultra low voltage and 1 ghz and lower, do i need to also go into cpu scaling frequencies and make profiles and stuff?
Any information is greatly appreciated, Ive been reading up for days but this stuff is hard to find clear answers on specific issues. Thanks!
This is probably the most basic first thing to ask/do, but have you checked the battery useage to see which apps are using the most power? try doing what you did where you charged, and then let it sit for 4 hrs, and after that see what's using the battery, I bet there is some app that just nonstop uses the gps or 3g data or something wearing your battery life out super fast.
Yeah i looked at that this morning to see and all it said was suspend took up like 90% of the battery...Doesnt make any sense
1. Set at boot isn't what you're thinking. Set at boot means that whatever your current settings are will be set the NEXT time the phone boots. This is used when you have a setting you like. The reason you DON'T want to set at boot is that if you accidentally pick a setting that your phone doesn't like, and it makes it crash, then next time it will boot up with normal settings. Otherwise, you'd be looking at some work doing a recovery with either CWR or RSDLite... There are better ways to spend 30 minutes. Disclaimer: I use SetCPU, but the settings are all essentially the same.
2. For scaling, unless you're a power user (read: Geek) who's really up on his stuff, you should just stick with ondemand. This means your CPU will run at the lowest frequency possible, but will scale its speed up when processes call for it. This is efficient.
3. Yes, you should still make profiles. The setting on the main screen where you choose "Set at Boot" (Again, I'm speaking from SetCPU experience, but it SHOULD be the same) is just the main profile, setting the global minimum and maximum. You should leave the minimum on this at 300. The phones don't like to run much lower than that, even with the screen off; They start not ringing for calls, not waking up, etc. Set the maximum to whatever you want the max to be. You can overclock, which will obviously hurt your battery life. You could underclock and set the maximum to 1GHz, or even 800MHz, which would have a decent effect on battery life with no noticeable performance decrease to the average user. I run mine at the stock 1.2GHz and it's fast enough for my needs.
4. I wrote this thread to help people maximize their battery life. It's pretty detailed, you should give it a thorough read, it works well for me, and seems to work for others. I'm at 32hrs unplugged and my battery has gone from 90% to 20%. That's pretty light use, and I have an extended battery, but I still see over a day on my stock battery when I use it. There's a list of my SetCPU profiles there too, that might be helpful in setting up your own.
Thanks for the info on overclocking, I think I have it figured out now...
I will definitely read through your thread, but is it possible that I just had a bad battery? due to a shipping error, when verizon sent me my phone they sent 2 by accident so I just swapped out the battery for the other one and it seems to be doing much better already...
Meaning, does the battery life take a dip when you overclock to 1.5ghz. Does it get any hotter? Is heat an issue at all on this thing? Also, any performance or battery changes from installing the tiamet kernel itself? I'm in the wifi xoom btw.
Strangely enough battery life seems to be about the same. Heat has not been an issue mainly due to having the dual core, however its something you always want to keep an eye on.
Battery life is affected most by the screen. Screen> Network connections > CPU > RAM
There was a thread that someone made a while back about the things that affected battery life the most. If I can find It ill send it your way. After seeing the charts I figured Id try changing some settings.
things I did:
1. Set my max cpu freq to 1.19 min to 488 same for all my cpu tunner profiles ( I wanted to have my phone running the same all the time)
2. Lower'd my screen settings. I didnt need a pocket flashlight EVERYTIME I unlocked my phone.
3. Turned off un needed network connections. Its not hard to turn them back on when you need them.
4. I then looked for things that were running but were not needed by anything ( google maps are used by a few apps so dont disable it haha) I used Uninstaller for root users to get rid of some things.
After all these steps my battery life went WAY up. I have been doing the same thing on my Xoom now and my batt lasts the same at 1.5 as it did at 1.
I still get VERY respectable battery life at 1.5ghz, I can easily get through the day with normal usage. Yesterday night in fact, I left the house with maybe 75% battery life, used my tablet quite a lot throughout the evening(left the house around 9, went to sleep around 1am) and used it all morning basically constantly from 7am to around noon and came home with 9% battery left.
No problems here either. Woke up around 8:30 yesterday and used it all day sometimes pretty heavy. Finally had to plug it in around 6:30. I'm home all day with a broken hip and femur, so I've been putting it through the paces. Running @ 1.5ghz with interactive gov.
Chris
+1 on 1.5GHz having little effect on battery life. I didn't have to change anything else, either.
thats all great to hear! I suppose ill start looking into rooting my wifi xoom tomorrow then. Thanks for the help!
Im very happy with the battery life on this thing. I expected 4 hours max after a few weeks of use/charges. I never thought that it would keep up with anything Apple, Lets face it.. Apple knows how to make stuff run forever. But I was plesently suprised. Xoom +1000
yeah, the battery is good, but i won't know any damage to the cpu when overclocked ?
I wouldn't worry about any CPU damage- too many people have reported success (and no reports of failure).
Anyone else notice with the tiamat kernel that their xoom becomes very unstable overclocked at 1.5 using setCPU? Mine was essentially a soft brick at 1.5 constant rebooting and never able get pass the unlock screen, I had to rewipe with bootloader. I can do 1.2 no problem but don't even want to try going higher.
All of our chips have variations, so the overclock isn't universally guaranteed. That being said, I've been using the Tiamat kernel @1.5GHz since it was released with no problems.
Should have stated that mine is the wifi model, but yea thanks for info.
Here was that post I was looking for on this stuff. http://forum.xda-developers.com/forumdisplay.php?f=946
Hi, my Triumph should be arriving in the mail in just a few days and i was wondering which is the best kernel or ROM and Kernel combination that is best for battery life? I've heard that battery life on the Triumph is not so good. Maybe it's false but i would still like to know.
jerenater10 said:
Hi, my Triumph should be arriving in the mail in just a few days and i was wondering which is the best kernel or ROM and Kernel combination that is best for battery life? I've heard that battery life on the Triumph is not so good. Maybe it's false but i would still like to know.
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I would go with CM7
That's what i was planning on. Does your Triumph give you battery problems?
jerenater10 said:
That's what i was planning on. Does your Triumph give you battery problems?
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The battery life is a lot better now with the latest builds of CM7 and MIUI.
I just use CM7 and leave wifi and bluetooth off, no juice defender or anything like that and I can easily go all day with no charge, typically about a day and a half and my battery is getting low but it really depends on what you are doing like games, wifi, videos and whatnot.
Before I think there was a problem with the battery draining while in idle but things have cleared up since then, There are also third party kernels you can OC and everything, but you can use them to undervolt as well to save some battery if you know what you are doing. over on androidforums there is a lot more chatter about this phone, just so you know.
ketjr81 said:
The battery life is a lot better now with the latest builds of CM7 and MIUI.
I just use CM7 and leave wifi and bluetooth off, no juice defender or anything like that and I can easily go all day with no charge, typically about a day and a half and my battery is getting low but it really depends on what you are doing like games, wifi, videos and whatnot.
Before I think there was a problem with the battery draining while in idle but things have cleared up since then, There are also third party kernels you can OC and everything, but you can use them to undervolt as well to save some battery if you know what you are doing. over on androidforums there is a lot more chatter about this phone, just so you know.
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Click to collapse
Thanks. I got my phone today and im loving it so far. Do you know which of those third party kernels are good for battery life and that i can install over stock? I'm not quite ready to install a ROM yet but i already did the HTC Thunderbolt Build.prop tweak and obviously im rooted.
It's usually not the kernel but whatever governor you have it set to use. Even the stock can get improved performance if you switch the governor to such--”performance”--but I'm probably not the guy to tell you about which one is best.
I also have the silly feeling a lot of misconceptions abound here...in the form of ”I changed this setting and now my device lasts longer..., oh btw I no longer play with it 24/7.” In other words, use drastically impacts battery performance. JuiceDefender is an amazing tool but it won't do you a bit of good if you're testing out your phone's Adobe Flash capabilities regularly.
Sent from my Wildfire S
The Savagezen and interactive (not sure if interactive is on any of the kernels for this phone.) gov isn't that great. At least not in my experience. I had SmartassV2 on my girlfriends phone and it got ~3600 on Antutu benchmark at 1.5 and when I used Savage at 1.5 she got ~1700. The interactive gov made my friends Dinc2 noticably slower. Just switching home screens it lagged to the point it was hard to get into the app to change the gov.
CM7 + TheOC kernel allows adjusting voltage & overclock or underclock. You really should flash a CM7 ROM. Having it just rooted can be dangerous because you're not using a custom recovery to make a backup image, and if something messes up, you don't have a backup ROM to restore. Going to a different ROM forces you to make a backup, then there's a backup to restore if you mess things up.
Governors just tell the CPU how fast to ramp up to a certain frequency, & how long to stay there. It's hard to balance fast ramp up (less lag), and low battery drain (spend more time in the lower frequencies). I like interactive/x, find that smartassv2 spends too much time in the mid frequencies (~500) even for light work. Using the app CPU Spy helps a lot to see what's going on. Also it tells you whether your phone is sleeping properly when screen is off, which is a big factor for battery drain.
Ok I'm kinda new to the whole overclocking thing and I was wondering what are the best settings to use if I wanted to(for instance) save more of my battery. I've done quite a bit of searching but I wanted to make sure that the voltage settings aren't different on different ROMS or phones. I'm on Zeus V3 for the record. Any help would be greatly appreciated! Thanks for your time.
Stable settings definitely vary from phone to phone unfortunately, even if they are the same device. So basically its trial and error, no matter what anybody suggests. Generally, the more you can undervolt and stay stable, the better battery life you will have. You're just going to have to experiment a bit, and just make sure you don't save any settings as boot settings until you know they are stable. I know there is a guide to overclocking somewhere on the forums, I just hate searching on my phone.
Quick tips, start with only moderate undervolting, and crank them down gradually until your phone is at the limit of stable to maximize battery life. Use the 'stability test' app in the market to test for stability. Also, running other benchmarks, such as neocore or quadrant, without freezing is a good test.
Hope I helped!
PS, I've come to the realization that it all doesn't make THAT huge of a difference, and if you switch roms anywhere as frequently as me, its a waste of time. Not to discourage you, just my two cents. If you like to pick a rom and stick with it, then definitely play with it.
*edit* Got on my computer and found the guide for you:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1036020
Obviously, since the guide is based on a captivate, the values you will end up with will be different, but he explains the process of fine tuning very well. Enjoy!
Sent from my SGH-I997 using xda premium
what i do with all my ROMs is put it from 100 mhz (min) - 1600 mhz (max)
and put the governor to "ondemand"
i usually get about 18 hours on battery life a day.
give it a shot doesnt hurt to test it out cause you could always charge your battery haha
I was wondering which CPU settings / governor everyone else is using on their Skyrocket. I'm running the official CM9 nightlies, and am currently using a 1188/384mhz combo with the conservative governor. Battery life is OK, but isn't as great as it was with Sky ICS. I'm wondering if anyone has any suggestion on how to improve it.
Thanks!
i suggest you use the app set cpu. with it you can make profiles that change your cpu level depending on factors like if your screen is off or if your phone is charging. it really helps with battery life
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mhuang.overclocking&hl=en
it all about the $$$$
lets see what it will cost me i have a thrill, a sr , do i need another phone ..yes!! but i also need other things too. like food and gas it all about do i have extra capital to drop an a new toy. my partner at work still has a unrooted g1 it makes me sad.
Try testing this:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1721235
I currently have mine on 192/1512 will see how it goes testing it for a full day but so far its a little less draining than the original (at least for me).