Hello, i charged my poco x3 pro to 80%, accubattery indicated that the battery was at 4.2v and at 4800mah, i restart the bootloader and restart again and now I have 100% battery at 4.2v with 5060mah
Is this that just happened the fault of the pmic? or is it a bug in the bootloader?
on older motorola models, I remember updating the firmware also contained a pmic.img, something like:
fastboot flash pmic_a pmic.img
if something like this existed for the device, would it help?
do I need to charge to 100% every time when i change roms to make sure i have good battery voltage?
i say to avoid establishing a 100% wrong in the battery.
Simply charge your device up to 100% and your problem is solved.
A lot of people worry way too much about the battery. I have always charged my devices to 100% and have never noticed a noticeable drop in capacity over the years. My oldest device still in use has been charging from 1-5% to 100% for 6 years.
Chargin to 100% is not the same as fully charging!
Use the App Battery Log by example: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=kr.hwangti.batterylog&hl=de_CH&gl=US
If you charge from 99% to 100% it takes a few Minutes. from 100% to "Full" takes WAY Longer.
Same if you plug a USB Power Monitor and measure how much current flows trough your charger. Even if the phone says 100% there is still more going in.
So connect it to the charger over night and restart the next morning.
There are also people saying "You need to shut the phone down and charge it then" but imho that makes no difference.
Tsuragi said:
Hello, i charged my poco x3 pro to 80%, accubattery indicated that the battery was at 4.2v and at 4800mah, i restart the bootloader and restart again and now I have 100% battery at 4.2v with 5060mah
Is this that just happened the fault of the pmic? or is it a bug in the bootloader?
on older motorola models, I remember updating the firmware also contained a pmic.img, something like:
fastboot flash pmic_a pmic.img
if something like this existed for the device, would it help?
do I need to charge to 100% every time when i change roms to make sure i have good battery voltage?
i say to avoid establishing a 100% wrong in the battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you get root, use command in terminal:
Code:
su
dumpsys battery
Or with PC adb command line:
Code:
adb shell dumpsys battery
https://c.mi.com/thread-2732945-1-0.html
Good afternoon! My battery behaves exactly the same, after switching to the bootloader and back to the system, the indicators change a lot, it was 85% after the reboot it became 100%, did you manage to find out the reason ?!
Hi, I had the same issue on my device, seems like I fixed it temporary by rebooting the phone to bootloader until the battery percentage didn't changed, and then I flashed miui 13.0.8 via recovery but now I'm getting a problem with the proximity sensor, it mostly happens when I have the device in the pocket, the same happens with the ambient light sensor in both miui and custom ROMs
Related
Hey guys, is anyone else here experiencing the battery level going up when you restart the phone?
If my battery is at 70%, and I restart it, it'll be at 76% or even higher and remain that way for quite a while (remains a consistantly drain, not a single major drain in a short period of time)
This is something that's been happening since I was stock (Retail device from T-mobile store on launch date)
Here's some info:
-S-OFF using Revolutionary, and then later upgraded to 4.0.0.9 via terminal emulator
-Rooted stock (no rom uploaded)
-1900 mha Anker battery
-Battery stats wiped
-UncleSpoon's battery icon mod
even after all that, it'll still do it. So is it just me, or is everyone else experiencing this?
Yes, you have to re-calibrate your battery stats.
No, the CWM menu option to wipe battery stats is not right, for some reason.
Go get this free app: Battery Calibration
Charge your battery all the way up and let it sit charging for a few minutes after you see the light turn green (while turned on and booted up)
After it's been green for a few minutes, open this app and click the big "calibrate" button, and then un-plug it from the charger.
Let it run down until it turns itself off, without plugging it in. This means no usb to the computer, either - and don't turn it off manually.
After it turns itself off from lack of juice, plug it in (wait about 30 seconds) and then turn it back on. If you turn it on too quickly weird things may happen, depends on how depleted the battery is. (usually there is 1 or 2 % left so it's ok)
Leave it plugged in and turned on until fully charged. After that, you can feel free to play with it, but you should run it up and down a few more times without charging in-between. The first one is critical to do this way, though, or you are just wasting your time.
You MUST be rooted, or it will not work. (said for others who may need this info)
Tip to drain battery - screen brightness all the way up, screen to not turn off, and turn the flashlight app on. Leave it sit for a few hours.
Tip to charge quickly while on: Turn all wireless and data communication off, tap power button to turn screen off (keeping phone on)
Good luck, it'll solve the problem though.
I used battery calibration to wipe my battery stats (I did it in recovery on my 3G Slide, so I'm aware of that alternative method)..
I've let my stock battery get to 0% but that was pre-root.
After reading all the charging problems with the CWM, I was a bit afraid to attempt the 0% drain on the new Anker.
Are you running 4.0.0.9, and does it charge fine? I'd hate to deplete an Anker since I have no external battery charger.
RazoE said:
I used battery calibration to wipe my battery stats (I did it in recovery on my 3G Slide, so I'm aware of that alternative method)..
I've let my stock battery get to 0% but that was pre-root.
After reading all the charging problems with the CWM, I was a bit afraid to attempt the 0% drain on the new Anker.
Are you running 4.0.0.9, and does it charge fine? I'd hate to deplete an Anker since I have no external battery charger.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Removing the stats only doesn't calibrate the battery, check the calibration guide in my sig, for a correct method that works for any android device.
Read this too
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1168036
Ace42 said:
Removing the stats only doesn't calibrate the battery, check the calibration guide in my sig, for a correct method that works for any android device.
Read this too
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1168036
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Seriously, that's a good read.
I agree.
What I recommended was better then just wiping battery stats with CWM, but nowhere near as good as what Ace42 linked us up to.
I'd recommend reading those threads and doing that instead, I am more then happy to be corrected and shown a better way.
(FYI - I depleted a stock battery completely, both in CWM 4.0.0.8 and 4.0.0.9 to test the charging issue. You will always be able to charge it in the phone, even if you bring it completely to dead.
The idea that you can't is a myth, and was a concern until it was proven not to be true.)
My Moto Maxx is never going below 15% battery for quite some time.
I was running CM 12.1 before and I am running the CM 13.0 preview now.
The problem now seems much worse.
This could be my battery dying?
Wait its not going below 15% or above 15%? Also, did you flash the ROM with a clean wipe (no dirty flash)?
Another thing to note is that the CM 13.0 Build is a "PREVIEW" which means that there are a TON of bugs in there. I would advise you go back to CM 12.1 for the time being.
It is never going below 15%.
On CM12.1 it also happened.
When it reaches 15% percent, the phone shuts down and needs to be charged.
After sometime charging, it displays the battery as above 15% and I can turn it on again.
Mine had always done that at 5 percent. Here lately it's closer to 7 percent.
I'm on original 5.0.2 and also facing that issue... I've heard onde it's related to the use of non original chargers, or even QI chargers... Never got rid of it, even after a full wipe/factory reset...
I've had this problem too and made a post over in the Droid Turbo forums but no one ever replied..
At least I'm not the only one that has this problem.
Yeah I've always had this issue between 5-8% on my three Turbos. Stock Rom and other flavors. They all shut the phone down around there.
Solved the problem with this app: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.newagetools.batdoc&hl=pt_BR
Now my battery goes down to 1% again, yahoo!!!!
how can that app fix it?? i would think its a placebo effect as i see dificult for an app to read or fix battery info...
maybe it locks out the bad parts (like an old chkdsk on a HD)
anyway i will tryit if i see it tries to go rogue with the Ads it Dies..
Batteries in laptops and phones have a file that keeps track of battery life. They use this to estimate percentage.
Sent from my DROID Turbo using XDA-Developers mobile app
still having this issue
I have the same problem. It started as shutting down at %5, then %7, now it's %15 shuts down.
The same thing on my XT1254. It shuts down near 5%, I will try to charge it with my old i9505 charger, it could be a problem related to TurboCharger.
Hello guys,
My girlfriend's phone had this issue some months ago, what I did in order to fix this issue was:
1) Let the battery drain until phone shutdown. (try to turn on again until you cannot)
2) Fully charge with an original Motorola charger (phone turned off)
3) When it reached 100%, turn on the phone but enter in the fastboot mode and wipe caches
4) Uses the phone normally and let reaches 0%.
Making these steps, the battery back to have a "normal" behaviour
danilobertelli said:
Hello guys,
My girlfriend's phone had this issue some months ago, what I did in order to fix this issue was:
1) Let the battery drain until phone shutdown. (try to turn on again until you cannot)
2) Fully charge with an original Motorola charger (phone turned off)
3) When it reached 100%, turn on the phone but enter in the fastboot mode and wipe caches
4) Uses the phone normally and let reaches 0%.
Making these steps, the battery back to have a "normal" behaviour
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I´ll perform these steps, thank you
Although you see the battery as percentage, the operating system does not see it that way. It uses lower limit voltage of the battery to shut down the device in order to extend battery life. Batteries do not like to get and stay deep discharged (below low level voltage)...if you do this frequently, you will severely hamper your battery's life.
Hey guys, I am so insecure about the battery charging tips for the OnePlus 6. I've seen a lot of posts, some say it does no harm charging to 100% and vice versa. Could anyone please enlighten me? I always charge my phone until 80% and then disconnect the power source.
Thank You
Whatever makes you feel comfortable.
I always charge to 100% but try to avoid the constant use of dash charging. I find that regular fast charging slightly reduces the battery life. Not charging to 100% also reduces the battery life (as the phone will think after a while that 80% is the max it can reach). I want to keep this phone for a long time (got the 8/256 version) and my experience with years of computerized Lithium chargers (for RC stuff) suggests that a. always charge to 100% and b. avoid frequent fast charging, slow(er) charging is better. That lead for me to the max battery life (both capacity and overall life expectancy)
Gadgetguy2005 said:
I always charge to 100% but try to avoid the constant use of dash charging. I find that regular fast charging slightly reduces the battery life. Not charging to 100% also reduces the battery life (as the phone will think after a while that 80% is the max it can reach). I want to keep this phone for a long time (got the 8/256 version) and my experience with years of computerized Lithium chargers (for RC stuff) suggests that a. always charge to 100% and b. avoid frequent fast charging, slow(er) charging is better. That lead for me to the max battery life (both capacity and overall life expectancy)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not charging to 100% will NOT reduce battery life as much as charging to 100%. You're probably thinking of Lithium-Polymer batteries and not Lithium-Ion batteries which this phone uses.
isaacchook said:
Hey guys, I am so insecure about the battery charging tips for the OnePlus 6. I've seen a lot of posts, some say it does no harm charging to 100% and vice versa. Could anyone please enlighten me? I always charge my phone until 80% and then disconnect the power source.
Thank You
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ignore all the crap. Just use your phone comfortably as that's how the experience should be. By the time your battery degrades, you'll probably be looking to replace it anyway.
j0nas_ said:
Not charging to 100% will NOT reduce battery life as much as charging to 100%. You're probably thinking of Lithium-Polymer batteries and not Lithium-Ion batteries which this phone uses.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You may be right. I am not sure. What I do know is that I sold my last three phones after 12-18 months of use and using my method their batteries had the exact same capacity than the day I got them. My wife is charging her phone whenever she feels like it (most of the time she charges to less than 100%) and after less than a year the capacity is reduced.
So I am not sure if I do it right (they way it "should be done") but it works for me.
isaacchook said:
Hey guys, I am so insecure about the battery charging tips for the OnePlus 6. I've seen a lot of posts, some say it does no harm charging to 100% and vice versa. Could anyone please enlighten me? I always charge my phone until 80% and then disconnect the power source.
Thank You
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's 2018 battery technology has changed. Charging it to 100% is the same amount of wear as having to charge to 80% more often 1 cycle on a lithium ion battery is how many times it is charged to 100% total. So a charge from 25% to 100% is .75 of a cycle then if you run it down to 75% and charge the 25% back to 100 that is 1 total cycle. It doesn't matter how many times you go to 100% or how many times you plug it in. And dash charge has built in protection against overcharging and it also slows charging when it nears full capacity. So Dash charging isn't any more wear than a slow charger.
---------- Post added at 08:38 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:36 PM ----------
j0nas_ said:
Not charging to 100% will NOT reduce battery life as much as charging to 100%. You're probably thinking of Lithium-Polymer batteries and not Lithium-Ion batteries which this phone uses.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It won't reduce the battery life and neither will just going to 100%
See https://batteryuniversity.com/index.php/learn/article/how_to_prolong_lithium_based_batteries
BTW.. my battery is often hot, running at 30-31c. What Temperature is your battery at when not doing much?
as you want
Just bear in mind your battery will not have the same performance after 2 years of use.
just charge it up to the level you want, then invest in a $30 replacement battery.
Gadgetguy2005 said:
I always charge to 100% but try to avoid the constant use of dash charging. I find that regular fast charging slightly reduces the battery life. Not charging to 100% also reduces the battery life (as the phone will think after a while that 80% is the max it can reach). I want to keep this phone for a long time (got the 8/256 version) and my experience with years of computerized Lithium chargers (for RC stuff) suggests that a. always charge to 100% and b. avoid frequent fast charging, slow(er) charging is better. That lead for me to the max battery life (both capacity and overall life expectancy)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How do you not do dash charging if all you got is the charger that came with the phone? Is there a way to actually tell it how to charge the battery?
Static-xy said:
How do you not do dash charging if all you got is the charger that came with the phone? Is there a way to actually tell it how to charge the battery?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have about a half dozen phone chargers - I just use one that is not dash
i emailed oneplus and they told me a new battery after warranty cost only 33 euro including repair and shipping so now that i know this i dont really care about my battery health and will change it out around 2 years
I'm changing phones every year. By this time battery will be fine, so I don't really care how to charge it. My way is to charge it every night with USB cable connected to pc (slow as f*ck, 80% takes about 3 or 4 hrs, but sleeping takes6-8hrs anyway - reason for that is stupid I don't have power socket close to my bed ) - in case I need juice fast - two oneplus chargers somewhere at home.
OnePlus 6 @ Tapatalk
isaacchook said:
Hey guys, I am so insecure about the battery charging tips for the OnePlus 6. I've seen a lot of posts, some say it does no harm charging to 100% and vice versa. Could anyone please enlighten me? I always charge my phone until 80% and then disconnect the power source.
Thank You
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You should charge your phone to 100% and if you can leave it on a charger even after that, even better
I'm actually a developer and have read the code so please read on for the explanation
If you have had a phone with android M or lower you might be familiar with the "android is starting/upgrading" screen where it showed "optimising app x of total"
So, Google removed that code in N right? Why is this a bother
Actually wrong, that code was simply relocated
The code was moved from the boot process to when the device was charging (that is, plugged in), full charged (that is, 100%) and idle (idle = device is not physically moving)
Once this condition is satisfied, the code behind the "android is starting" screen runs in the background and starts optimising apps
In other words, you have to keep your phone connected to a charger in order to finish this process
Which is why it is a good idea to charge overnight
What if you don't allow this to happen?
Ever heard of the classic "android system using a lot of battery" issue? You basically force your system to use the JIT compiler which uses a lot of battery and android system comes to the top as a result
In other words if you don't leave your device on a charger long enough, your battery life will suffer anyway
Wiping cache is also a pretty bad idea
So, leave your phone on a charger without worries. Google just made the "android is starting" code a lot more convenient for the user but you have to allow your phone to run that code otherwise it's meaningless
Protip: some root users suggest running "cmd package bg-dexopt-job" in a terminal emulator app as root forces the optimisation to happen. I haven't personally tried it but it won't cause any damage to your phone that's for sure
That doesn't mean you should go try it unless you are aware of what you're doing either
anupritaisno1 said:
You should charge your phone to 100% and if you can leave it on a charger even after that, even better
I'm actually a developer and have read the code so please read on for the explanation
If you have had a phone with android M or lower you might be familiar with the "android is starting/upgrading" screen where it showed "optimising app x of total"
So, Google removed that code in N right? Why is this a bother
Actually wrong, that code was simply relocated
The code was moved from the boot process to when the device was charging (that is, plugged in), full charged (that is, 100%) and idle (idle = device is not physically moving)
Once this condition is satisfied, the code behind the "android is starting" screen runs in the background and starts optimising apps
In other words, you have to keep your phone connected to a charger in order to finish this process
Which is why it is a good idea to charge overnight
What if you don't allow this to happen?
Ever heard of the classic "android system using a lot of battery" issue? You basically force your system to use the JIT compiler which uses a lot of battery and android system comes to the top as a result
In other words if you don't leave your device on a charger long enough, your battery life will suffer anyway
Wiping cache is also a pretty bad idea
So, leave your phone on a charger without worries. Google just made the "android is starting" code a lot more convenient for the user but you have to allow your phone to run that code otherwise it's meaningless
Protip: some root users suggest running "cmd package bg-dexopt-job" in a terminal emulator app as root forces the optimisation to happen. I haven't personally tried it but it won't cause any damage to your phone that's for sure
That doesn't mean you should go try it unless you are aware of what you're doing either
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you. Understood!
anupritaisno1 said:
You should charge your phone to 100% and if you can leave it on a charger even after that, even better
I'm actually a developer and have read the code so please read on for the explanation
If you have had a phone with android M or lower you might be familiar with the "android is starting/upgrading" screen where it showed "optimising app x of total"
So, Google removed that code in N right? Why is this a bother
Actually wrong, that code was simply relocated
The code was moved from the boot process to when the device was charging (that is, plugged in), full charged (that is, 100%) and idle (idle = device is not physically moving)
Once this condition is satisfied, the code behind the "android is starting" screen runs in the background and starts optimising apps
In other words, you have to keep your phone connected to a charger in order to finish this process
Which is why it is a good idea to charge overnight
What if you don't allow this to happen?
Ever heard of the classic "android system using a lot of battery" issue? You basically force your system to use the JIT compiler which uses a lot of battery and android system comes to the top as a result
In other words if you don't leave your device on a charger long enough, your battery life will suffer anyway
Wiping cache is also a pretty bad idea
So, leave your phone on a charger without worries. Google just made the "android is starting" code a lot more convenient for the user but you have to allow your phone to run that code otherwise it's meaningless
Protip: some root users suggest running "cmd package bg-dexopt-job" in a terminal emulator app as root forces the optimisation to happen. I haven't personally tried it but it won't cause any damage to your phone that's for sure
That doesn't mean you should go try it unless you are aware of what you're doing either
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nice, now that's some interesting reading, thanks for the info, didn't know that !
anupritaisno1 said:
You should charge your phone to 100% and if you can leave it on a charger even after that, even better
I'm actually a developer and have read the code so please read on for the explanation
If you have had a phone with android M or lower you might be familiar with the "android is starting/upgrading" screen where it showed "optimising app x of total"
So, Google removed that code in N right? Why is this a bother
Actually wrong, that code was simply relocated
The code was moved from the boot process to when the device was charging (that is, plugged in), full charged (that is, 100%) and idle (idle = device is not physically moving)
Once this condition is satisfied, the code behind the "android is starting" screen runs in the background and starts optimising apps
In other words, you have to keep your phone connected to a charger in order to finish this process
Which is why it is a good idea to charge overnight
What if you don't allow this to happen?
Ever heard of the classic "android system using a lot of battery" issue? You basically force your system to use the JIT compiler which uses a lot of battery and android system comes to the top as a result
In other words if you don't leave your device on a charger long enough, your battery life will suffer anyway
Wiping cache is also a pretty bad idea
So, leave your phone on a charger without worries. Google just made the "android is starting" code a lot more convenient for the user but you have to allow your phone to run that code otherwise it's meaningless
Protip: some root users suggest running "cmd package bg-dexopt-job" in a terminal emulator app as root forces the optimisation to happen. I haven't personally tried it but it won't cause any damage to your phone that's for sure
That doesn't mean you should go try it unless you are aware of what you're doing either
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What if I charge for a prolonged time but the battery doesn't reach 100%? I.e. if I plug it into my PC (very slow charging) and leave it for a few hours?
Hello guys,i bought poco f2 pro global a week ago.My problem is the follow:
When i put my phone for charging the process go to 89% and freeze there.if i disconnect and connect again the charger then its make it 100%!?u can wait 5 h but no more than 89%.
Its very anoyning ,coz when i got to bed i put the phone on charge and at the morning i get it on 89%.
Factory reset didn't solve it.Any ideas?thx
Try draining the battery to 0%, then let it charge uninterrupted and see if that helps..
Hi if you've seen some of my posts. I got a Poco F2 Pro and on the second day it started showing 1% battery charge all the time. As well as an overheating issue and would close the camera after 5 seconds. Not sure what I did other than turned it off and let it charge a few times. For no known reason it started working fine. That was a week ago, so haven't had the problem occur since.
I'd check while the phone is off what the battery level shows as. If it still shows 89% it might be more serious, otherwise could be a bug
Fast78i said:
Hello guys,i bought poco f2 pro global a week ago.My problem is the follow:
When i put my phone for charging the process go to 89% and freeze there.if i disconnect and connect again the charger then its make it 100%!?u can wait 5 h but no more than 89%.
Its very anoyning ,coz when i got to bed i put the phone on charge and at the morning i get it on 89%.
Factory reset didn't solve it.Any ideas?thx
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ITs not uncommon a miss-calibrated battery. Make a full discharge, wait all the time until your phone is power off. Once completely drained, try (without charger) power on some times, to be completely sure is totally death. Now, make a complete Full cicle. This time, the phone should reach 100%
Thank you all for the suggestions. I discharged the battery to 0 %,then plug it again and the result was 92%.So no luck..I really hope that this is software bug and will be fixed with miui 12 .Will be very unlucky if my unit is defective.the phone is a week old .what do you think,if i download the present software and flash it , maybe that's will help?
Theliels said:
ITs not uncommon a miss-calibrated battery. Make a full discharge, wait all the time until your phone is power off. Once completely drained, try (without charger) power on some times, to be completely sure is totally death. Now, make a complete Full cicle. This time, the phone should reach 100%
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This so called "calibration of the battery" is total BS.
At every boot with at least the latest 4 Android versions it will "calibrate" itself and nothing one can do about it to "trigger calibration" or that kind of stuff.
When the battery won't charge beyond 89% something else is causing it, faulty battery or software related.
Did you unlock your device or is it still locked?
When locked try to manually download the whole rom new from the update menu and reflash it.
Then check if it charges correct of not.
Snah001 said:
This so called "calibration of the battery" is total BS.
At every boot with at least the latest 4 Android versions it will "calibrate" itself and nothing one can do about it to "trigger calibration" or that kind of stuff.
When the battery won't charge beyond 89% something else is causing it, faulty battery or software related.
Did you unlock your device or is it still locked?
When locked try to manually download the whole rom new from the update menu and reflash it.
Then check if it charges correct of not.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Some devices that I have seen with the same behavior would not think the same as you, obviously with a healthy battery. A bad battery can behave abnormally too, but I doubt that is the case.
And yes, it can be called a ... "calibration", although nothing to do with the supposed magic cures of deleting the battery statistics file. What happens is not that % battery is lost or that the battery is not fully charged. In fact, if the battery is fully charged, it is the count that fails. This is perfectly evident, when the phone reaches 1% it stays in that% much longer than usual, because the phone really did not have 78% (for example) and is not full drained yet. Once the battery is completely drained, the margins are recalculated correctly again. It is not a bad battery that is not fully charged, it is fully charged, what happens is that the battery reports incorrect data due to a "calibration" mismatch.
In any case, the partner will be able to tell us perfectly if it worked, or not . I repeat, there are many phones that I have seen with this behavior and many that have returned to their being. It is clear that if the battery is bad it will continue to be bad. It has happened to me in the past with a pair of Xiaomi phones, the last one a Redmi 6, is not uncommon
Snah001 said:
This so called "calibration of the battery" is total BS.
At every boot with at least the latest 4 Android versions it will "calibrate" itself and nothing one can do about it to "trigger calibration" or that kind of stuff.
When the battery won't charge beyond 89% something else is causing it, faulty battery or software related.
Did you unlock your device or is it still locked?
When locked try to manually download the whole rom new from the update menu and reflash it.
Then check if it charges correct of not.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi
Sorry , i don't have anything intelligent to say about battery calibration (except that if the battery sound faulty, take advantage of the phone warranty while you can!)
So... I just saw @Snah001 had a F2 pro and a Mi 9T pro... Could you please give us your quick opinion and advice here ? https://forum.xda-developers.com/poco-f2-pro/help/poco-f2-pro-t4137287
Thanks so much
Cheers !
Hello, i have a problem with my phone. Recently i changed my battery to a new one, probably not original, even though it has oneplus branding on it. And ever since battery indication on the phone making no sense, once it's fully charged, phone shows that percentage falls to 0 very quickly (100 to 1 in ~3-4 hours screen off time), but once it hits 1%, it stays like that for at least 6-7 hours with battery saver turned off and quite heavy usage of phone, like i imagine it should with a new battery. Also, once it hits that 1%, AIDA64 shows about 2500-2700mah under "charge counter" section. Is this a software issue or its related to the battery itself? I tried to completely drain it until phone shut off and charged fully after that, and still the same problem.
Please i need help
ellanyx said:
Please i need help
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So noone helps me, thanks
Here you go
For non rooted phones the battery calibration is done via cycle livesnof the battert:
1. Let your phone die
2. Charge it while powered down to 100%
3. Turn it on charge to 100%
4. Let it in charge for 20min even when 100%
5. Turn phone off charge to 100%
6. Go to recovery and clear cache
7. Charge the phone in power off to 100%
8. Turn it in repeat steps from 3. To 7.
Do this in 3life cycles, so once u do step 7. Twice use your phone normal, and repeat 3 times.
If it didn't help there is a recovery tool. It will wipe your phone and install new original OOS with new batterystats file.
More info
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My case:
Change battery, but however i do, at +- 13% starts going down until 0 very fast and dies...
Already calibrated, clean cache.....nothing works.
Since i get almost 6Hours SOC, i really don`t care....but its stupid.
VOOC works perfectly well....
Only diference for the original, is that this new one Says V1, and the original is V2....
Have to try erase rom next time.....who nows....