It seems I have the same prob with the mda pro shutting down at a set battery level.
I followed the recommendations on the other threads:
<quote>
1. Fully charge the device with the "wall charger" not USB.
2. Put device into bootloader mode (backlight+power+reset) and run until device goes dead.
3. Charge the device completely with the “wall charger” not USB again.
4. Set screen brightness to MAX and turn off ALL power saving features.
5. Unplug the device from charger and run until completely dead again.
6. Repeat step 3, then restore custom screen brightness and power saving features.
7. Finished.</quote>
I did the drain method above about 5 times, and let it charge up for about 12+ hours each time to full.
I also flashed back to official T-Mobile UK Rom and this didn't make much difference.
Now my battery drains normally if the MDA pro is left idle- it goes from 100% all the way until 30%.
But as soon as I use a battery intensive task, such as connect to the internet, put the screen brightness up to full... it again just shuts down as before.
The only thing i haven't tried is getting a new battery... then I'm calling T-Mobile to get it replaced.
Just thought I'd add a clue to help solve this weird problem.
I had a similar problem with my jasjar - only thing that helped was a new battery. I'm not more cautious of ensuring I fully drain the battery regularly, and it seems to be working well...
Related
Hi,
I noticed the following problem on my Diamond 2:
If I turn off the phone for night charge it never shows green in the morning.
The only way to see that amazing green light is to charge the phone whent it is turned on.
Of course I applied the latest hotfix - no use for the off mode charging. And of course I wrote to htc - will not waste your time repeating their suggestions.
And I am not happy with my phone battery life - it hardly endures one working day - lets say - 10 hours...
ROM - Official, yet.
orlean said:
Hi,
I noticed the following problem on my Diamond 2:
If I turn off the phone for night charge it never shows green in the morning.
The only way to see that amazing green light is to charge the phone whent it is turned on.
Of course I applied the latest hotfix - no use for the off mode charging. And of course I wrote to htc - will not waste your time repeating their suggestions.
And I am not happy with my phone battery life - it hardly endures one working day - lets say - 10 hours...
ROM - Official, yet.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I never turn my phone off so the green light problem never arises. However I will check and see if occurs.
As for battery life, you will need to give it a few weeks of use before you see maximum battery life.
Make sure you don't continually discharge the battery (better still keep it charging whenever you can) and you should see improvement over time.
Unlocking and replaceing the ROM can also have a significant effect on battery performance as does the Radio version in use. That's going to need some work on your part but the improvements are there to be had.
Some apps that are in common use are also power hungry and can cause a significant drain on power.
And if you install your apps to mem card then again that uses more power than installs to phone storage memory.
You can also turn off any unused background apps and processes.
Only turn on Bluetooth and WiFi when needed.
All these things help.
Personally I carry a spare standard battery with me at all times and strangely since I bought it I haven't needed to us it. The placebo battery effect?
Thanks for the answer.
About the battery usage conseption:
You suggest that I plug my phone each time when possible?
I thought that as the battery has XX recharges according to the specifications it is not good to charge each time whenever you got AC or USB access
I started to follow your recommendation anyway.
For example however - my laptop is never (when possible) with battery in it. I use the battery only when necessary, becasue in the user manual is written that has 300 cycles of recharging. And I always wait until completely discharged before charging. That is how I began treating the Dimond, too.
orlean said:
Thanks for the answer.
About the battery usage conseption:
You suggest that I plug my phone each time when possible?
I thought that as the battery has XX recharges according to the specifications it is not good to charge each time whenever you got AC or USB access
I started to follow your recommendation anyway.
For example however - my laptop is never (when possible) with battery in it. I use the battery only when necessary, becasue in the user manual is written that has 300 cycles of recharging. And I always wait until completely discharged before charging. That is how I began treating the Dimond, too.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
With Lithium Ion batteries the "quoted" numbers of "rechage" is is an approximate equivalent to give some idea of life expectacy.
It's a hangover from the old NiCad battery days and is not really very helpful when applied to Lithium Ion usage.
The most important aspect of LIon is it's ability to hold it's voltge at max current for longer than other technology. It does this best when well charged and maintained at near max as possible as often as possible. The downside is it's life expectancy which does deteriorate over time.
If you require max daily useage then max charging whenever possible will give you this and you will have to accept that the battery will at some point loose it's charge retaining capabilities and will have to be replaced.
For most of us that's the most important thing.
This is not a battery issue, I believe that this is a software one.
I noticed this morning, having left my phone on charge, and 'off', all night, that the indicator light was still red. When I switched on the phone, it showed only 80% charged.
Having seen this before, I carried out a soft reset, the battery indicator then showed fully charged.
So the battery is charging fully, but the battery charge indicator is showing less than that.
So, my wife has a STOCK MyTouch 4g (2.3.4) that has worked well for a long time. She is a VERY light user, but, when she needs it, she NEEDS it
Recently, every time she has pulled it out of her purse, the battery has been dead. I have tried changing batteries, a new one, and one from my personal backup MyTouch 4g (also 2.3.4). Regardless of the battery and even with the phone turned OFF, the battery will go dead in a couple of hours. How can the battery drain when the phone is off?
What am I missing?
I did a factory reset on the phone and set it back up again. This didn't seem to help. I checked the features using the battery (settings -> about phone -> battery -> battery use) and it appears that the Cell Standby is still running even with the phone turned off.
Any thoughts?
Thank you!
Follow up
As a follow up:
1) I took a fully charged and known good battery (from my phone where it works perfectly well) and left it OUT of the problem phone over night;
2) the problem phone was without any battery at all overnight, so, it was OFF
3) I then checked the battery in my phone and it was still at 100%
4) I then put this battery into the problem phone and did NOT turn the phone on.
5) 10 hours later, I tried to turn on the problem phone. It would NOT turn on.
6) I pulled the battery and checked it. It was DEAD.
So, even when turned OFF, the problem phone is causing a drain on the battery.
Where should I start looking? Any ideas? Bad/damaged firmware? Should I root and flash this phone?
TIA
jlsatt4 said:
As a follow up:
1) I took a fully charged and known good battery (from my phone where it works perfectly well) and left it OUT of the problem phone over night;
2) the problem phone was without any battery at all overnight, so, it was OFF
3) I then checked the battery in my phone and it was still at 100%
4) I then put this battery into the problem phone and did NOT turn the phone on.
5) 10 hours later, I tried to turn on the problem phone. It would NOT turn on.
6) I pulled the battery and checked it. It was DEAD.
So, even when turned OFF, the problem phone is causing a drain on the battery.
Where should I start looking? Any ideas? Bad/damaged firmware? Should I root and flash this phone?
TIA
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You could root and flash a new rom. But from the looks of it i think its a hardware issue. Maybe charging system issue.
Because a short circuit in the charging system or battery connectors could yield such a problem
Is your mytouch 4g made in taiwan?
Hello all,
Recently i've been noticing that my GS4 battery is draining too fast, i think that it's time to recalibrate it. Since my phone is not rooted, i have searched for guides on how to recalibrate the battery.. and i found this one:
To calibrate your Android phone battery correctly:
1-First drain your battery down. Let the device switch itself off naturally. You will know if it is completely dead because it won’t switch on again.
2-Place the phone ion charge while it is turned off. Allow it to charge for at the very least 2 hours, if not 4, until the battery meter reads 100%
3-Switch on the phone while the charge is still connected to it. When your phone is on the home screen, leave the charger connected for a further 2 minutes before removing it.
4-Repeat the above steps twice more, always allowing the phone to completely discharge first.
The reason for leaving your charger connected is to allow the configuration files to update with the new, correct charge values. Some of the best ways to avoid battery usage is to make sure all connections are turned off when they are not in use – Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS etc. Make sure your screen locks down in under a minute when not in use and that your screen is not set too bright
My question is.. is it safe to turn on the phone while it is charging? is it safe to turn on the phone when it is plugged to a charger while it is off?
Thank you in advance.
Gab! said:
Hello all,
Recently i've been noticing that my GS4 battery is draining too fast, i think that it's time to recalibrate it. Since my phone is not rooted, i have searched for guides on how to recalibrate the battery.. and i found this one:
To calibrate your Android phone battery correctly:
1-First drain your battery down. Let the device switch itself off naturally. You will know if it is completely dead because it won’t switch on again.
2-Place the phone ion charge while it is turned off. Allow it to charge for at the very least 2 hours, if not 4, until the battery meter reads 100%
3-Switch on the phone while the charge is still connected to it. When your phone is on the home screen, leave the charger connected for a further 2 minutes before removing it.
4-Repeat the above steps twice more, always allowing the phone to completely discharge first.
The reason for leaving your charger connected is to allow the configuration files to update with the new, correct charge values. Some of the best ways to avoid battery usage is to make sure all connections are turned off when they are not in use – Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS etc. Make sure your screen locks down in under a minute when not in use and that your screen is not set too bright
My question is.. is it safe to turn on the phone while it is charging? is it safe to turn on the phone when it is plugged to a charger while it is off?
Thank you in advance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi
Yes and yes
BTW I do not believe to much in those battery calibration methods , as far as i know a new file is generated each time you switch off and back on
You can charge your phone in any status, on, off, flight mode, playing games etc.It will only affect your charging speed.
As for calibration - I have heard about such thing and try to discharge my battery till some 1-3% and full charge at least once a month. Don't know if this helps. I think also important is the environment temperature and how you discharge the last percent.My suggestion is that last percent must be discharged as slow as possible - with screen locked let it die natural way, with normal usage, very slowly. I and other usually switch all possible things to drain battery faster at this stage. That seems wrong on my personal opinion.
Gab! said:
Hello all,
Recently i've been noticing that my GS4 battery is draining too fast, i think that it's time to recalibrate it. Since my phone is not rooted, i have searched for guides on how to recalibrate the battery.. and i found this one:
To calibrate your Android phone battery correctly:
1-First drain your battery down. Let the device switch itself off naturally. You will know if it is completely dead because it won’t switch on again.
2-Place the phone ion charge while it is turned off. Allow it to charge for at the very least 2 hours, if not 4, until the battery meter reads 100%
3-Switch on the phone while the charge is still connected to it. When your phone is on the home screen, leave the charger connected for a further 2 minutes before removing it.
4-Repeat the above steps twice more, always allowing the phone to completely discharge first.
The reason for leaving your charger connected is to allow the configuration files to update with the new, correct charge values. Some of the best ways to avoid battery usage is to make sure all connections are turned off when they are not in use – Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS etc. Make sure your screen locks down in under a minute when not in use and that your screen is not set too bright
My question is.. is it safe to turn on the phone while it is charging? is it safe to turn on the phone when it is plugged to a charger while it is off?
Thank you in advance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
NO NO NO
Draining your battery is BAD!!! Draining it below 0 is the dumbest thing you can do. That damages your battery. Whoever made that "guide" has absolutely no understanding about his battery.
Calibrating is easy.
Charge to 100%. Pull your battery. Put battery back in. Charge again until full when powered off. Volia calibrated.
Though it will probably not help. My guess is that you just need a new battery (if it's no software problem).
Hi there, I currently have a Samsung Note 4 running CM12.1 and in the past two days the phone has randomly "crashed" late afternoon/night (5.30pm today and 8.40pm last night). My phone performs fine throughout the day and then I'll notice that the screen doesn't wake up if I press the home button like normal. If I then power the phone on it boots up and instantly powers off after booting since it has "0%" battery. Both times the phone had plenty of charge in it, around 30-50%. Has anyone else encountered this before?
I have some screenshots but I am unable to post the Imgur links in my post because of my post count. Any other way I can post them?
Specs:
SM-N910F
CM 12.1-20151022-NIGHTLY-trltexx
Android 5.1.1
I can provide more specs if you wish.
Buy another battery, if another battery is OK then your old battery is broken
I had a similar issue where it would, after a clean software reset, shut down unexpectedly at 20% or so - then subsequently at 40%, 60%, and further 20 percent increments when I'd let it shut down of it's own accord. RMA'd it under warranty, pretty pleased with the service I got. No software fix for it.
RBrNx said:
Hi there, I currently have a Samsung Note 4 running CM12.1 and in the past two days the phone has randomly "crashed" late afternoon/night (5.30pm today and 8.40pm last night). My phone performs fine throughout the day and then I'll notice that the screen doesn't wake up if I press the home button like normal. If I then power the phone on it boots up and instantly powers off after booting since it has "0%" battery. Both times the phone had plenty of charge in it, around 30-50%. Has anyone else encountered this before?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Recalibrate your battery. I had this issue, too, after flashing another ROM. My Note 4 would shut down and die at ~50%.
1. Download Battery Calibration from Google Play
2. Fully charge your phone. By "fully" I mean not only to 100% (which, in your case, will be something like 50% effective charge), but until your LED has turned green. For good measure, just turn your phone off and let it charge overnight.
3. Run Battery Calibration, and tap the big button that says "Battery Calibration"
4. That's it.
You should do this every time you flash a new ROM, because there's always a chance your battery gets miscalibrated during the process.
Thank you very much for your help everyone, I'll try the Battery Calibration and let you know if it fixes it!
So for the past few weeks my battery has been draining faster than the speed of light. It will get to anywhere between 30 - 70% (usually about 56%) and it will just turn off. Like straight to dead, no powering down.
When I try to turn it on again I get a white screen with a picture of an empty battery.
If I plug it is, I get the charging screen showing a battery percentage the same as it was when it crashed.
I've done a factory reset, wiped the cache, tried it with no third-party apps, all sorts. But it's still the same. I'm having to charge it 4 or 5 times a day and it's only getting about 30 mins of usage before it dies.
It tends to happen the most with the camera or Snapchat but I don't think it's related to those as it will also do it in other apps and even the lockscreen.
Is it time to call it quits and send it to the phone shop in the sky?!
I had this weird problem with my battery too! MXPE on stock nougat , as soon as I charged my phone to 100% and plug out it used to drop below 80 in 2 minutes ! and then when the percentage hit ~20% It used to turn off showing that white screen you mentioned, however when I plugged the phone in it would start charging at ~15% ! so I tried recalibrating my battery and it is surprisingly effective !
here is the method:
1) drain your phone battery until it shuts down.
2)power it on again and you will see that white battery low picture. plug the charger for 3 or more seconds and out, it will boot up again but as soon as the Rom boots up the phone will die again . do it multiple times.
3)charge the phone while it is off until 100%. turn it on and drain the battery as fast as possible (max brightness, volume, streaming videos on cellular data and running benchmarks will do ) till the phone dies again.
4) repeat (2)
5) charge the phone up to 100% while it is off ! and there you go your battery is recalibrated and good to go!
Obviously, this will shorten the batteries lifespan but since I believe you have it for a long time It won't be an important matter!
Thank you. I think I'm going to bite the bullet and treat myself to the new OnePlus 5T when it goes on sale tomorrow but I will try your advice as this will be a good backup phone to keep for emergencies as it's not worth much to sell on or trade in.
Try removing the back with a heatgun and unplugg and plug de battery.
I'm having the exact same issue and tried the same solutions, no help. It's dying now after a couple minutes. I'm carrying around a battery pack.
Seems to me my troubles started after updating to Nougat. You?