[Q] dead battery help! - HD2 General

Hi guys, in need of a bit of help here.
right, having not realised what i had done, i pulled the battery whilst on charge before i pulled the charger. my current situation is that now the phone is stuck on the loading bit. the version of android i have comes up with "droid" then goes to a red eye like thingy whilst loading. it keeps looping that screen over and over.
after a quick search i saw my problem could have been bent battery connector pins, but alas they are fine.
after another search i reasised what i had done (or at least what i think i have done). would i be right in thinking that the battery now does not have enough power to boot android and get to a point where it can charge the battery?
having seen the threads on here about using a USB lead to manually charge the battery i am at my wits end. i tried the USB fix and it didnt work.
i have now found this thread: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=978101
and am currently attempting to charge my phone using the "USB mass storage" setting on MAGLDR (v1.13 btw) but the bit that im wondering is the bit that says "you will NOT get a charging indicator in this mode"
does any one know for sure whether this is true? i am hoping that the thread is correct my only doubt has arisen due to the fact that the thread was based on a HD2 running WP7.
thanks in advance for any help
Ben

Try to measure voltage at pin +/- on battery. If there is more than 3,6V battery is able to boot up the phone if voltage is belov 3V it's bad. If You have an adjustable (for laboratory use) voltage source, connect it to pins of phone vhere normally must be connected +/- leads of battery (carefully check polarity), give it 3,7V and try to load the bootloaderon the phone (hold Vol.Down butt and power button together). If it doesn't work, you may have ruined the bootloader.

I read some of the thread you linked. There is something that I think the OP of that thread and a whole lot of people using MAGLDR do not understand. I qoute this straight from the OP of the MAGLDR thread.
*Fixed Power-Off-Cable-Plug-Stop. Phone now detects this situation and reboots. Battery controller inside LEO needs runtime control during charge, it implemented in OS.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You have to have a functional OS installed for you to even be able to charge your battery using your HD2 when you have MAGLDR installed on your HD2. The simple fact that the OP of that thred has a WP7 ROM installed on their HD2 is the only reason option #4 USB Mass Stg even will slightly charge the battery, if it was no ROM on the phone, just MAGLDR, it will not charge at all just as when you are in bootloader and the USB connected it will not charge no matter if you have a ROM on the phone or not. I personally think the slight charge you get by using option #4 USB Mass Stg in MAGLDR is purely accidental and only a small amount of voltage as it takes so long to get any kind of substantial charge. Also if you have a completly dead battery you can not even boot into MAGLDR to try to charge using opyion #4 of MAGLDR.
I am a electrician and have been for a little over 15 years and in my oppinion if you have a dead battery and you are running Android from NAND or a WP7 ROM using MAGLDR. Your best bet is to use.
A: A external charging cradle.
B: Another HD2 that is running Win Mo.
C: Using a modified USN cable to get enough charge to boot into your ROM
Note: The last option I listed is only in a emergency situation as I do not advice you use this as a everyday charging technic. Also only long enough to boot your phone so you can finish charging normally. If you do use this option maintain a constant watch of the battery to insure it does not start to become warm, and only use your wall charger when using this method. The voltage is very low that the wall charger sends though the witres so there is no danger of shock.

Do You mean that when HD2 is POWER OFF state it doesn't charge battery? Even from wall charger? Mine does charging pretty well when turned OFF...
All phones I repaired or dizassembled had hardware automatic for charging battery, not depending of ROM or OS at all, it must have only 5V at charger inlet (USB or dedicated charger port i.e. for NOKIA), I doubt if HTC gone other way that all other developers
C: Using a modified USN cable to get enough charge to boot into your ROM
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can You tell me more about this cable? Any schematics?

pvii said:
Do You mean that when HD2 is POWER OFF state it doesn't charge battery? Even from wall charger? Mine does charging pretty well when turned OFF...
All phones I repaired or dizassembled had hardware automatic for charging battery, not depending of ROM or OS at all, it must have only 5V at charger inlet (USB or dedicated charger port i.e. for NOKIA), I doubt if HTC gone other way that all other developers
Can You tell me more about this cable? Any schematics?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes a HD2 can charge in a powered off state if you are still running a Windows Mobile ROM on it. If you have flashed MAGLDR to your HD2 you will not be able to charge your HD2 until you flash a Android or WP7 ROM to it as the charging is to quote the OP of the MAGLDR thread again, "Battery controller inside LEO needs runtime control during charge, it implemented in OS."
As for as a schematic no real need for a schematic. You take and cut the end off of a USB cable, the end you leave on needs to bt a standard USB male end. Next you strip back the outer insulation and the inner foil layer, then strip a little off the ends of the black and red wires. Finally connect the red wire to the positive terminal of the battery (marked on the battery), and connect the black wire to the negative terminal on the battery (marked on battery) and plug the USB male end of the cable into your wall charger, not any other power source. Yopui can use some tape to keep the ends connected to the battery.

T-Macgnolia said:
As for as a schematic no real need for a schematic. You take and cut the end off of a USB cable, the end you leave on needs to bt a standard USB male end. Next you strip back the outer insulation and the inner foil layer, then strip a little off the ends of the black and red wires. Finally connect the red wire to the positive terminal of the battery (marked on the battery), and connect the black wire to the negative terminal on the battery (marked on battery) and plug the USB male end of the cable into your wall charger, not any other power source. Yopui can use some tape to keep the ends connected to the battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You tried this even one time???
NEVER DO THAT, YOU WILL RUIN YOUR Li-ION BATTERY!!!!
Li-ION charges at no more that 4,2V, internal protection circuit will shut it off if you get it to 5V charger directly and if this protection accidentally will not work your battery blows up! 5V must be applied to USB port ONLY if you want your battery and phone alive

unfortunately i dont have a way of measuring the voltage of the battery, i have now just bitten the bullet and ordered another battery and an external charger. that way if the battery i have now is dead i have a replacment and if it just needs charging then ill have two batteries. having tried the USB cable charging bodge and it not work im thinking i have killed the battery. i use LiPo batteries in my airsoft stuff so i know that they can die if not treated properly. my own silly fault i guess haha.
ill update tomorrow once the charger and battery have arrived.
what do you guys think will be wrong with it if a new full charged battery doesnt work?

airsoft_ben_1989 said:
unfortunately i dont have a way of measuring the voltage of the battery, i have now just bitten the bullet and ordered another battery and an external charger. that way if the battery i have now is dead i have a replacment and if it just needs charging then ill have two batteries. having tried the USB cable charging bodge and it not work im thinking i have killed the battery. i use LiPo batteries in my airsoft stuff so i know that they can die if not treated properly. my own silly fault i guess haha.
ill update tomorrow once the charger and battery have arrived.
what do you guys think will be wrong with it if a new full charged battery doesnt work?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If your new battery wont work than you probably may have a dead charging circuitry on your mainboard (sudden death when removing a battery during charging process) and if that circuit works only under OS control, IMHO your mainboard is useless too. Have to be replaced or repaired.

fair enough, thanks mate. fingers crossed for tomorrow the hehe

pvii said:
You tried this even one time???
NEVER DO THAT, YOU WILL RUIN YOUR Li-ION BATTERY!!!!
Li-ION charges at no more that 4,2V, internal protection circuit will shut it off if you get it to 5V charger directly and if this protection accidentally will not work your battery blows up! 5V must be applied to USB port ONLY if you want your battery and phone alive
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have not personally tried charging a my battery this way bit I know several people on her that have and it does charge the battery. If it did not work for the OP of this thread than they either did not have a good connection between the wires or the battery is not chargeable anymore.
Look at your wall charger it should say on your wall charger that the output is 5.0 v or 5.1 v. This is pretty much a standard on all wall chargers for phones as they all require the same voltage. Yes there is a protection system that monitors the charging voltage and if you use the modified cable to charge you do not have this protection system. But your wall charger unless the small transformer in the actual plug part that is the charger malfunctions will only put out 5v, actually it will probably be more like 3.5v as the 5v is Max output capacity. Also if the transformer malfunctions it is just going to melt down and not put out a charge what so ever, it will not cause a spike in voltage. Trust me on this one, my job requers I have a full understanding of transformers be it a big one are a little one as I have to work with them all of the time. But I did put my warning in there for a reason as this can kill the battery where it can no longer charge, and even though it is menamal it is a small risk of the battery exploding, but it is a very small risk.

pvii said:
You tried this even one time???
NEVER DO THAT, YOU WILL RUIN YOUR Li-ION BATTERY!!!!
Li-ION charges at no more that 4,2V, internal protection circuit will shut it off if you get it to 5V charger directly and if this protection accidentally will not work your battery blows up! 5V must be applied to USB port ONLY if you want your battery and phone alive
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just for info I've done this twice, once thru wall once thru usb slot. It only needs about 45 seconds to get enough charge to start booting, and charging starts about halfway through the boot.
you are right that it isn't recommended, of course, but then most of what goes on on this site isn't recommended for a healthy phone

T-Macgnolia said:
I have not personally tried charging a my battery this way bit I know several people on her that have and it does charge the battery. If it did not work for the OP of this thread than they either did not have a good connection between the wires or the battery is not chargeable anymore.
Look at your wall charger it should say on your wall charger that the output is 5.0 v or 5.1 v. This is pretty much a standard on all wall chargers for phones as they all require the same voltage. Yes there is a protection system that monitors the charging voltage and if you use the modified cable to charge you do not have this protection system. But your wall charger unless the small transformer in the actual plug part that is the charger malfunctions will only put out 5v, actually it will probably be more like 3.5v as the 5v is Max output capacity. Also if the transformer malfunctions it is just going to melt down and not put out a charge what so ever, it will not cause a spike in voltage. Trust me on this one, my job requers I have a full understanding of transformers be it a big one are a little one as I have to work with them all of the time. But I did put my warning in there for a reason as this can kill the battery where it can no longer charge, and even though it is menamal it is a small risk of the battery exploding, but it is a very small risk.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Man, I do not intend to start a holy-war about it
It's a little off-topic, but seems that you do not have idea how these power stage of mobile devises works (from wall outlet to battery), all mobile devices are very similar in this aspect, simply google what is Li-Ion battery advisor, how it works and rules of charging Li-ion batteries, there are a huge bunch of forums specially dedicated to this theme...

pvii said:
Man, I do not intend to start a holy-war about it
It's a little off-topic, but seems that you do not have idea how these power stage of mobile devises works (from wall outlet to battery), all mobile devices are very similar in this aspect, simply google what is Li-Ion battery advisor, how it works and rules of charging Li-ion batteries, there are a huge bunch of forums specially dedicated to this theme...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok first of I am not madd by no means, and no it is not off topic as people need to be able to know these things. As I have seen in a couple of XDA members signatures "I am learning from you, and you are learning from me."
I Googled the Li-Ion battery advisor and found the PDF I think you were talking about as it was the first two links Google pulled up. But I have to tell you what is discussed in that PDF is on Li-ion batteries for vehicles not cell phones. Those batteries are much large and there for data in that PDF can not necessarily by applied to cell phone LI-ion batteries, unless you care to educate me further.
Like I said I have been a electrician for going on 15 years now, I know how to read electrical schematics, I know how electricity flows, I know about positive and negative charges, I know a lot I will just put it that way. If you have further links YOU would like me to check out I will be glad to. But from my prospective what I mentioned as a emergency charging method is no more dangerous than shaving with a disposable razor.

right so the new battery doesnt work, charged it in the external charger and nothing. same as before just looping on the Droid boot up screen.
would it be worth flashing back to WM6.5 as a last resort?

airsoft_ben_1989 said:
right so the new battery doesnt work, charged it in the external charger and nothing. same as before just looping on the Droid boot up screen.
would it be worth flashing back to WM6.5 as a last resort?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Any photos of boot screen?
Try to flash back to older official WM ROM with regular SPL (flash from SD card not thru PC sink), else HSPL and that custom bot manager wont be erased from NAND. May be it will help You, I used this method when my touch stopped responding and it was a solution for me.

pvii said:
Any photos of boot screen?
Try to flash back to older official WM ROM with regular SPL (flash from SD card not thru PC sink), else HSPL and that custom bot manager wont be erased from NAND. May be it will help You, I used this method when my touch stopped responding and it was a solution for me.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You are correct to tell the OP to flash via SD card or they would still have HSPL. but the custum boot manager as you called it is actually a custom bootloader. And if you flash a Windows Mobile ROM be it custom or official through RUU or SD card it is gone. MAGLDR or cLK bootloader run in sesession of the original bootloader meanning you never lose the original boot loader( if you did you would have a bricked phone) and that it is not in the same partition of the NAND memory as the original bootloader. MAGLDR, CLK, AND CWM are in the same partition as the OS, therefore when you flash back to a Win Mo ROM you lose them.
HSPL would not have anything to do with the OP's problem as it is part of the original bootloader and the two main purposes for HSPL is to one beablecto flash a official ROM that is not meant for your HD2 without having to use a gold card, and to disable the CID check so you can flash custom firmware.
At the OP have you had a look at your battery pins to make sure they are all in properly aligned with each other and that one is not bent?

Related

totally dead wizard after battery drain

Hi,
That's the first time I am not able to find in this great forum a solution for a problem with one of my 2 wizards (i love this machine...)
Yesterday, one suddenly did not power on. I knew that the battery was pretty low, so I guessed was just discharged. But once I plugged it at home to the wall charger, no amber light appeared, nothing powered on! When I replaced the battery with a fresh one, nothing changed... and when I tried the "bad" battery with my second wizard+wall charger, I confirmed the battery was almost empty (2%), but worked fine.
I tried to plug the mobile to the computer, but nothing... to soft-, hard-resets... the bootloader reset... but my wizard did not respond electrically or electronically to anything... any idea what could be happening? any possible solution? I do not remember exactly which rom I was wearing now, if that matters... probably a FariaWM6_realthing_crossbow
thanks to all in any case
marcos
Maybe out of sight accident
why you leave alone your lovely wizard and so aprecciated mmmm....
its xtrange but as you say i think this kind of forum may helps you with software... took it to a cellphone repair center... they has multimeters to know where does the energy stops... maybe a little electronic component has burn it down. or try the not original and official wall chargers withj specific mhz and amperage, try something more hard.
hope i help you
more news
After being overnight without the battery, this morning I tried a "resurrection"
I just put back the battery, did a softreset, and it worked!... really!? no... just the first two screens (HTC welcome and machine tests) It did not go forward, and a second reset it did not work either... now it's again like yesterday, just dead
I think there is something else than just an electronic problem, but who knows. I recommend you not to let the battery too low!
Marcos
Charging a completely dead Wizard battery
Delapena,
I've had this problem a bunch of times with my Wizard (Cingular 8125 branded version). I was able to get it working again using the instructions of a VERY helpful person(s) who I want to give credit to but cant remember right now (sorry in advance) so just FYI this works for me, but the credit goes to the original poster (will edit later if I recall).
Easiest method (if available):
1) Locate your STOCK 5vdc/1.0A wall charger.
2) Remove stock battery, put it in a ziplock bag, place in freezer for 5-10 min or so. This should minimize the internal resistance of the battery to boost VDC across the terminals (in case you ran the battery very, very very dead).
3) After the battery is good and cold, put it back in the phone; DO NOT PRESS THE POWER BUTTON!
4) Plug the 5vdc/1.0AMP STOCK WALL CHARGER into the phone.
5) Charging indicator (solid amber LED) should light up after 5-10 seconds with no other indications (no screen, no beeps, just solid amber LED ON).
It's my understanding (may be wrong) that the 1.0amp wall charger uses/supplies 5vdc one one or more of the mini-usb plug pins than the standard USB->mini-usb cable used for standard data-transfer on standard USB-spec devices. Also, the wall charger sources a full AMP of current at 5vdc, as opposed to the 0.5amp each USB host IC is allowed to source (e.g. the USB host IC on your motherboard/front/back of computerbox).
...reply to this if you want the comprehensive method. Ill research if above doesnt work / you dont have the charger. Swamped at present though; if you need the full blown recharge-the-battery-from-the-stoneage method ill look it up---dont want to give you invalid info.
If you dont want to wait (i'd understand, been there), try searching around a bit if you havent already found what your looking for.
Reply back if you need more help, otherwise, good luck and replace your battery with a new one asap!
Cheers
(again, no credit to me on this one, got this solution from somewhere else on the forum a long while back...credit to original poster!!)
Sir,
I didnt read what you had already tried. My wizard is rebooting constantly as well. My thought is that my battery is so old that the battery charging chemistry is so out of whack that the battery charging / voltage sensing circuit is all sorts of confused as to where the (really old worn out) battery is on its charging curve.
I'm guessing that my phone is rebooting because the battery fails to supply adequate voltage at x.xx amps of current draw to the phone's internal voltage regulator. When the IVR cuts out, the phone poops its pants.
I'm currently looking for a battery replacement myself.
more... but less
Thanks for the help, brhestir. But did not work for me. Actually, I tried with the 3 batteries I have, which actually work OK in my second wizard.
The only thing I am able to "slighlty" reproduce till now:
1) Wizard remains several hours with any battery plugged
2) I put the battery back
3) I switch it on or do any kind of reset
4) Just sometimes, the machine starts up, but gets hanged up after the first screens
5) most of the times, after this... the screen turns white slowwwwly, till it switches off
6) only once, I managed to get the bootloader screen, which stayed like that with any problems... but the computer cannot connect to it, so impossible to change the rom.
Next step: to dismantle the machine (prior step before throwing it through the window)
Marcos
brhestir said:
Delapena,
I've had this problem a bunch of times with my Wizard (Cingular 8125 branded version). I was able to get it working again using the instructions of a VERY helpful person(s) who I want to give credit to but cant remember right now (sorry in advance) so just FYI this works for me, but the credit goes to the original poster (will edit later if I recall).
Easiest method (if available):
1) Locate your STOCK 5vdc/1.0A wall charger.
2) Remove stock battery, put it in a ziplock bag, place in freezer for 5-10 min or so. This should minimize the internal resistance of the battery to boost VDC across the terminals (in case you ran the battery very, very very dead).
3) After the battery is good and cold, put it back in the phone; DO NOT PRESS THE POWER BUTTON!
4) Plug the 5vdc/1.0AMP STOCK WALL CHARGER into the phone.
5) Charging indicator (solid amber LED) should light up after 5-10 seconds with no other indications (no screen, no beeps, just solid amber LED ON).
It's my understanding (may be wrong) that the 1.0amp wall charger uses/supplies 5vdc one one or more of the mini-usb plug pins than the standard USB->mini-usb cable used for standard data-transfer on standard USB-spec devices. Also, the wall charger sources a full AMP of current at 5vdc, as opposed to the 0.5amp each USB host IC is allowed to source (e.g. the USB host IC on your motherboard/front/back of computerbox).
...reply to this if you want the comprehensive method. Ill research if above doesnt work / you dont have the charger. Swamped at present though; if you need the full blown recharge-the-battery-from-the-stoneage method ill look it up---dont want to give you invalid info.
If you dont want to wait (i'd understand, been there), try searching around a bit if you havent already found what your looking for.
Reply back if you need more help, otherwise, good luck and replace your battery with a new one asap!
Cheers
(again, no credit to me on this one, got this solution from somewhere else on the forum a long while back...credit to original poster!!)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
wow i just ran into the same problem today.. my battery was low tried to plug into the cigar lighter but the fuse was blown due to another object i had plugged in so i didn't get a chance to charge it, the phone was fine all day until i left work it was completely dead.. no amber light for the charger.. have you had any luck?
hi everyone,
i solved this problem by creating a sort of bypass for the battery...
i bought a special battery used for some circuits experiments which is 4,5v..
i connected the + and - with the phone contacts, with the battery plugged...turn on the phone until the orange light is on and leave it until charge is full...
this is cause phone needs a minimum of charge to start recharge circuit...
Yes the same problem on every post
The thing of cooling batteries is an old but knowledge charging fast option but it brokes your performance batt drain so i recomend a new full battery ok? is the only way or...... charge the one you have fully fully.
and try again! tu plugin the batt once at time and again and again it wouldnt boot cause its too low to begin the OS and let you charge with the wallcharger... to charge with the wall or usb you need a bootable and functional OS ok?
hope you can find a way to charge your batt at least sufficient to boot the OS ok?
bye
well good news! 20 minutes in the freezer + 5v + 1a = win
CONGRATS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
mp86 said:
well good news! 20 minutes in the freezer + 5v + 1a = win
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So dont ever let the batt drains to the hell down forever hahaha.
+ Que PPC said:
So dont ever let the batt drains to the hell down forever hahaha.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
lol it was an accident i thought it was charging in the car!

My G1 stop charging, in need of a external battery charger.

Alright heres the story i bought a FM transmitter/charger for my G1 on Ebay a few months ago its been working fine until today. When i plugged it in today the transmitter/charger kinda flash then wont turn back on. So I figured hey its from china I'm glad it worked this long, but when i plugged my phone up at home it still wouldn't charge. I tried multiple chargers and my second battery, nothing. I went to Tmobile and they had to order me a new phone under warranty. So now I need a external battery charger because the phone is completely dead now and I need to get some info off of it and flash it back to its original firmware (its completely modded). Any suggestion? Oh yeah and the loaner phone really sucks.
You could always get a spare 5 volt wall charger (up to 1amp), clip the end off and use a couple alligator connectors to directly charge the battery (with the battery outside of the phone). You would need to mind polarity and make sure to use fine tipped alligator clips with the rubber insulation. It'd only take a short while to charge it enough to retrieve your info.
As always, use care.. 5 volts will not hurt you, but if you leave the battery on the charger overnight and there is no overcharge protection, or if you reverse polarity, the battery could possibly burst.
This is just a quick dirty fix to get the battery a charge prior to returning the phone.
Rick
I didn't know you could do it like that. Thanks for the idea. One question tho. How can i tell the + and - connection on the power cord?
Careful with those Lithium Batteries. They can explode/cause fire if wrong voltage applied (5v with large amperage is too much for it.. The charging circuit in the device controls current) or shorted. Not scaring u off. Better be safe than sorry.
U can use cheap Voltage regulated Universal Chargers like this one:
http://www.amazon.com/Universal-Mobile-Phone-Battery-Charger/dp/B001AHU6QU
They have wrong polarity protection too.
on1ydabest said:
I didn't know you could do it like that. Thanks for the idea. One question tho. How can i tell the + and - connection on the power cord?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Once you strip the wire back it will be color coded.. red + and black -
What do you need to take off your phone..? Just remove your SD card. Also, according to other users on this thread, having modified firmware does NOT void your warranty or anything. It doesn't matter if you have it rooted or anything and you send it back.

how to charge htc 8125 with no original usb cable and(or) without orig. wall charger

hi there.
shortly-i have this phone with no orig. usb cable and with no wall charger. it was friend of mine phone actualy. given to me with dead battery (i am not sure but i have trouwn it away long time ago)
first I did was to wait until friends of mine from china had sent to me 2 batteries compitable with the phone. what i discovered is that a normal ordinar usb cable cant charge the phone's battery it only can connect to the pc.
second what i did is this: i found my old charger from a very old panasonic cell phone and had a try to make the charging process with the simply contacting corresponding pinouts of the battery to the +&- of this same charger (somehow i dissasembled the plug of that charger and it became more "comfortable" to get in touch to the pinouts of the specific cingular's battery)
that unordinar way i did discovered that i can charge these batteries even not sure how much appropriate that other brand wall charger is. It seems its pretty much the same as a power characteristics.
Meanwhile (as i dont use this phone) i had some free time to search the net and to have better idea about that strange unordinar power charging matter with that model of a phone. The situation is that i cant find a place nearby me to buy a cheap usb and wall charger and become using this nice device finaly.
And also i dont want to buy these cable things before clearly understand why this happens ..
I did try also to charge this phone with a HTC brand wall charger but no sucsess again cause it seems this wall charger is for other htc phone (even same mini usb plug and same characteristics)
What i need is to have answers by someone very informed about that matter and let me know what exactly is the specific power charging matter (need explanations i mean) with this phone. If sharing some good ideas about how to remake others usb cable or wall charger for geting it work along for me in such a case , i will appreciate this very much
thanks
charge
hi ! please forgive me for my bad english! in this case you can charge your phone in 1 way! you need to procure a motorola or any charger with same socket but attention the charger must have 6 volts and no less than 500 mAh(milli amps)! you cut the wires and one wire put on the + of the battery you will see the signs on the battery an one wire at the - no matter which one. and you need stay with the wires 3 - 4 minutes on the battery ! then you put the battery on the phone it will start and then you cand fully charge it with the usb cable ! good luckk ! i hope my inf will help you!
no
no it doesnt work that way.
what i need is the simple answer : what is so special into the pinouts of htc cingular 8125 wall charger?
thats what i need only. Then I might figure out how to proceed
Thanks anyway
I don't know if anyone else has had trouble doing what I have done, but I've got the Cingular 8125 (HTC Wizard 100), which is also known as the HTC 8125.
1. I bought a car charger at a convenience store for $6 that had the mini-USB plug. It worked like a charm. Never any problem there.
2. I also bought a standard USB to mini-USB cable from the local computer store, because I had lost mine, and it also worked fine for both synchronization and for charging.
3. I bought a second wall charger, buying a standard mini-USB wall charger sold pretty much everywhere cellular phone chargers are sold. It's a common charging port, and this generic worked for me as well.
I'd be interested to hear if anyone has had problems with these types of devices not properly charging the unit.
Even my USB cable for my portable USB hard drive will power my unit.
EDIT: About your problem with it not charging. I had that problem about a year ago, when my battery got extremely old. It wouldn't charge even with the original charger. I just needed a new battery. The batteries get old and stop taking a charge after a certain amount of use. How long this takes depends on how heavily the batteries are used. They, like car batteries, do not last forever.
I had this problem when I had my wiz too. The battery died and drained, and my phone refused to charge it. I took it to an AT&T service center, and they had no clue what the problem was, and they wanted to issue me a replacement (it was a G4, I had a G3, I wasn't about to fiddle with that at the time.) So I asked to borrow a demo device they had there to fix it. I charged my battery on their demo device no problem, got it up to 3%, and finished charging it through my USB cable in the car socket.
It appears to be a sort of one-in-every-few-or-so type condition, but I got hit with it.
seems like noone can tell me if something special inside the mini-USB plug.
i realy cant charge. Very nice device, but i cant make it charging up whit cables.
guys, from up there, say that nothing special about the charging cables, but i trust what i see not what i read.
Perhaps there is a problem with your USB port on the device? USB charging has standards, and all devices that need power from a USB port have the same power pin configuration. Otherwise, they can't call it a USB connection. It would have to be called a proprietary connection, and they would have to change the plug size/dimensions and pins.
If there isn't a problem with your battery (which is the most likely source of your problem), then it may be a loose connection on your USB connector. This happens with a number of devices.
If a sync cable connects to the PC but will not charge the battery, then you definitely have an unusual pin detachment of some sort, or a bad battery.
thanks again..
for pity i was writing a lot to make my recent post and finaly it desapeared cause my session was left.. its funny in some case, but now i just dont want to repeat all what was intended to be posted
i give only the link where you might see why i was assuming that this is a kind of a special matter here with that htc 8125 charging
//pinouts.ru/CellularPhones-A-N/razrv3_charger_pinout.shtml
so, any more help will be appreciated a lot
thanks
SOLVED: HTC Wizard (Cingular 8125) Dead Battery Wont Charge
Dozzen said:
hi ! please forgive me for my bad english! in this case you can charge your phone in 1 way! you need to procure a motorola or any charger with same socket but attention the charger must have 6 volts and no less than 500 mAh(milli amps)! you cut the wires and one wire put on the + of the battery you will see the signs on the battery an one wire at the - no matter which one. and you need stay with the wires 3 - 4 minutes on the battery ! then you put the battery on the phone it will start and then you cand fully charge it with the usb cable ! good luckk ! i hope my inf will help you!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi - Too bad for the OP that asked questions but did not listen to this brilliant post.
I have confirmed that a variation of this method works perfectly! I have an old Cingular 8125 that I have been trying to charge for over a year using various USB chargers and NONE would charge the device.
The reason that this may happen is that the original charger has an output of 1 full amp which is much higher than most chargers. The voltage is the same but you need a charger that can handle such a strong current draw.
Nearly all USB chargers can only handle around 250milliamps - 500milliamps which is about half the power needed to breathe life into a fully discharged battery.
The best solution is to NEVER let the battery fully discharge.
Here are the details of what I did:
1. Find the best match charger of 5-6 DC Volts and ability to put out as close to one amp (1000mA) as possible. I chose an old Sanyo SCP-07ADT that is rated at DC 5.4V at 800mA. The plug can be any type, no need to be USB.
2. Cut the connector off the end of the cable and strip the outer black part up about an inch and then strip the positive and negative (red / black respectively) wires up about a millimeter, just enough to have bare metal ends to touch to a small area.
3. Take your battery out of the phone, look at the back of battery for the + and - marks which correlate to one of the metal connection points on your battery, this is where you will "touch" or "attach" the bare ends of the wires.
4. Plug the charger in making sure not to short your bare leads. Before you do this double check that the OUTPUT of your charger is indeed DC voltage so that you don't hurt yourself. You do not want AC output and it can be dangerous.
Then touch the bare end of the red wire to positive of battery, and black wire to negative terminal of your battery. I held them with my fingers while surfing the web for about five or ten minutes. I had no idea if anything was happening or not but it "felt" like the battery might have gotten just a bit warmer.
5. Unplug the home-made bare wire charger and put battery in your phone. Quickly attach a USB charger or just plug into a USB cable of your computer. I pushed it in and nothing happened at first but finally I heard the standard "bleep" when you plug a USB device in. I knew that I made progress because it never beeped before it took about 30 seconds and several "bleeps" of connecting/disconnecting from USB but eventually the charge light stayed on!
It's been about 30 minutes and I'm up to about 50% charge and been using the phone heavily while charging.
So, in summary... never let your battery discharge below 5% or you can only charge it with an OEM cable rated at 1amp (rare). IF you let it discharge to "dead" then charge for 5-10 minutes with the "wire" method and then charge normally!
Thanks to Dozzen for the original idea!!
Wizard that won't charge
When my Wizard/HTC 8125 goes dead my cure for the battery is to use a 9 volt charger with the wires stripped back also. But, my method is a bit different. I place a standard Christmas Tree light bulb (the newer small ones)in series with the charger wires. Observe the correct polarity. The battery is labeled + and - so that part is easy. By using the small light bulb you are doing 2 things. 1.You can see the slight glow from the bulb and know that proper connection is made. 2. You are limiting the charging current to the battery.
If you get really creative like I did you can solder a couple of small nails or in my case a set of red and black probes to the setup and the points on these nails/probes make for much easier connections. Note.... This method may take a few minutes longer but, is much easier on the battery.
In my experience once the battery is below a certain level NO charger that I plug in will work. I just purchased a used 8125 from eBay and brought it back to life most successfully with this method.
hy there my htc wizard battery whos dead so i charched with a cable with + and - the phone starts but when i try to connect to a usb or a adaptor it doesnt charge anymore it show me the charge icon on the baterry but it doesnt charge the usb works fine it's sync to my pc but it doesnt charge anymore... what sould i do?
So it seems no one touched on what really matters here.
A design flaw, in my opinion. The HTC Wizard cannot recharge via USB unless there is enough power to turn on. The reason is because it requires the OS to charge.
So, what many people already posted are very creative ways to charge your 8125. The easiest and cheapest way, in my opinion, is to use AA batteries.
1) Take two AA batteries and tape together so they are in series. Imagine it like this... [- AA battery #1 +][- AA battery #2 +]
2) Use two wires and tape one to each side of the AA's (one on the + side and another on the other battery's - side since the - of the first battery is connected to the + of the second).
--w-i-r-e--[- AA battery #1 +][- AA battery #2 +]--w-i-r-e--
3) Connect the positive (+) wire to the positive (+) side of the phone. By this I mean the 6 metal pieces that stick out to contact the phone battery. I did it by wrapping the wire around the top most one (or second top most, it's been over a year since I've done this.).
4) Connect the negative (-) wire to the negative (-) side of the phone. Again, bottom most or second bottom most (see #3).
5) Insert phone battery while the wires are still in and connected to the two AAs.
6) Let the power flow for 30 seconds or so and then try turning your phone on. This part is the important part because you cannot use a USB to mini-USB connected to your computer to charge the phone unless the operating system can function. Meaning, it needs to be turned on first.
7) Once the phone is on, plug in the mini-USB part and connect it to a computer. I'd recommend getting at least 5% battery before disconnecting the AAs, seeing as you need to be able to start up your phone long enough for the OS to boot. Once the OS boots, you can fully charge it through a normal USB to mini-USB connection on any computer.
old post but just wanted to say thanks. Used the wire to battery method and got phone turned on after 2 mins of holding wires to battery.

HTC HD2 not charging need help!

rwtelecom said:
HTC HD2 T8585
When connect to usb via PC or wall charger no response at all from phone.
i tried fixing the middle battery terminal but it doesnt work at all.
hope somebody could help me with these...
thank you in advance!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
try to connect the charger when the phone is off (not sleep, completly off)...if it's charge then uncheck the "Don't charge if connected to PC" or something like that setting is the power option...
If you can get a voltmeter that can test low voltage and use the test leads to test the positive and the negative pins, look at the battery to figure out witch ones these are as the battery is marked positive and negative. Also make sure you have your phone plugged into the wall charger while you are conducting the testing. I am not sure what voltage reading you should get as I don't know the exact voltage it takes to charge the battery, but it should be a pretty low voltage. If you get a reading between the positive and negative you are getting voltage to the battery and your problem is either software or your battery is no longer any good. If you don't get a voltage reading then you are not getting voltage to the battery and you probably have a hardware problem somewhere in the phone.
Also is the led lighting up when you plug the phone in to charge?
Ok I just tested my battery leads with a tester. I got a constant 00.3 volts on my tester testing from positive to negative. If you are getting this reading you are getting voltage to your battery. I would take a very close look at the pins(leads) that connectar to the battery, especially if you do a battery pull as your means of reseting your HD2 instead of using the reset button. A lot of wear and tear on these pins can cause very minor bends in them that can cause all kinds of ptoblems for users. Use a magifiying glass if you have to as they could be such a small difference in the pins that you can not tell with hour naked eye.
What I am concered about though is the fact you say your led is not lighting up when you are plugged into the wall charger nd that you have tried another battery. Also just for your benifit I recomend using the wall charger to charge your phone as the computer does not charge as fast, leading me to think it does not put out the same voltage. Anyway though you can try a hard reset and see if the led comes on then. If not you most likely have a hardware issue.
Also if you can not get it to work you can always buy a external charger to charge your battery. But I also suggest you get another battery if you do this so you can always hve a charged battery to uze while the other charges.
What os? Do you have magldr installed? Flashed any roms or radios lately?
rwtelecom said:
but its puzzling me, if usb port working, has voltage output on battery terminal, so why it doesnt detect by the computer? anyone can help me please?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, it could be the battery went bad. You'd have to replace it to find out.
As a last resort, you could also buy an external charger off ebay. They are inexpensive. I have one for my backup battery.
EDIT: I just remembered the check box for "Do Not Charge My Battery" in the settings menu under Settings / System / Battery. There is a check box, but this should not affect the wall charger.

Is it bricked?

Hey guys,
I'm a little bit new at this, but my missus flashed a rom onto her HD2 a year or two ago and about 6 months ago I tried to revert it back to stock, so i could give it to a mate...
It didnt go well and ended up not being able to get into the boot loader (three colour screen?).
So i pulled it out yesterday as I am going to need a temporary phone soon...
I plugged it into the charger and it vibrated 5 or 6 times and up came the HTC logo with the white background... It stayed on that permantly.
So i'm at work now and figured i'd try to get into the boot loader (3 colour screen).
But now when i try to turn it on, it doesnt want to. Every now and then after pulling out the battery and plugging it in and fiddling around and putting the battery back, it will vibrate 5 or 6 times again, but no screen...
I'm pretty sure its due for the graveyard... But is there any chance to get this happening again?
Thanks for any help, and sorry, i dont remember the ROMs or anything, but they were ones that were all recommended in here... i'm usually very carefull when flashing.
When turning the phone on, hold the power (far right button) and the down volume button...be quick and you shouldnt see the splash screen. If that works, get a rom and rename to leoimg and put that on your sdcard.
She's not turning on anymore... its like the battery is flat but she's plugged in...
It does have a cheap ebay battery, so might try and dig out the original battery and see if that is the issue..
ftosam said:
She's not turning on anymore... its like the battery is flat but she's plugged in...
It does have a cheap ebay battery, so might try and dig out the original battery and see if that is the issue..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you could not get it to the bootloader the first time way back when then it is .ricked and no amount of time of it just laying ariund will have changed that. The only way to revive the phone is by using a JTAG and a RIFFBOX on it but the RICFBOX will cost you where the JTAG is not that bad. Or you can replace the mainboard in the phone. These are your options my friend.
Turns out the Ebay battery was having an effect on it...
Have got it to the three colour screen! woo!
It says:
PB81100 SS-BC
SPL-3.03.0000 XE
MicroP(LED) 0x05
MicroP(Touch) 0x50
So looks like i've got SPL-3.03.0000???
No idea on the radio though. and no idea how to get this back to stock.
Any ideas?
Oh and also, we bought this initially from mobicity.com.au and its apparently a Thailand phone, so we always used to have problems trying to flash a ROM that was in english with out Serial Number.
Any help would be awesome... I dont know alot about this stuff, and should never have let the missus stuff around with it.
THanks for any help guys and gals.
Edit:
Better yet, How do i go from where my phone is now, to WP7?
Should i go right back to stock first? or can I just go from here?
Should I change from SPL-3.03.0000?
Any help would be awesome.
thank you
Edit again:
With this SPL, could I Install MAGLDR 1.13 from here (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=912416)
Update the ROM,
THen in MAGLDR USB Flash and Install DFT_LEO70_RELEASE?
If I can do this with SPL3.03.0000, then would love to have some WP7 goodness.
Then
ftosam said:
Edit:
Better yet, How do i go from where my phone is now, to WP7?
Should i go right back to stock first? or can I just go from here?
Should I change from SPL-3.03.0000?
Any help would be awesome.
thank you
Edit again:
With this SPL, could I Install MAGLDR 1.13 from here (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=912416)
Update the ROM,
THen in MAGLDR USB Flash and Install DFT_LEO70_RELEASE?
If I can do this with SPL3.03.0000, then would love to have some WP7 goodness.
Then
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can go straight for WP7, but to flash MAGLDR you have to have HSPL 2.08. Google or search XDA for HSPL 4 and download it and flash it through bootloader. Before you try to flash though make sure to go to www.windowsmobile.com/getstarted and download the lates version of Windows Mobile Device Center (WMDC) and install it to your computer as it has USB drivers you need. If you are using Windows XP then download the latest ActiveSync from there and install it to your computer. Put your HD2 into bootloader and connect your HD2 via USB cable to your computer and wait utiil the Serial changes to USB in the white bar of bootloader. Then run the HSPL 4 and when it ask what HSPL or SPL you want to install make sure to select HSPL 2.08, this is the only HSPL MAGLDR supports. Use the same method to flash a new radio if need be and to flash MAGLDR. Let me know if you need any more assistance and I will help, you can even PM me if you want. Glad your HD2 is not bricked too.
Thanks for the help...
Went to try this and the bloody phone went back to doing the same thing again... grrr... Maybe this charger i'm using at work isnt working or something (Original HTC USB Port Charger (240V)
Any Advice on which radio is good?
ftosam said:
Thanks for the help...
Went to try this and the bloody phone went back to doing the same thing again... grrr... Maybe this charger i'm using at work isnt working or something (Original HTC USB Port Charger (240V)
Any Advice on which radio is good?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah use radio version 2.15.50.24 as it is the latest radio and seems to be the best one out so far.
Quick question:
Got HSPL 2.08 on...
Does the HTC charge while in the bootloader(three colour screen) and plugged into USB?
Might charge it for a while before I attempt anymore..
ftosam said:
Quick question:
Got HSPL 2.08 on...
Does the HTC charge while in the bootloader(three colour screen) and plugged into USB?
Might charge it for a while before I attempt anymore..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Do you see the LED light? if not, then it doesnt charge
Yeh no LED...
Dunno how i'm going to charge this thing...
ftosam said:
Quick question:
Got HSPL 2.08 on...
Does the HTC charge while in the bootloader(three colour screen) and plugged into USB?
Might charge it for a while before I attempt anymore..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No it does not charge, sorry. Also sorry for the late post I had some personal crap to do lol.
Edit: You can buy a external charger for the HD2 battery if you want to. Or if you want to you can do this. Note I only suggest you do this long enough to flash some kind of ROM onto your HD2 and then completely charge the battery the normal way. Take a old or very cheap USB cable and cut the end off. Strip back the red and black wires a little. Use some tape to attach the red wire to the positive battery terminal and the black wire to the negative battery terminal. Plug the USB cable into your wall charger and mantain a watch on the battery for any warming up or swelling as it is a very very small chance this could occur. Also don't worry about getting shocked cause it is like ultra low voltage going through the wires.
Thanks a heap... have dodgied up a charging rig... lol...
Its not easy with the battery terminals being recessed, but i think its working...
what you reckon an hour or so at that? or only half an hour should do it?
ftosam said:
Thanks a heap... have dodgied up a charging rig... lol...
Its not easy with the battery terminals being recessed, but i think its working...
what you reckon an hour or so at that? or only half an hour should do it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I would go for like 40 to 45 minutes as long as you do not see any adverse effects like I mentioned before. Make sure you are completely ready to flash a ROM when you take it off the charging rig. best of luck.
ftosam said:
Thanks a heap... have dodgied up a charging rig... lol...
Its not easy with the battery terminals being recessed, but i think its working...
what you reckon an hour or so at that? or only half an hour should do it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hopefully this is not a bit late, but be careful of charging with makeshift arrangements. LiIon batteries can have explosive!
stevedebi said:
Hopefully this is not a bit late, but be careful of charging with makeshift arrangements. LiIon batteries can have explosive!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes you are very correct the LiIon batteries have s potential to be explosive. This is why I told him to maintane a watch on it as he was charging for any warming or swelling of the battery as this is a sign it needs to be disconnected. I do not recomend this method of charging as a daily charging method as there is no monitor of the battery bing charged beside the person doing the charging. With normal charging with the device the device has monitoring software and can tell you if it needs to be disconnected from the charger. But just to add to this subject for other members benifit, and I am not trying to promote charging batteries in this manner what so ever, as it is a certain level of danger involved all be it minimal. When you connect a USB cable to charge the battery normaly it creates a connection between the male mini USB connector pins and the the pins in the female port of the phone for the positive and the negative wires that go back to the wall charger or computer's USB port. The pins have a direct path to the battery pins so it can tranfer the voltage to the battery. So you see there is no internal parts in the phone that control charging only a pathway/conductor for the voltage to travel. The wall charger or the internal step down transformer of the computer is what controls voltage and the rate of flow of the electricity and voltage. So as long as you have proper connection and proper functioning charging source it is a very minimal risk. I have tested the pins in my HD2 while plugged into my wall charger and a USB cable I stripped back and got the exact same voltage readings. I have not seen a scimatic drawing on the HD2 but I have reseach charging of cell phones and most other battery operated devices and it is pretty much an indusrty standard that the charger controls charging with the pins or terminals that connect to the battery only providing a means of a conductive pathway for the charge to travel to the bttery terminals. But as I said before I do not suggest one to use my above method of charging as a normal thing. So please whenever possible use a approved charger or charging aporatise.
My personal opinion... WAIT (sorry for the caps)
Don't risk to flash with that faulty or bad battery.
If you take the batt out of your device it doesn't boot at all, even on the 1 Amp charger!
If you check the warnings from HTC they state that you need atleast 50% in the batt. That warning is not there without a reason.
So if you have a bad battery you take very big risks that I would never take.
I know it itches to have this up and running the way you want to but for your mind and wallet sake buy another ebay batt.
Leave it aside untill a better batt arrives.
My 2 Eurocents!
lukesan said:
My personal opinion... WAIT (sorry for the caps)
Don't risk to flash with that faulty or bad battery.
If you take the batt out of your device it doesn't boot at all, even on the 1 Amp charger!
If you check the warnings from HTC they state that you need atleast 50% in the batt. That warning is not there without a reason.
So if you have a bad battery you take very big risks that I would never take.
I know it itches to have this up and running the way you want to but for your mind and wallet sake buy another ebay batt.
Leave it aside untill a better batt arrives.
My 2 Eurocents!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have experienced flashing with battery less than 50% (around 35%), but I used SD Card method. If using USB sync, definitely will not work (I tried already )
cheers
silverwind said:
I have experienced flashing with battery less than 50% (around 35%), but I used SD Card method. If using USB sync, definitely will not work (I tried already )
cheers
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
does if you put the phone into bootloader manually, ,, it bypasses the battery level check.

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