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hi guys, i'm a newbie when it comes to rooting and stuff
i reduced all my lcd settings (display is only at 10%, removed animations, etc), turned off unecessary apps (wifi, etc) and i'm using setCPU (so i could downgrade my cpu speed) after i learned how to root here with the ff settings:
cpu range 200-500 mHz, conservative.
my phone still seems to be draining fast. i'm not watching vids or playing games.
can anyone help me or give me tips which overclock actually worked for their S2?
i was hoping my battery would last about a day.
thanks!
Suggestions: restore your cpu settings to normal to establish a base line. Then download Osmonitor and see if any application is hogging your cpu. If not, then, in recovery wipe Dalvik cache (not anything else!).
You don't say what rom you are on but assuming you are not watching video files all day, you should get a full day easily.
Sent from my Xoom using XDA Premium App
Is your device connected to an exchange account ?
Sent from my GT-I9100 using XDA App
Root has nothing to with battery life directly, but you can use T.B Pro to freeze some garbage apps always.
Besides you can't get any benefit from using SetCPU? LOL. Well I don't wanna a debate here, but that damn app will not do any useful thing other than mental satisfaction.
And you stop any app which is set as Automatic refresh in an specified interval, run as low as Widgets possible, Turn Off WiFi and Packet Data when not needed, and try to use Juice Defender which is doing a great job on mine.
Regards.
thank you for the replies
@tangiers: can osmonitor also freeze useless apps? or it just merely monitors your phone?
@jimhaddon: what is an exchange account? i don't think i set-up anything like that while i was tinkering with my phone.
@ithehappy: i think i'm only getting the mental satisfaction from setCPU like you were saying
ithehappy said:
Root has nothing to with battery life directly, but you can use T.B Pro to freeze some garbage apps always.
Besides you can't get any benefit from using SetCPU? LOL. Well I don't wanna a debate here, but that damn app will not do any useful thing other than mental satisfaction.
And you stop any app which is set as Automatic refresh in an specified interval, run as low as Widgets possible, Turn Off WiFi and Packet Data when not needed, and try to use Juice Defender which is doing a great job on mine.
Regards.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I beg to differ. After I isntalled SetCPU and Underclocked/Undervolted my CPU I found that my battery life increased quite a bit and was no longer experiencing battery heating.
lovidore said:
I beg to differ. After I isntalled SetCPU and Underclocked/Undervolted my CPU I found that my battery life increased quite a bit and was no longer experiencing battery heating.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ROOT has nothing to do with battery life END >>>but it did enable you to use SetCPU .
jje
I9100 CPU is smart enough to change it's state when needed, you don't need an additional 2US$ software for that, when will people agree this fact? Anyway, why shall I care!
I'm also in the camp that thinks setcpu is a myth for saving battery. The cpu already scales up and down as needed stock. At idle the cpu sits at 250 mhz.
SetCPU
I found out that setCpu actually drained my battery faster, so just uninstall it.
See if it gets better.
My battery drains too.
Solved that problem by charging overnight.
Sent from my GT-I9100 using xda premium
There are many factors that's can cause battery drain, wakelocks, signal strength, method of data wifi or 3g, display etc etc
You could have a rouge app that is keeping your phone awake, download betterbatterystats and check for partial wakelocks.
Signal strength can be a factor, see your current signal strength and then change the modem to see if this reduces.
No need to tinker with setcpu, you can underclock if you wish but generally leaving it on stock is fine.
Most importantly enjoy the phone don't get to obsessive with trying to save every ounce of battery its a smartphone at the end of the day otherwise we'd be carrying Nokia 3310s with us, and remember you can always charge nightly!
Sent from my GT-I9100 using Tapatalk
Things that drain the battery :
Gps
Bluetooth
Wifi
Life wallpapers
Display brightness
Display time up setting
Try to configure them and see how much you can squeeze that .
Check on setup battery the top ranking of battery usage.
This is mibe so you can compare :
Regards.
Sent from my GT-P3113 using xda app-developers app
See my screen time above. I feel its pretty good. 6hrs+
I underclocked to 800mhz, auto brightness, ICS stock rom with the famous KH3 modem. The phone looses 2% over 8hrs of deep sleep. I think thats awesome. My phone lasts for at least 13hrs. (I charge it overnight and take it out @ 6am and use it till 11pm.)
Off topic: I was using my dad's iPhone 4 for a while and the battery life is amazing. But I still hate iphone.
Sent from my Bathtub using bubbles
poch_1421 said:
hi guys, i'm a newbie when it comes to rooting and stuff
i reduced all my lcd settings (display is only at 10%, removed animations, etc), turned off unecessary apps (wifi, etc) and i'm using setCPU (so i could downgrade my cpu speed) after i learned how to root here with the ff settings:
cpu range 200-500 mHz, conservative.
my phone still seems to be draining fast. i'm not watching vids or playing games.
can anyone help me or give me tips which overclock actually worked for their S2?
i was hoping my battery would last about a day.
thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
since you are rooted, try flashing jeeboo kernel
other tips, if you are not using Google Now disable it, freeze samsung push service, settings -> wifi -> advanced -> network notifications - uncheck.
First and foremost this guide is based around the Sprint Nexus S 4G. If you do not have the Nexus S 4G, Than this guide will probably not help you. =)
Secondly all credit goes to the wonderful people that work endlessly to make these wonderful Roms and Kernels. Without you guys Android wouldn't be what it is today!
Third: Please make a back up and use this guide at your own risk. I don't want to bare the weight of someone turning their phone into a paperweight by using this guide.
Alright, Now lets get to the fun part.
Case you've already forgotten why you're ready this topic. This is my rough how-to guide on getting easily over 2 days out of a single charge on your phone, Very much possible to push 3 or more days depending on use and other varying factors.
What you're going to need to start:
- Rooted Nexus S 4G with a custom recovery like Clockwork mod.
- Flash the following Rom http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1417499
- Flash the following Kernel http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1436313
-Flash the following "KL2" Radio update http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1077168
After you have flashed all the above and confirmed your phone is running stable with all the default settings. Charge your phone to 100% and reboot back into recovery, and WIPE YOUR BATTERY STATS
Now. Lets begin configuring your rom and kernel!
- Install CPU MASTER FREE from the android market https://market.android.com/details?id=com.antutu.CpuMasterFree&hl=en
Set the following on CPU Master
- CPU Speed 800 MAX and 100MIN
- CPU Governor CONSERVATIVE
- and Scheduler set to CFQ
- Make sure to click apply on boot as well
- Now Install NSTOOLS from the Android market https://market.android.com/details?id=mobi.cyann.nstools&feature=search_result
Set the following on NSTOOLS
- DEEP IDLE: ENABLED
- Backlight Dimmer: ENABLED
- Make sure Backlight Notifications are left disabled. It keeps phone from idling properly.
- Leave all other settings alone and make sure to check set on boot
- Now lastly install Antutu Battery Saver from the Android Market
https://market.android.com/details?id=com.antutu.powersaver&feature=search_result#?t=W251bGwsMSwxLDEsImNvbS5hbnR1dHUucG93ZXJzYXZlciJd
Activate Battery Saver and set to level 2 battery save. Easy as that.
Basically your done! =)
If you notice your phone has a slightly worse or little to no improvement on the battery this is due to you deleting your battery stats. As you use your phone it will write new stats and you will begin to notice a difference after a few cycles. Just make sure your battery is charged when you wipe them, Let the phone run almost completely dead. Plug it up, Let it charge back to 100%, Unplug it. Rinse and repeat. Just be sure to unplug it when you notice it's fully charged even if you don't plan on going anywhere. Just let it sit and run on battery so that it calibrates the battery stats while it's idle as well.
Now as you should already know your battery life is going to heavily depend on use and SIGNAL STRENGTH. It seems a lot of people don't realize the more signal you have the longer your battery will last. If you're in an area with very low signal it can kill your phone in a matter of hours.
I have attached a screen shot of my battery life using this above method. Other settings I will mention
- WIFI ENABLED and CONNECTED
- Bluetooth and NFC DISABLED
- Automatic backlight control enabled
- Facebook notifcations, Weather and Contacts are the only things set to SYNC on my phone.
- Usage: Light to moderate. This includes a few texts throughout the day. A few phone calls, and a brief checking of facebook every now and then.
If I'm missing anything I will update this post. That is all for now. Happy modding and may this tutorial work the same wonders for you as it did me.
Also I should state that the phone finally died at around 2Days 17hrs on battery. My goal for 3 straight days was cut short after a few 30 minute phone calls and other work I had to do on the phone.
If you have any questions. Feel free to post, or PM me. I'll be here =)
cwayn1989 said:
First and foremost this guide is based around the Sprint Nexus S 4G. If you do not have the Nexus S 4G, Than this guide will probably not help you. =)
Secondly all credit goes to the wonderful people that work endlessly to make these wonderful Roms and Kernels. Without you guys Android wouldn't be what it is today!
Third: Please make a back up and use this guide at your own risk. I don't want to bare the weight of someone turning their phone into a paperweight by using this guide.
Alright, Now lets get to the fun part.
Case you've already forgotten why you're ready this topic. This is my rough how-to guide on getting easily over 2 days out of a single charge on your phone, Very much possible to push 3 or more days depending on use and other varying factors.
What you're going to need to start:
- Rooted Nexus S 4G with a custom recovery like Clockwork mod.
- Flash the following Rom http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1417499
- Flash the following Kernel http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1436313
-Flash the following "KL2" Radio update http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1077168
After you have flashed all the above and confirmed your phone is running stable with all the default settings. Charge your phone to 100% and reboot back into recovery, and WIPE YOUR BATTERY STATS
Now. Lets begin configuring your rom and kernel!
- Install CPU MASTER FREE from the android market https://market.android.com/details?id=com.antutu.CpuMasterFree&hl=en
Set the following on CPU Master
- CPU Speed 800 MAX and 100MIN
- CPU Governor CONSERVATIVE
- and Scheduler set to CFQ
- Make sure to click apply on boot as well
- Now Install NSTOOLS from the Android market https://market.android.com/details?id=mobi.cyann.nstools&feature=search_result
Set the following on NSTOOLS
- DEEP IDLE: ENABLED
- Backlight Dimmer: ENABLED
- Make sure Backlight Notifications are left disabled. It keeps phone from idling properly.
- Leave all other settings alone and make sure to check set on boot
- Now lastly install Antutu Battery Saver from the Android Market
https://market.android.com/details?...1bGwsMSwxLDEsImNvbS5hbnR1dHUucG93ZXJzYXZlciJd
Activate Battery Saver and set to level 2 battery save. Easy as that.
Basically your done! =)
If you notice your phone has a slightly worse or little to no improvement on the battery this is due to you deleting your battery stats. As you use your phone it will write new stats and you will begin to notice a difference after a few cycles. Just make sure your battery is charged when you wipe them, Let the phone run almost completely dead. Plug it up, Let it charge back to 100%, Unplug it. Rinse and repeat. Just be sure to unplug it when you notice it's fully charged even if you don't plan on going anywhere. Just let it sit and run on battery so that it calibrates the battery stats while it's idle as well.
Now as you should already know your battery life is going to heavily depend on use and SIGNAL STRENGTH. It seems a lot of people don't realize the more signal you have the longer your battery will last. If you're in an area with very low signal it can kill your phone in a matter of hours.
I have attached a screen shot of my battery life using this above method. Other settings I will mention
- WIFI ENABLED and CONNECTED
- Bluetooth and NFC DISABLED
- Automatic backlight control enabled
- Facebook notifcations, Weather and Contacts are the only things set to SYNC on my phone.
- Usage: Light to moderate. This includes a few texts throughout the day. A few phone calls, and a brief checking of facebook every now and then.
If I'm missing anything I will update this post. That is all for now. Happy modding and may this tutorial work the same wonders for you as it did me.
Also I should state that the phone finally died at around 2Days 17hrs on battery. My goal for 3 straight days was cut short after a few 30 minute phone calls and other work I had to do on the phone.
If you have any questions. Feel free to post, or PM me. I'll be here =)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I thought it was the More Bars you have the more Data Kills Your Battery... but sprints 3G sucks .. some users only experience a .5kbs to 1.0 Mbs (if your lucky) ... that being said I think that's why your battery lasts longer. But then again I'm on Wifi so my battery has lasted all day ^_^ 15% left. Nfc on , Bluetooth off , screen at 50% brightness and heavy usage. Buuuut in your screen shot below your on 3G ... the 2 days.. was it always on Wifi?
- Google
What is your screen on time?
I don't use any "power-saving" apps, just AOKP Milestone 2 with Steve Garon's 1.14 kernel to run 50hrs with nearly 4hrs of screen time.
100/1100mhz, interactive governor, standard voltage, bln/bld on, wifi used whenever available. It doesn't help that my office is in a poor signal area - battery life would be much better if the signal reception bar stayed green all the time.
Sent from my Nexus S 4G using xda premium
iGoogleNexus said:
I thought it was the More Bars you have the more Data Kills Your Battery... but sprints 3G sucks .. some users only experience a .5kbs to 1.0 Mbs (if your lucky) ... that being said I think that's why your battery lasts longer. But then again I'm on Wifi so my battery has lasted all day ^_^ 15% left. Nfc on , Bluetooth off , screen at 50% brightness and heavy usage. Buuuut in your screen shot below your on 3G ... the 2 days.. was it always on Wifi?
- Google
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Screen time out is on 30 seconds. and Wifi was connected virutally through the entire time, exception was when I visited a friends house which is why in the screenshot it does not say it's connected, However it was still active.
Braneless said:
What is your screen on time?
I don't use any "power-saving" apps, just AOKP Milestone 2 with Steve Garon's 1.14 kernel to run 50hrs with nearly 4hrs of screen time.
100/1100mhz, interactive governor, standard voltage, bln/bld on, wifi used whenever available. It doesn't help that my office is in a poor signal area - battery life would be much better if the signal reception bar stayed green all the time.
View attachment 912363View attachment 912364View attachment 912365
Sent from my Nexus S 4G using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Those are very nice stats, Question, On your battery log, What are the massive drops in battery from? low signal or just heavy use on your phone?
Also I believe I'm going to go back an retry my experiment with SmartassV2 governor and On Demand. because I recently read they are better than conservative.
By all means play around with these settings and if you report back something I can approve on I will be happy to update this post and give credit to whoever finds more tricks to improving the battery life even more =)
cwayn1989 said:
Those are very nice stats, Question, On your battery log, What are the massive drops in battery from? low signal or just heavy use on your phone?
Also I believe I'm going to go back an retry my experiment with SmartassV2 governor and On Demand. because I recently read they are better than conservative.
By all means play around with these settings and if you report back something I can approve on I will be happy to update this post and give credit to whoever finds more tricks to improving the battery life even more =)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
They're from heavy use, probably angry birds or web browsing. The poor signal usually results in much slower drain.
Sent from my Nexus S 4G using xda premium
Braneless said:
They're from heavy use, probably angry birds or web browsing. The poor signal usually results in much slower drain.
Sent from my Nexus S 4G using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not saying you're wrong, but based on past experience when I lived in an area where my phone was constantly losing and gaining signal or especially switching between Verizon (Roaming) and Sprint to find a signal, My phone would get very warm and it would cause massive battery drain.
Also in regards to the Sprints 3G speed.
Here in town where I live now, with the new KL2 radio
Edit:
I have attached screenshots of 3G speeds. It seems today when I ran the test the speeds aren't that special, I guess it all depends on network load.
Braneless said:
What is your screen on time?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This ^
I can get about 4-5 hrs on screen-on time a day with a full charge before it dies. I couldn't imagine spreading that amount of time over three days unless I was travelling again or something lol
Sent from my Nexus S 4G using Tapatalk
kyouko said:
This ^
I can get about 4-5 hrs on screen-on time a day with a full charge before it dies. I couldn't imagine spreading that amount of time over three days unless I was travelling again or something lol
Sent from my Nexus S 4G using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Haha yeah sorry about that guys, That could have been helpful for me to post, but I actually just now realized you could view your screen on hours by clicking it. I feel about stupid now.
After I tweak some more settings and do this little experiment again I'll be sure to actually include that, Seeing as it would have been helpful LOL
Braneless said:
What is your screen on time?
I don't use any "power-saving" apps, just AOKP Milestone 2 with Steve Garon's 1.14 kernel to run 50hrs with nearly 4hrs of screen time.
100/1100mhz, interactive governor, standard voltage, bln/bld on, wifi used whenever available. It doesn't help that my office is in a poor signal area - battery life would be much better if the signal reception bar stayed green all the time.
View attachment 912363View attachment 912364View attachment 912365
Sent from my Nexus S 4G using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How do you get your phone to idle so well? I can never get the battery stats to flatline like that. Could it be due to me having BLN turned on as the OP said that causes an idle bug?
tycruickshank said:
How do you get your phone to idle so well? I can never get the battery stats to flatline like that. Could it be due to me having BLN turned on as the OP said that causes an idle bug?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There's a possibly you're running an app in the background that's preventing your phone from deep idling. Also try the battery saving app I mentioned in the post as well. It works wonders for some, and others don't notice difference. There's a lot of varying factors.
Have you wiped your battery stats and calibrated your battery with the method I mentioned above? Also you can check to see if your phone is deep idling by going into NSTools and clicking Idle stats.
If you see that your idle numbs are higher than your deep idle stats, Than yes, Something is preventing you're phone from doing so, and I would recommend disabling BLN and seeing if that fixes it.
It could be an issue with BLN and it may not be. My entire post is basically the steps and settings I've figured out and tweaked on my own to achieve maximum battery. I've read around and it seems some others have used BLN without any noticeable difference in battery at all. I guess it really just depends.
Also to the other post, The main reason I run my phone unclocked is basically, in use, I prefer the CPU to be at the lowest max speed possible, while remaining smooth, and I've noticed no lag at 800max, So therefor even when I'm using my phone it's still not going to be pulling as much power as if lets say I had it set to 1000 or 1100. Overclocking is great, Don't get me wrong, but unless you're doing something heavy like gaming or a sheet ton of crazy multitasking, I don't really think it's worth it. That's just my opinion though =)
So you're at home all this time? Then why go through all this trouble and handicapping of features and performance? Why not just plug it in?
jesusice said:
So you're at home all this time? Then why go through all this trouble and handicapping of features and performance? Why not just plug it in?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How exactly am I handicapping? I had people asking me how I was getting my battery life and wanted me to post up details on it, so I decided I would. I run an underclocked phone because like I stated in my previous post, I don't see the point in running a overclocked phone unless you're going for benchmarks or doing a lot of heavy multitasking and then by all means, Take the 5 seconds to change your max CPU speed. If you're referring to me not running BLN, That's because for some, including me it keeps your phone from idling and will cause battery drain. It works fine for some, others it doesn't. I'm SURE it's a problem on my end, but until I get it worked out I'm just leaving it off for now.
I've been learning about rooting and modding since the Sprint HTC Hero days. I'm far from a professional and will be the first to admit I'm an amateur compared to you guys, I cannot develop, I cannot code. I'm simply wrote this guide as a reference point for people wanting to get good battery life, That's why I said tweak with the settings and have fun.
The main reason I'm so ecstatic about the battery life, is up until now I've barely been able to get a days normal use out of an android phone even running custom roms and all that good stuff. Now I can actually use my phone throughout the day, Throw it on my dresser at night, and wake up the next morning with still enough charge to use it again without having to worry about plugging it up every night.
Home or not, this info can prove to be very useful depending on an individual's circumstance. I work multiple jobs and when I get home, sometimes I'm so tired I don't even bother to fiddle with my phone's charging cable and just crash on my bed. I've gotten great battery life using similar tactics (went to bed with a 13% charge once, woke up with the thing still alive and kicking), so again, some may find this extremely helpful. Good work!
zeigan said:
Home or not, this info can prove to be very useful depending on an individual's circumstance. I work multiple jobs and when I get home, sometimes I'm so tired I don't even bother to fiddle with my phone's charging cable and just crash on my bed. I've gotten great battery life using similar tactics (went to bed with a 13% charge once, woke up with the thing still alive and kicking), so again, some may find this extremely helpful. Good work!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you kind sir. I'm glad you were able to find this poorly formatted guide useful! =D
Battery Optimization Discussion Thread
CM9 beta: Android 4.0.3 for Samsung Epic 4G
This thread is ONLY to discuss issues related to power management and battery life on CM9 on the Epic 4G. Battery tips are regularly summarized in the official Battery Optimization Guide. Please read the guide before posting to this thread.
CM9 Discussion Threads
User Support, Questions & Answers Thread
Battery Optimization Discussion Thread
Tips & Customization Discussion Thread
Development Discussion Thread
its good practice to save battery to turn refresh interval for apps that access the web for updates such as social media, new readers, etc to manual to help save battery life as most of these apps refresh on a pretty regular interval and defiantly eat up alot of battery
If you notice especially high battery drain and recently used your GPS or Camera they can occasionally stay on with no visible signs. Also please remember the battery stats is HIGHLY inaccurate. A Phone reboot usually fixes this.
Never keep apps like Skype, IRC, etc that stay running and keep your CPU on they drain battery especially fast!
One big battery saver is to not wake your phone to just check the time. Let the CPU stay in deep-sleep as long as possible to preserve power until you actually need your phone for something.
One MAJOR thing to save power is DO NOT MESS WITH CPU SETTINGS!
Do not use 3rd party apps like Voltage Control or SetCPU or even the built in Performance settings as modifying the settings will increase the minimum clock to 200MHz which will greatly reduce battery life than NOT messing with them. This is a known issue and will be addressed in a future release!
dyehya said:
One MAJOR thing to save power is DO NOT MESS WITH CPU SETTINGS!
Do not use 3rd party apps like Voltage Control or SetCPU or even the built in Performance settings as modifying the settings will increase the minimum clock to 200MHz which will greatly reduce battery life than NOT messing with them. This is a known issue and will be addressed in a future release!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you DO decide to run a custom kernel, (NOT, I repeat NOT recommended or supported by CM9 devs) I'd suggest Control Freak. I ended up with a 200mhz min, and with that app managed to get deep sleep and 100mhz back. WITH uv and some minor oc. My battery life is great.
Head on over to the app thread here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1072403
Another thing that can save battery, Screen Filter from the Market (Play Store now I guess) can dim our screens lower than the lowest stock increment. Useful for dark environments. (Movies, night outside etc.)
This should be obvious, and has been stated already, but it bears repeating: TURN OFF DATA AND ALL OTHER MODEMS if you're not using them.
Thanks to all the devs and everyone who contributes.
YES!!! It seems a little bit more snappy or is it just me?
And thanks for the advice not to run custom kernels...
Without a doubt, the biggest battery saver for me, is to turn off data until I want to use it.
I simply cannot believe the difference. Makes me think I'm gonna have to go out and get Juice Defender, and let it turn off data when I put the phone to sleep, it is just that dramatic.
I can call text, and play hours of games, and still have the battery have more juice remaining than it did over the same timeframe with just a call or two for usage with the data on.
tabormeister said:
Another thing that can save battery, Screen Filter from the Market (Play Store now I guess) can dim our screens lower than the lowest stock increment. Useful for dark environments. (Movies, night outside etc.)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Rather than installing an additional app to control brightness, why not just tweak the settings yourself?
System Settings / Display / Automatic Backlight
Check "Use custom" and set a lower Screen dim level. Use "Edit other levels..." to adjust the steps for auto brightness if you use that feature.
This is a fantastic feature if you use the phone in low light conditions.
DCRocks said:
Without a doubt, the biggest battery saver for me, is to turn off data until I want to use it.
I simply cannot believe the difference. Makes me think I'm gonna have to go out and get Juice Defender, and let it turn off data when I put the phone to sleep, it is just that dramatic.
I can call text, and play hours of games, and still have the battery have more juice remaining than it did over the same timeframe with just a call or two for usage with the data on.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This first and foremost for me.
I took my phone to a basketball game the other night and turned data off. From when I left work to when I got home was about 7 hours, and I didn't plug in for another few hours later and still had some juice. Compare this to last night when I went to class and had my phone in my pocket with 4g on for a few hours, I arrived home and my phone died 15 minutes later. Total time elapsed, 3 hours 46 minutes.
Particularly 4G data is offensive in it's battery consumption.
I have also found that putting the display on Auto Brightness saps my battery. I just adjust it whenever I need to, keeping it on the lowest setting most of the day since I'm inside a lot.
The mmc_delayed_work and deleted_wake_locks are driving me crazy. I know they've been reported as "false blames," but something, whether MMC or otherwise, definitely causes seemingly unnecessary wake locks, and there is a very clear pattern between high report percentage and battery drain.
I don't mean to take away from the optimizations suggested; they're definitely useful if you're looking to stretch the battery life out longer than typical stock capability. But for many of us, something wakes the phone a little too often, and it's very difficult to debug without disabling every single application and testing one at a time.
I guess the point is, has anyone else found a better way to figure out these wake locks?
Why is awake time in Android OS always more than double the display on time? That sounds like serious wake locks. What can I do to reduce that?
Sent from my SPH-D700 using xda premium
Don't overlook the AudioOut_1 wakelock. Its my number one offender at the moment.
Minimize it by turning off screen selection sounds... System Settings / Sound / Touch sounds.
We need to figure out what the problem is with that.
On the good side, my mmc and deleted wake locks are negligible so far on beta.
Liner81 said:
Don't overlook the AudioOut_1 wakelock. Its my number one offender at the moment.
Minimize it by turning off screen selection sounds... System Settings / Sound / Touch sounds.
We need to figure out what the problem is with that.
On the good side, my mmc and deleted wake locks are negligible so far on beta.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Same for me. Think due to notification sounds mostly.
muyoso said:
Same for me. Think due to notification sounds mostly.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's probably right. The only time I ever see that is playing music without headphones. I almost always have my phone on vibrate
Sent from my SPH-D700 using xda premium
I get 39 minutes for vbus_present in the 6 hours since unplugged.
Sent from my SPH-D700 using xda premium
Just want to say THANK YOU for this thread, and THANK YOU for such am awesome rom.
If I might be so bold to suggest, put a section on your page for "If you get worse battery life on this rom than your last rom, it may not be because of a problem with this rom, it may just be that way and there may be nothing that can be done about it because that's just the way it is."
I have had no problems with battery life, fwiw.
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA
"Without a doubt, the biggest battery saver for me, is to turn off data until I want to use it."
Agreed... Right now 25%, 8 days 8 hours, 3 h 37 m awake, screen on 1 h 43 m
XXCoder said:
"Without a doubt, the biggest battery saver for me, is to turn off data until I want to use it."
Agreed... Right now 25%, 8 days 8 hours, 3 h 37 m awake, screen on 1 h 43 m
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
8 days? Airplane mode? Or is your battery over 9000....mah?
Sent from my SPH-D700 using xda premium
XXCoder said:
"Without a doubt, the biggest battery saver for me, is to turn off data until I want to use it."
Agreed... Right now 25%, 8 days 8 hours, 3 h 37 m awake, screen on 1 h 43 m
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Pics or it didn't happen! And here's a battery tip. Don't install facebook or messenger. Ever.
Sent from my SPH-D700 using Tapatalk
Just spend a day with CM9 Beta 0. It's a great rom with lots of promise. Great feel and look, very fast, ICS is fantastic.
That said, the battery life is not there yet. I basically set it up the same way I set up the stock rom. Email on Exchange push notification, EVERYTHING ELSE on manual sync. On a stock rom I usually am at about 40% after 12 hours of moderate use. About 5% drop an hour. On this rom I was at 75% after 2 hours. About 12% an hour. This is with the "stock" 1800 mAh battery.
If the devs can match the battery life of stock GB I'll be back. It really is a great rom, I just can't recharge twice a day, and I'm not carrying around a 3500mAh battery in my pocket either.
Seriously, great work to all the devs who have taken it this far. Looking forward to the next couple releases.
DCRocks said:
Without a doubt, the biggest battery saver for me, is to turn off data until I want to use it.
I simply cannot believe the difference. Makes me think I'm gonna have to go out and get Juice Defender, and let it turn off data when I put the phone to sleep, it is just that dramatic.
I can call text, and play hours of games, and still have the battery have more juice remaining than it did over the same timeframe with just a call or two for usage with the data on.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I use JD for this and run it in extreme mode, which disables data until you physically enable it yourself (and after you enable it, it will disable again when the screen is off). Using it, I get a huge improvement in battery life, especially on CM9. It's kind of annoying having to enable it everytime you turn the screen back on, especially since it takes 4-5 seconds before data works again, but if it can give me the type of battery life it does, I am all for it. Other than the slightly noticeable lag I get compared to CM7 and other ROMs such as CleanGB (I know I can install supercharger, but I am talking pure stock CM9 here), I have no problems at all. Major props to all the developers involved for breathing new life into our OG Epics.
Hey guys. I'm wondering how much better the battery has gotten since the first week y'all got it, to now.
For me I'm satisfied with the battery and I've had it for 4 days. I get about 2-2.5 hours screen on time with fairly heavy internet usage, texting, etc.
Beerad875 said:
Hey guys. I'm wondering how much better the battery has gotten since the first week y'all got it, to now.
For me I'm satisfied with the battery and I've had it for 4 days. I get about 2-2.5 hours screen on time with fairly heavy internet usage, texting, etc.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Are you taking any measures to save battery life, like certain screen brightness, disabling of certain features or radios, undervolting or CPU/Governor changes, etc?
First thing I installed on mine ( haven't had mine a week yet ) was Battery Monitor Widger Pro, since I've used that on my past devices when I was testing out generic batteries (speaking of which the 8$ ebay 3800mAh on my Desire-Z is still kicking strong after a year).
Problem with estimates, is that they are basically just that, and the difference between browsing on mobile vs browsing on wifi or mix, and your reception quality can also have an impact on your battery. (in the end, your screen is the biggest impact).
Mine lately, say if I had it charged at 100% , it'll take about 2 hours on mobile to get to 91%, with the screen being on about 25%-35% of that time (auto-brightness), receive/send text, take out of pocket to check email or facebook notifications, and so forth. Which would normally show as screen 30%, Google services 13%, Wifi 9% (when I had it on between house and destination). Phone idle 8%, Android OS 7% etc.
The widget I mentioned earlier can basically monitor your draw from time to time and if the screen was off or on and such during those times (default interval on it if using a widget is around 10 minutes on the logging, shorter may actually impact the battery it's monitoring oddly enough)
PS: The other day when I actually drained it down to 0% it took about 5-6 hours
Beerad875 said:
Hey guys. I'm wondering how much better the battery has gotten since the first week y'all got it, to now.
For me I'm satisfied with the battery and I've had it for 4 days. I get about 2-2.5 hours screen on time with fairly heavy internet usage, texting, etc.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I had about 3-4.5 hours of screen time other moderate to heavy usage on my first week as I was testing it's battery life. As that I just used my phone under light to moderate usage. My brightness level is always at it's lowest but when I'm outside I turn it up to about 50%. I rarely play games on my device. I read a lot on my phone. I use my phone to record lectures in class and do a bit of homework on it. 7 months later and I'm pretty much doing the same. I have a custom kernel installed and I'm really confidence about it. I carry a external battery pack with me all the time but I hardly use. After having a custom kernel for the past 7 months I can say battery life has been relativity the same screen time wise. I learned how to manage my apps so they won't prevent my phone from sleeping to save power. Your mileage will vary depending on what you're doing on your phone and how you manage your device. Cell service is crucial to the phone. If you're in area with little to no service your device will use up more power to stay connected. This is when "Airplane mode" comes in handy.
kbeezie said:
Are you taking any measures to save battery life, like certain screen brightness, disabling of certain features or radios, undervolting or CPU/Governor changes, etc?
First thing I installed on mine ( haven't had mine a week yet ) was Battery Monitor Widger Pro, since I've used that on my past devices when I was testing out generic batteries (speaking of which the 8$ ebay 3800mAh on my Desire-Z is still kicking strong after a year).
Problem with estimates, is that they are basically just that, and the difference between browsing on mobile vs browsing on wifi or mix, and your reception quality can also have an impact on your battery. (in the end, your screen is the biggest impact).
Mine lately, say if I had it charged at 100% , it'll take about 2 hours on mobile to get to 91%, with the screen being on about 25%-35% of that time (auto-brightness), receive/send text, take out of pocket to check email or facebook notifications, and so forth. Which would normally show as screen 30%, Google services 13%, Wifi 9% (when I had it on between house and destination). Phone idle 8%, Android OS 7% etc.
The widget I mentioned earlier can basically monitor your draw from time to time and if the screen was off or on and such during those times (default interval on it if using a widget is around 10 minutes on the logging, shorter may actually impact the battery it's monitoring oddly enough)
PS: The other day when I actually drained it down to 0% it took about 5-6 hours
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nah. All stock, not rooted yet, auto-brightness, No auto sync. I don't get very good service at my work and I was about 28% without service during the time I was there. I would get on facebook and message people on facebook and text, surf the internet etc because it was slow. I had maybe 2 hours screen time and 8% battery life when I left work. It was probably 9 hours off the charger. Here. I'll post a screen shot after this post (On my computer right now)
Sent from my Nexus 4 using xda premium
Beerad875 said:
Nah. All stock, not rooted yet, auto-brightness, No auto sync. I don't get very good service at my work and I was about 28% without service during the time I was there. I would get on facebook and message people on facebook and text, surf the internet etc because it was slow. I had maybe 2 hours screen time and 8% battery life when I left work. It was probably 9 hours off the charger. Here. I'll post a screen shot after this post (On my computer right now)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
One of the benefits to custom roms (though 'stock' on a nexus is well AOSP so...) is the ability to tweak that stuff to finer details, top it off with a custom kernel and can optimize even further. Just a matter of how far you want to take it.
I have a history of immediately rooting anything I get my hands on, so I tend to have very little experience with stock. But the Nexus devices are probably the only ones I could survive having stock (but rooted) as opposed to say touchWhiz on samsung.
I can say that this phone charges FAAAAAAST.
kbeezie said:
One of the benefits to custom roms (though 'stock' on a nexus is well AOSP so...) is the ability to tweak that stuff to finer details, top it off with a custom kernel and can optimize even further. Just a matter of how far you want to take it.
I have a history of immediately rooting anything I get my hands on, so I tend to have very little experience with stock. But the Nexus devices are probably the only ones I could survive having stock (but rooted) as opposed to say touchWhiz on samsung.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Coming from the the backflip's motoblur to the Captivate's touchwiz then onto One X's sense to AOSP.. I'm going to stay android purist from now on. I'm in love with AOSP
Beerad875 said:
Coming from the the backflip's motoblur to the Captivate's touchwiz then onto One X's sense to AOSP.. I'm going to stay android purist from now on. I'm in love with AOSP
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
At least all the available kernels work just fine with AOSP. (Francos seems to be pretty popular for battery, I prefer bricked though on both my N4 and N7).
kbeezie said:
At least all the available kernels work just fine with AOSP. (Francos seems to be pretty popular for battery, I prefer bricked though on both my N4 and N7).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Why do you prefer them?
So with battery monitor widget pro do I just let it run and collect data?
kbeezie said:
At least all the available kernels work just fine with AOSP. (Francos seems to be pretty popular for battery, I prefer bricked though on both my N4 and N7).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Guess tonight I'm going to work on getting it drained down to 0% just remembered it was my N7 that I did a full cycle on with monitoring, I haven't done so yet to the N4.
PS: I usually do a dual-graph (mV and mA), but in this screenshot you can see generally speaking with my current configuration, I tend to drain around 200-300 mA screen on, and around -20-50 with it off.
PS#2 : It only went up to the -400 or so mA on the top right because I had changed my screen brightness to about half instead of autobrightness.
Beerad875 said:
Why do you prefer them?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Additional options. Take for example the Bricked kernel for the N4 in my signature. This is it's feature list, it's not aimed for hardcore overclockers or such but gives you some options (The one for the Nexus 7 is a bit more configurable during the installation).
* Based upon Googles msm 3.4 source
* Various other fixes (look @ github)
* Compiled with gcc4.7.2 toolchain (linaro 09.12)
* -O3 optimized
* Snapdragon S4 & CortexA15 optimizations
* Sweep2wake
* 192Mhz min clock
* replaced qcoms hotplug binary with msm_mpdecision (IN-KERNEL, better battery life + performance)
* Extensive sysfs interface for mpdecision with all the tuneables you want (/sys/kernel/msm_mpdecision/)
* replaced the thermald binary with my IN-KERNEL solution. (/sys/kernel/msm_thermal/)
* export krait version to: /sys/kernel/debug/krait_variant
* modified ondemand governor
* Allow OC up to 1,83Ghz, faux123 (from a thermal point of view that is now SAFE)
* Fixed min cpufreq resets
* Undervolting (faux123)
* Default clocks: 384min & 1512max
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sweep2Wake is kind of nice too, you just slide accross the screen to turn it on without having to touch the power button (And yes your phone is still asleep doing this, it just works off interupts.)
other kernels can be a bit more involved, such as being aimed towards overclocking the CPU or GPU, or adding in extra features not normally found in stock, and so forth. I've had the best luck with Bricked and Francos'
Beerad875 said:
So with battery monitor widget pro do I just let it run and collect data?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yep, if you have a widget on the home screen (I usually do 2x1 size) it'll collect every 10 mins by default. If you don't use a widget you'd have to check a box in preference to monitor without widget or it won't log times (note for example the missing 'blocks' from my history log).
---------- Post added at 11:29 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:22 PM ----------
Speaking of battery, anyone ever gotten more than say 800mA charge on their N4? Cuz even on my old Desire-Z if I plugged it into a 2.1A charger it would actually charge up around 1300-1500mA, but with the Nexus 4 seems that even on a 2.1A port it rarely charges more than 500-600mA.
It'll probably become more accurate once I actually drain it down to 0% and have the widget record it's history from 0% to 100% since it bases a lot of it's mA estimates off that (ie: off the rate of decrease of the battery's mv since batteries typically have a certain voltage once they hit near 0% and when they're at 100%, comebine that with what it knows the battery's mA to be it can determine the charge/discharge based off that).
kbeezie said:
[/COLOR]Speaking of battery, anyone ever gotten more than say 800mA charge on their N4? Cuz even on my old Desire-Z if I plugged it into a 2.1A charger it would actually charge up around 1300-1500mA, but with the Nexus 4 seems that even on a 2.1A port it rarely charges more than 500-600mA.
It'll probably become more accurate once I actually drain it down to 0% and have the widget record it's history from 0% to 100% since it bases a lot of it's mA estimates off that (ie: off the rate of decrease of the battery's mv since batteries typically have a certain voltage once they hit near 0% and when they're at 100%, comebine that with what it knows the battery's mA to be it can determine the charge/discharge based off that).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I can get back to you when I figure this app out more and start using it.
What'd you say your screen on time usually was?
Beerad875 said:
I can get back to you when I figure this app out more and start using it.
What'd you say your screen on time usually was?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just in the last 2 hours or so, probably 30-45 minutes. I was in the car so it wasn't coming on all that often. Since I actually have the widget on my home screen now, I'll just post an update again probably in the morning as I play with the phone some more, maybe play a game or two (I'll set a Market in the battery history before I start and after I end it).
Far as figuring it out, it's pretty easy since most of it is already set up by default once you open it. You can basically just pop a 2x1 widget on the home screen and just leave it.
My battery life has improved drastically by just sticking with one setup and letting the phone get used to it. That means keep the same rom and kernel so the phone settles in and gets used to it. After a few cycles your usage should increase.
I recommend straight CM 10.1 with Franco kernel.
Also use 2g instead of HSPA+ when you're not using data to save power.
If you're using touch control, don't, it drains more power for sure.
Undervolting helps too.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using xda app-developers app
nyyankees1237 said:
If you're using touch control, don't, it drains more power for sure.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can you clarify on this, other than the power/volume there's not much else to actually control the phone with.
kbeezie said:
Can you clarify on this, other than the power/volume there's not much else to actually control the phone with.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The app 'touch control' , many nexus 4 owners use it to wake and lock the phone using touch gestures in place of the traditional power button. In my usage it definitely drains the battery quicker.
Sent from my GT-N5110 using xda app-developers app
nyyankees1237 said:
The app 'touch control' , many nexus 4 owners use it to wake and lock the phone using touch gestures in place of the traditional power button. In my usage it definitely drains the battery quicker.
Sent from my GT-N5110 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh you mean like Sweep2Wake in the Bricked Kernel I'm using, except that doesn't use any battery cuz that's in the kernel using interrupts rather than an app that would keep the phone awake. (course that's all it does too, wake, nothing more sophisticated than that).
But yea I didn't know about that app.
kbeezie said:
Just in the last 2 hours or so, probably 30-45 minutes. I was in the car so it wasn't coming on all that often. Since I actually have the widget on my home screen now, I'll just post an update again probably in the morning as I play with the phone some more, maybe play a game or two (I'll set a Market in the battery history before I start and after I end it).
Far as figuring it out, it's pretty easy since most of it is already set up by default once you open it. You can basically just pop a 2x1 widget on the home screen and just leave it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So yeah. You should drain it then report with some screenshots.
It's at 44% right now
Sent from my Nexus 4 using XDA Premium HD app
Hello guys,
I have been researching, experimenting and trying many many things to understand how cell phone battery consumption works and how to find the solution to be able to use the most of the battery! HTC did a very bad job on the battery side of M9 and in my opinion, Battery is the only downside of M9. I will explain later why I say that.
I will share the tips and tricks I found to get such battery life that none of you ever think of getting out of M9. Look at below battery stat. It looks like M8 battery stat which made all M8 user really happy with their device! Now we will be enjoying that too! BTW This is my birthday today, so its a very good day for me to post this thread. Wish me luck!
First Let me explain some things about why a phone drain the battery in relation with CPU and Apps.
1. Random CPU freq change.
2. CPU heat.
3. When phone is idle, means you are not doing anything(not opening apps or neither you have apps opened in background, CPU freq not being able to stay down.
4. GPU related drains(while playing games or not)
5. Display category. Amoled or LCD or what type.
6. Buggy ROM keeping wake locks. ( I am not going to talk about wake locks at all. There are good enough threads for this)
7. Apps. Each you open and close an app, the cpu starts working, freq goes high. So, this means, the less opening and closing you can do the less battery you consume. Now, all these concepts of app killer running in background, killing apps after a certain interval, ARE COMPLETELY WASTE OF BATTERY AND NOTHING ELSE! Android keeps opening apps in background according to its algorithm. So, if you want those app to stop bugging you in the background, then task killers are NOT ANY USE AT ALL! Remember! The less app in background the less drain you will get. We usually use home button a lot when coming to home screen but we dont realize the app just got minimized and consuming as much as battery as it would if it was open in the foreground. So result is, bad standby time + more drain while screen is on.
So how can you get rid of those background apps? Best way is to use Greenify. Greenify is the only app that can hibernate any app without hogging battery by itself and keeping wake locks. How to find which apps to put under auto hibernation list? You need 2/3 days to observe. Greenify will automatically mark those apps which opens in background. Once you are with good number of apps, greenify all of them. In greenify settings, select autohibernation so that even if some gets awake by the app, can be put to sleep again. Now two things will hapen because of this.
1. You will consume MUCH LESS CPU power means you will save battery. The device will be very snappy. Ram will be at least 1.3 gb free.
2. It will take more time for an app to open which are under your hibernation list. Now I have thought about it. My conclusion is that, I need to choose between battery and super fast device. When I on battery saving priority I follow the solutions of this threads and when I am not worried about the battery I try to enjoy the device.
So, we can restrict apps from hogging with greenify. Now how to control the CPU?
Out CPU is actually ULTRA FAST and is capable of fastest performance amongst all smart phone around. Here is the antutu benchmark to show how crazy this CPU can be! So crazy CPU will drain battery. Its cor-relational. So, the solution is to limit the CPU from putting too much power, especially when it gives more than the phone and user needs. When I was using HTC Sensation, I was feeling like, there are 2/3 things which should be better and I demand nothing more from a phone. LIke battery, camera, ram etc. But after M7 I have never felt that the phone should get faster and we should get like 4 gb of ram either~! But newer means faster and better. So CPU + GPU are getting more powerful and eventually the phone is getting such overrated power which it doesnt even need! After all we are not flying to moon with our phones! lol!~ Right?
ok Now how to limit the CPU?
We need
1. Elemental x kernel 4.01 installed with all stock configuration. This is important. Yout must use STOCK values. I have seen anything else other than STOCK values drain the battery even more! So STOCK IS BEST!
2. Elemental x kernel app or Kernel adiutor kernel config app to tune the kernel for our battery saving mode.
Steps-
- Set HTC pnp manager off
- Set max cpu freq of small cluster to 864 mhz, min cpu freq to 384
-Make sure you are on stock gov.
- Set GPU max to 320 GHZ.
-Flash this zip by @ivicask Battery tweaked php zip
[url=http://postimg.org/image/uoq5zw5j5/]
[/URL]
[url=http://postimg.org/image/xf43atrlt/]
[/URL]
[url=http://postimg.org/image/fotohog75/]
[/URL]
Disclaimer: These settings will make the phone performance slower but not laggy. So, just consider a power saver package which has very decent speed too!
After applying these settings, you better restart your device to let settle it with new rules for CPU. leave the phone for 2/3 mins. The things that you will notice when you turn on the display -
1. No rapid CPU freq changes
2. Phone is ultra cool as the temp of CPU and battery has gone down to 35 C. M9 with default setting will never come down to 35 c ever! The lower temp would be 40 c. So, cooling the cpu will minimize mA consumption.
3. when you open any heavy app like fb or chrome you will see the consumption mA rate is almost half of what it is with default settings. Max rate of discharge was 700 mA for me with 50% brightness + 3g internet + FB/chrome/youtube.
4. When you leave your phone to sleep, here is the fun! I have never seen such low mA discharge rate on M9 and I didnt even expect! It goes as low as 40 mA! Insane! The avg screen of discharge rate I found was 70 mA which means on full charge our M9 will get 40 hours standby! And that is with internet on.
5. If you are charging with official m9 charger, you will see the charging rate is 850/+- mA while your display is on with internet. When screen off it will reach mac to 1340 mA. My phone previously was charging at 600 mA with screen off. So, now 0 to full charge is only in 2 hours.
6. Clash of Clans used to drain 1200 mA and now it drains only 550-600 mA.
[url=http://postimg.org/image/7ookkoe0x/]
[/URL]
Hope this helps. Please post your battery results. And dont forget to tell me if you like this post. This will inspire me to make more posts.
Thanks!
I'm in the search of the perfect battery life too haha ????. Please continue posting about battery improvements. Thanks!
My battery life goes way up when I put the phone in the glove box of the work truck. 0% drain over 5 hours, checked it for call a few times and that was it. I leave data and stuff switched off until I'm going to use it.
Sent from my HTC One M9 using XDA-Developers mobile app
Instead of turning PNPMGR off, have a look at this first. http://forum.xda-developers.com/one-m9/development/mod-htc-one-m9-enhanced-thermal-t3369574
It's a pretty indepth thread on the pros and cons of PNPMGR, and also custom thermal configuration files that change clock speeds of your CPU, dependent on your usage.
Also, your Antutu benchmark picture isn't anywhere to be found.
What about CPU boost? Do you disable it?
Skickat från min HTC One M9 via Tapatalk
I do all like u but my m9 is still after few minutes too hot.
I never was more diaappointed with any another of my phone and heating and poor batt life like on m9...
After one hour of browsing internet I'm over 50% down.. on stock mm. That's shame for HTC. Now I'm back on my 2yrs old s5 with still perfect battery life..
I don't get any overheating on my m9 at all. It's on stock marshmallow still. Bought it used a couple weeks ago.
Sent from my HTC One M9 using XDA-Developers mobile app
BLEK0TA said:
I do all like u but my m9 is still after few minutes too hot.
I never was more diaappointed with any another of my phone and heating and poor batt life like on m9...
After one hour of browsing internet I'm over 50% down.. on stock mm. That's shame for HTC. Now I'm back on my 2yrs old s5 with still perfect battery life..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi,
If you did an OTA update to MM and are losing that much battery in just an hour of heavy use, then I would back up everything and do a factory reset. I can go for 5 hours of very heavy power user performance before dropping to that level. Either that, or you have a malware app on the phone that is being used in the background. Which a factory reset will also solve.( except in rare cases, requiring a firmware reflash)
+249904226367. M9 ftw!!!
350Rocket said:
My battery life goes way up when I put the phone in the glove box of the work truck. 0% drain over 5 hours, checked it for call a few times and that was it. I leave data and stuff switched off until I'm going to use it.
Sent from my HTC One M9 using XDA-Developers mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
the same happens to me , but when i used it , it drains really quickly , i wonder why
lateral18 said:
the same happens to me , but when i used it , it drains really quickly , i wonder why
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just follow this link as the issues have been dealt with about as good as it can get.. good luck
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=3369574
Æaa..\../
takota6 said:
Just follow this link as the issues have been dealt with about as good as it can get.. good luck
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=3369574
Æaa..\../
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I did , thanks to that script , the phone is so much better now :fingers-crossed: