Galaxy S2 + iPhone charger = Nuclear rocket charger - Galaxy S II General

I don't know what drug Apple put in their chargers, but i've always noticed my iPhone charging waaaay faster than my S2.
I even tried draining them both to 0%, and charging them with their original chargers. As soon as the iPhone was full of juice, the S2 was just about 50 or 60%
So i did some research about the safety of using the Apple charger, and it appeared to be all OK.
I'm going to end up buying a new battery anyways because i feel like mine has worn out, so i thought it was a good idea to plug the S2 in the fruitplug.
After i plugged the USB cable into the Apple charger, i immediately noticed the phone charging way faster. Waaay faster.
The phone does get a little warmer, but not too warm. I charged the phone from 8% to 100% in less than a hour!
I'm still experimenting the safety of this, by constantly keeping a look at the temperatures, and how hot the thing feels, and it appears to stay safe.
I recommend to remove your case and battery cover and keep an eye on your phone if you consider trying this, but for now i can say one thing:
If you have an iDevice in your house, charge your phone with the fruitplug
on the other side... what do you think about it? Would you try it?

domini99 said:
I don't know what drug Apple put in their chargers, but i've always noticed my iPhone charging waaaay faster than my S2.
I even tried draining them both to 0%, and charging them with their original chargers. As soon as the iPhone was full of juice, the S2 was just about 50 or 60%
So i did some research about the safety of using the Apple charger, and it appeared to be all OK.
I'm going to end up buying a new battery anyways because i feel like mine has worn out, so i thought it was a good idea to plug the S2 in the fruitplug.
After i plugged the USB cable into the Apple charger, i immediately noticed the phone charging way faster. Waaay faster.
The phone does get a little warmer, but not too warm. I charged the phone from 8% to 100% in less than a hour!
I'm still experimenting the safety of this, by constantly keeping a look at the temperatures, and how hot the thing feels, and it appears to stay safe.
I recommend to remove your case and battery cover and keep an eye on your phone if you consider trying this, but for now i can say one thing:
If you have an iDevice in your house, charge your phone with the fruitplug
on the other side... what do you think about it? Would you try it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It is all abouy amp your charger uses.
S2 charger give 5amp out and iphone must be more which throws more juice to ur phones battery thus fast charging.
Sent from my GT-I9100 using xda premium

Not 5A actually, it gives output of 5V and 1A.At least my charger. @domini99, what is the output for your iPhone charger ?

Nightshadow931 said:
Not 5A actually, it gives output of 5V and 1A.At least my charger. @domini99, what is the output for your iPhone charger ?
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According to the information on the charger, it outputs 1A. My samsung charger also outputs 1A, yet it charges faster with the iPhone charger.
I did some quick research and found that the iPhone charger would have a special sort of **** inside of it that charges the phone in a different way. Not sure if bull**** or actually true, but they did put some sort of magic or drug in that thing to make it hypercharge anything i charge in it

They couldn't have put anything inside, it all depends of voltage and amperage.
You can use charger with higher amperage than your device need though.
And, yea, you can use charger with more amps, but you cannot use charger with higher voltage than 5V.

iPad charger gives [email protected], but last time I tried it with a Samsung phone, it wouldn't charge.

Nightshadow931 said:
They couldn't have put anything inside, it all depends of voltage and amperage.
The higher the amperage, the faster your phone will charge.
You can use charger with higher amperage than your device need, your phone would charge just fine, only faster. But it would cause heating your device, thus reducing the life of your battery.
And, yea, you can use charger with more amps, but you cannot use charger with higher voltage than 5V.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well I'm fine with my iPhone charger
darth_mickrig said:
iPad charger gives [email protected], but last time I tried it with a Samsung phone, it wouldn't charge.
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Click to collapse
Maybe the iPad charger has too much drugs or magic inside of it and your Galaxy doesn't have any Space for it?

tablet/smartphone 5V | 2A,Micro USB
I buy charger for tablet/smartphone [email protected] It charges 3x faster.

I check all the chargers i have with current widget, a nice little app tell how much mv your battery have left and how much your charger putting in. I plug in a 600mah charger and i get around 500-550mah input. With a 2a charger i get 641mah consistantly, so i guess that's thr limit of our device
So 650mah, and a 1650mah battery, that means 2 and a half hour for full cycle. And that also means something is happening to that apple juicer

pipyakas said:
So 650mah, and a 1650mah battery, that means 2 and a half hour for full cycle. And that also means something is happening to that apple juicer
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Click to collapse
This.
S2's hardware doesn't allow it to charge more than 650mAh from an external charger. So it doesn't matter if you're using 1Ah or 2Ah charger, it will be the same.
Now, that's for the international i9100, who knows if there's something different with other versions or if the phone has a faulty hardware. I've also noticed that my phone recharges much faster right after being quickly discharged. So it could also be that the metering is faulty and there was juice left in the battery.

Darius_bd said:
This.
S2's hardware doesn't allow it to charge more than 650mAh from an external charger. So it doesn't matter if you're using 1Ah or 2Ah charger, it will be the same.
Now, that's for the international i9100, who knows if there's something different with other versions or if the phone has a faulty hardware. I've also noticed that my phone recharges much faster right after being quickly discharged. So it could also be that the metering is faulty and there was juice left in the battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I got European s2, would that make any difference?

What I know is that the s2 never will charge over 650mA per hour. I use a 700mA charger and incoming at ~640mA on my s2.
Maybe a battery charger will do better than charging through phone?

pipyakas said:
I check all the chargers i have with current widget, a nice little app tell how much mv your battery have left and how much your charger putting in. I plug in a 600mah charger and i get around 500-550mah input. With a 2a charger i get 641mah consistantly, so i guess that's thr limit of our device
So 650mah, and a 1650mah battery, that means 2 and a half hour for full cycle. And that also means something is happening to that apple juicer
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How did u make it work ? For me it shows 0mA always. I tried with v0.38 though, could you send me an apk for the latest version (0.40) from play store, cause it keeps telling me that the app is not compatible with my device.
Also, are u on jb or kk ?

Nightshadow931 said:
How did u make it work ? For me it shows 0mA always. I tried with v0.38 though, could you send me an apk for the latest version (0.40) from play store, cause it keeps telling me that the app is not compatible with my device.
Also, are u on jb or kk ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I install it from gg play and it works, no trouble there. Im using cm10.1, and i have tp resize the widget to have full vision of it. Anw, just got a ipad mini charger, 1A, plug in and it show around 640mah. 2.5h for a full cycle, that means op's charger have some problem. Too good to br true
---------- Post added at 02:21 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:18 PM ----------
GreekBlood said:
What I know is that the s2 never will charge over 650mA per hour. I use a 700mA charger and incoming at ~640mA on my s2.
Maybe a battery charger will do better than charging through phone?
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Click to collapse
A charging dock for the battery only, maybe. But be careful of those, they can make battery "fat" then eventually broke
---------- Post added at 02:22 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:21 PM ----------
Darius_bd said:
Now, that's for the international i9100, who knows if there's something different with other versions or if the phone has a faulty hardware. I've also noticed that my phone recharges much faster right after being quickly discharged. So it could also be that the metering is faulty and there was juice left in the battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Im using M250S version, and it doesnt seem that there are any differences

pipyakas said:
A charging dock for the battery only, maybe. But be careful of those, they can make battery "fat" then eventually broke=
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Click to collapse
Then you overcharge them.

GreekBlood said:
Then you overcharge them.
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I dont have a proper charging dock though, i can only guess when it's finish, and that's dangerous. Im using an ipad mini charger now and it's fine, just can do the 1hour-to-full like op's

pipyakas said:
I dont have a proper charging dock though, i can only guess when it's finish, and that's dangerous. Im using an ipad mini charger now and it's fine, just can do the 1hour-to-full like op's
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
And that's awesome

Related

Why does it take 1 year for the battery to charge?

Sarcasm, haha laugh a little.
But really, do you guys notice that it takes a long time for the battery to charge?
I think when available, I'll buy a bunch of batteries just to have handy.
well the battery is 1500mAh the nexus charged pretty quickly but it was 1400mAh i am not sure how much difference 100mAh will make on charging the battery but that could be a possibility.
Charging with the computer will always be slower, if that's what you're using.
I wonder if its the charger. The provided charger has an output rating of 0.7A. I know some microusb chargers I have seen are rated as high as 1.0A. That could be the difference.
soklean said:
well the battery is 1500mAh the nexus charged pretty quickly but it was 1400mAh i am not sure how much difference 100mAh will make on charging the battery but that could be a possibility.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I was thinking the same thing...hhmm could 100mAh make that much of a difference?
heygrl said:
Charging with the computer will always be slower, if that's what you're using.
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Click to collapse
I always try to avoid using the computer to charge my phone. It just seems to take awfully long even plugged into the wall.
landale said:
I wonder if its the charger. The provided charger has an output rating of 0.7A. I know some microusb chargers I have seen are rated as high as 1.0A. That could be the difference.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Interesting...that could be. However, maybe it's 0.7A for a reason? Perhaps the battery needs to have it at that "flow rate." ???
We did get a different charger over the i9000, they had a separate USB cable and microUSB wall charger. We obviously don't have that setup.
Some phones have Li-Pol batteries and they have to charge differently. This could be why it's taking so long to recharge.
check a tmobile store or website for the new portable micro usb charger. charges your phone on the go and recharges itself via a usb charger the vibrant ships with or your computer. i got mine and was a lifesaver the other night when i needed to leave my house with 10% charged.
I hate saying this, but: I literally LOL'd from the title of this thread.
I completely agree. Charging takes fuggin' forever. My guess would be that turning the device off helps speed this up, tremendously. But of course, who wants to do that?
That said, battery life has been impressively long, provided you turn off Samsung's widgets. :/
iunlock said:
Interesting...that could be. However, maybe it's 0.7A for a reason? Perhaps the battery needs to have it at that "flow rate." ???
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That would be a huge design oversight if a generic charger caused problems with the battery. I'm sure Samsung thought about the user charging with a generic charger.
Mine charges pretty fast I'm using the usb that came with the moto cliq
iceshinobi said:
Mine charges pretty fast I'm using the usb that came with the moto cliq
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Click to collapse
How fast is fast, iceshinobi?
I have conditioned my battery twice and going from empty with the phone off and pluged into the wall not via usb-pc, took me over 4hrs each time.
If the charger is 0.7 going to a 1.0 would be a huge improvement. The only worry would be the extra heat and problems that might cause. With NiMH batteries quick charging is preferable to slow charging, is this the same for Li-ion?
came here for insight as well, woke up at like 5am, phone was almost dead, 10% battery or so
turned it off, plugged it in to the wall charger and it is now 8am and it is maybe 60-70% charged
what the hell?
with my g1 turned off i can go from 0 to 100% charge in like an hour or so using a USB port. now i know the battery is smaller but c'mon... this is ridiculous.
Could it be that the phone just has to break in? When I first got G1 it would take about 4 hours to charge I remember, now a year and a half later I can get it to 80-90 percent in 1 and a half.
The computer USB standard is 100 to 500 milliamp, the USB walloulet adapter (charger) Is 700 milliamp, our batteries are 1500 milliamp and that's why.
USB cables have a certain standards witch includes voltage and current standards.
If you want a fast charger look for a hard wired 1000-1200 milliamp charger with a micro USB connector on ebay.
siberslug said:
The computer USB standard is 100 to 500 milliamp, the USB walloulet adapter (charger) Is 700 milliamp, our batteries are 1500 milliamp and that's why.
USB cables have a certain standards witch includes voltage and current standards.
If you want a fast charger look for a hard wired 1000-1200 milliamp charger with a micro USB connector on ebay.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Interesting...having a 1000+ milliamp charger shouldn't cause heat issues would it for pumping in more juice at a higher rate?

[Q] Charging with a 2.1 amp charger?

Do you think it would be safe to charge the evo with a 2.1 amp car charger? I found one on ebay that says its made for the iPad but I would love a faster charge on my epic.
In general, the slower you charge the battery, the longer it will last. The effect is pretty significant.
I don't know if that much current is safe.
http://www.batteryuniversity.com/parttwo-34.htm
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA App
It's more complicated than that. Just because the charger is able to provide 2.1A doesn't mean the phone will actually draw that much current.
The charge control circuitry is built into the phone. You are just providing a +5V rail as the charging power source via a standard USB connection. There is no charge control inherent in USB itself.
Sent from Samsung Vibrant
It will only pull as much as it needs. I use higher amp output chargers and it's not a problem. It will charge faster, regardless of what you use, if you turn the phone off.
jnadke said:
In general, the slower you charge the battery, the longer it will last.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Bingo.
Being an Aerospace Electrical Engineer I approve of this message.
jnadke said:
In general, the slower you charge the battery, the longer it will last. The effect is pretty significant.
I don't know if that much current is safe.
http://www.batteryuniversity.com/parttwo-34.htm
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
this is true, but the effect is not that significant, coming from using lithium packs in rc helicopers and cars, the battery will likely be obsolete before you kill it and the batteries aren't that expensive.
kerms said:
Do you think it would be safe to charge the evo with a 2.1 amp car charger? I found one on ebay that says its made for the iPad but I would love a faster charge on my epic.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
do you have a link and is there a wall charger too? I run a remote desktop app and it destroys the battery, even with the 1 amp charger going the battery just gets lower and lower.
robl45 said:
do you have a link and is there a wall charger too? I run a remote desktop app and it destroys the battery, even with the 1 amp charger going the battery just gets lower and lower.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It could be due to the usb micro charging standards... Many chargers do not adhere to the standard, and this may cause some of the newer phones (droid X, galaxy S phones) not to charge at full power. Most older phones simply did not care, and would use all the amperage they could get their hands on.
Basically, if the D+ and D- pins of the USB cable are not shorted, then the device will draw minimal power from the +5v rail. It is probably drawing <500 mah, and could even be drawing as little as 100 mah from the charger.
Getting a proper 1A charger could fix this, but I'd like to test it out myself when I get the chance..
http://www.griffintechnology.com/products/powerduo-for-ipad
These work good. I use the ac one. Only thing is, like some have stated, even when charging when phone is on and using the phone, the battery will still go down. Maybe 2.2 will fix this or a patch.
I'm not going to debate fast vs slow charging. This isn't like debating what is the best charger for AA rechargeable nimh, fast or slow or charging method.

T-Mobile HD2 takes too long to recharge the battery

Hello folks, I am very concerned with my HTC HD2 as it takes like over 4 hours to fully recharge the battery. I have got this HD2 from the market here on XDA and it works very good overall, except for this problem when recharging it. I thought it was the charger and I have tried many usb to wall chargers even the the iPhone's 4 one, but nothing has changed.
I have also tried several roms and kernels but nothing has changed on this side as well. I wiped everything and put back win mobile 6.5 T-mobile stock rom, but hey, no difference here too..
I am wondering if there might be something wrong with the phone itself or can it be the battery going in holiday???....
How can I figure this out???
I have downloaded Battery Doctor from the market and it says the battery is in good health, and I get up to 14 hours with a full charge with mytouch 4G rom and kernel rafpigna 1.7 cpu 1.3Ghz OC.
Is anyone else experiencing the same problem ??? do you guys have any suggests ???
This problem is driving me really crazy...
Get a new battery, mine only takes 2 hours when completely dead.
mattfmartin said:
Get a new battery, mine only takes 2 hours when completely dead.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You think is the battery?? but I get up to 14 hours of usage, I am not sure if its that good though, but I heard this phone is a sucky battery, and anyways why Battery doctor says the battery is in good health ??
Anyways I was thinking to get the battery extended 2300mah
How many hours does your battery last???
Are you using the original HD2 charger? I have tried many different chargers and they always charge at a different rate. It has to be that, not the battery.
secano said:
Are you using the original HD2 charger? I have tried many different chargers and they always charge at a different rate. It has to be that, not the battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unfortunately it came with its original charger broken and I have never had the pleasure to try with it.. Anyways I am using a charger that has the same specs of the original one, which is the usb charger of the iPhone 4, and yea same result ...
I have downloaded currentwidget from the market and it gets less than 200mA of current in, when it usually should get around 400mA, sometimes the value goes down to 200mA as well, which makes me really wonder the problem might be the usb port of the phone .
Does a broken battery does that as well??
Segnale007 said:
Unfortunately it came with its original charger broken and I have never had the pleasure to try with it.. Anyways I am using a charger that has the same specs of the original one, which is the usb charger of the iPhone 4, and yea same result ...
I have downloaded currentwidget from the market and it gets less than 200mA of current in, when it usually should get around 400mA, sometimes the value goes down to 200mA as well, which makes me really wonder the problem might be the usb port of the phone .
Does a broken battery does that as well??
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think it has to do with the charger you're using . When I charge mine I usually see anything from 500+mA to 700+mA on my battery monitor widget depending on how much charge the battery has, and like Segnale007 said it usually takes about 2 hrs to fully charge.
Segnale007 said:
Unfortunately it came with its original charger broken and I have never had the pleasure to try with it.. Anyways I am using a charger that has the same specs of the original one, which is the usb charger of the iPhone 4, and yea same result ...
I have downloaded currentwidget from the market and it gets less than 200mA of current in, when it usually should get around 400mA, sometimes the value goes down to 200mA as well, which makes me really wonder the problem might be the usb port of the phone .
Does a broken battery does that as well??
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I can't say it's the battery cause you say it lasts you 14 hours, usb port? maybe. Your battery is good for it to last that much (on averge usage of course). It's the different charger that you're using.
roloracer said:
I think it has to do with the charger you're using . When I charge mine I usually see anything from 500+mA to 700+mA on my battery monitor widget depending on how much charge the battery has, and like Segnale007 said it usually takes about 2 hrs to fully charge.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The charger I am using its the iphone 4 charger and just like the original one its a 100-240V ~ 0.2A 50-60HZ , which I have no idea about what it means, but I can guarantee u its the same ..
So, what charger do you suggest me to buy?? I wish it was everything except the phone ...
Segnale007 said:
The charger I am using its the iphone 4 charger and just like the original one its a 100-240V ~ 0.2A 50-60HZ , which I have no idea about what it means, but I can guarantee u its the same ..
So, what charger do you suggest me to buy?? I wish it was everything except the phone ...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's your issue there, 0.2A (aka 200mA).
The UK HD2 charger for example, is 1A (aka 1000mA).
To work out the maximum time it should take to charge the battery:
(capacity x inefficiency factor) / charging current
(1230 x 1.15)/200 = 7 hours
(1230 x 1.15)/1000 = 1.4 hours
xaccers said:
That's your issue there, 0.2A (aka 200mA).
The UK HD2 charger for example, is 1A (aka 1000mA).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh gosh, so ur basically telling me its the charger I am using what is ****ing up with the slow charging ???
Can you please point me at a good one???
I am totally ignorant about electricity and stuff like that ...
That charger only delievers 0.2 A which is 200ma , you need at least a 500ma charger, mine is a 1 A ( 1000 ma ) and its quite normal to see a 700 ma rate while charging..
Sent from my HTC Desire HD using XDA App
Segnale007 said:
Oh gosh, so ur basically telling me its the charger I am using what is ****ing up with the slow charging ???
Can you please point me at a good one???
I am totally ignorant about electricity and stuff like that ...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Take a look on ebay or any local phone shop/online phone accessory shop.
You want a micro usb charger that has an output current of at least 500mA/0.5A
The original HTC ones are 1000mA.
Blackberry ones I've seen are 700mA so they're good enough.
200mA isn't a problem, it won't damage your battery, in fact it will live slightly longer as it's being put under less stress when charging, but don't use your phone while you're charging with it as you'll be drawing more current than the charger can supply.
So for instance, if you wanted a car charger so you could use the phone as a satnav and talk via bluetooth, you'd need a 1A charger to cope with the drain on the battery.
xaccers said:
Take a look on ebay or any local phone shop/online phone accessory shop.
You want a micro usb charger that has an output current of at least 500mA/0.5A
The original HTC ones are 1000mA.
Blackberry ones I've seen are 700mA so they're good enough.
200mA isn't a problem, it won't damage your battery, in fact it will live slightly longer as it's being put under less stress when charging, but don't use your phone while you're charging with it as you'll be drawing more current than the charger can supply.
So for instance, if you wanted a car charger so you could use the phone as a satnav and talk via bluetooth, you'd need a 1A charger to cope with the drain on the battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Alright thanks, will let you know
Segnale007 said:
You think is the battery?? but I get up to 14 hours of usage, I am not sure if its that good though, but I heard this phone is a sucky battery, and anyways why Battery doctor says the battery is in good health ??
Anyways I was thinking to get the battery extended 2300mah
How many hours does your battery last???
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
With very, very light use about 55 hrs. That's not extended.
Alright, my dad has managed to temporary fix its original charger and I can confirm there's nothing wrong with the battery and the phone itself. It gets beyond 800mA with the original charger and fully recharge the batter within an hour and half, which is great..
Ok now I have to find a compatible USB to wall charger with the same frequency.
Since its a T-Mobile US HD2 its original charger is american, and since I am in Italy I'd get an Italian standard wall charger. Does the Italian HD2 original wall charger has the same frequency of the american one??
Thanks
xaccers said:
Take a look on ebay or any local phone shop/online phone accessory shop.
You want a micro usb charger that has an output current of at least 500mA/0.5A
The original HTC ones are 1000mA.
Blackberry ones I've seen are 700mA so they're good enough.
200mA isn't a problem, it won't damage your battery, in fact it will live slightly longer as it's being put under less stress when charging, but don't use your phone while you're charging with it as you'll be drawing more current than the charger can supply.
So for instance, if you wanted a car charger so you could use the phone as a satnav and talk via bluetooth, you'd need a 1A charger to cope with the drain on the battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Couldn't said it better..
Sent from my HTC HD2 Gingerbread using XDA App
I have the same problem but with Htc touch 2(Mega)-I know that this isn't Mega forum but i couldn't find any solution there,so i write here my issue-.It takes too much to charge my Touch 2 (around 9-10 hours) with the AC power.On the charger its writen:Input:100-240~0.3A(0,3A)50-60Hz,Output: 5V-1.0A(1,0A)MAX.DO I have the same problem,I need to change the charger?Thank you!
My T-Mobile's battery recharced 3 ours. not 4 ours or more. My charger is original.is there any problem with my battery

nexus s wont turn on after not using it for 4 months

ok i switched to another phone and i stooped using nexus s for like 4 months i was planning to sell it and today i took it out it does not even turn on. does not take charge. it was perfectly fine... what happened?????
Maybe the battery got killed.
does it do anything when its plugged in?
pull the battery, put it back in, try charging, oddly enough sometimes works.
it was perfectly fine until you left it for another <del>woman</del> phone. how did you think it would react?
Try charging it connected to a computer. Often wall chargers can't charge a device that is completely dead
Sent from my Nexus S
Matridom said:
Try charging it connected to a computer. Often wall chargers can't charge a device that is completely dead
Sent from my Nexus S
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't see how that would make any difference. I've never experienced that yet.
herbthehammer said:
I don't see how that would make any difference. I've never experienced that yet.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Because you'res not dead?
lvnatic said:
Because you'res not dead?
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Click to collapse
A charger is a charger. If both are working properly then one won't charge better than the other. One may charge faster than the other. Perhaps the battery has a dead or weak cell in it. Try swapping batteries with someone and see if your phone will charge it. Give someone your battery and see if their phone charges it. Try their charger on your phone. Try your charger on their phone. Process of elimination.
herbthehammer said:
A charger is a charger. If both are working properly then one won't charge better than the other. One may charge faster than the other. Perhaps the battery has a dead or weak cell in it. Try swapping batteries with someone and see if your phone will charge it. Give someone your battery and see if their phone charges it. Try their charger on your phone. Try your charger on their phone. Process of elimination.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Think about it..why would one charge faster than the other? well because the one charging faster is being given more current. if the battery is dead and isnt able to charge with the weak charger, maybe the one giving out more current is just enough current to get it started. You can compare this to jump starting a dead car battery.
omvir said:
Think about it..why would one charge faster than the other? well because the one charging faster is being given more current. if the battery is dead and isnt able to charge with the weak charger, maybe the one giving out more current is just enough current to get it started. You can compare this to jump starting a dead car battery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, no. It doesn't work like that at all.
Chances are the battery is just totally dead. If you have some sort of a charger that can charge any given Li-ion battery, hook it up and see if it charges. Otherwise, you're going to have to beg/borrow/steal/buy a new battery.
Yeah, a dead or weak cell is just that. I might be wrong but once that happens, there's no way to fix or revive it that will bring it back to normal. Check into it. If it turns out to be a bad battery, I'm not 100% sure so don't quote me, I thought I might have read the ns uses the same battery as the Samsung moment. If this is true, please research it first, then it shouldn't be very expensive to replace. I highly suggest you get an OEM original Samsung battery. Aftermarket usually never hold up as good as an OEM if both batteries are the same ratings. I've had OEM batteries outlast aftermarket ones for uptime even when the OEM was rated significantly lower in output. Example: I had sprint official battery that was extended 2200 for my evo. I had aftermarket 3300 for the epic. The evo would outlast the epic when both had a full overnight charge. Now before anyone says that's not a fair comparison, consider this. When both phones had OEM 1500ma batteries in them, the evo would ALWAYS die before the epic would. Noticeably sooner.

Charging while in use

If I have the screen on while plugged in, my battery % continues to drop and the device itself feels kind of hot. Could I have a problem or is this normal?
My battery life has also not been so great.
perigee said:
If I have the screen on while plugged in, my battery % continues to drop and the device itself feels kind of hot. Could I have a problem or is this normal?
My battery life has also not been so great.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Are you using the OEM charger?
perigee said:
If I have the screen on while plugged in, my battery % continues to drop and the device itself feels kind of hot. Could I have a problem or is this normal?
My battery life has also not been so great.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Mine doesn't it keeps going up, though I haven't tried playing games. It does depend on what you are doing with the device, if you are running applications that max out the processor it will possibly drop.
The GSII would drain while plugged in if the screen was on. You would see a noticeable drain while using GPS and Music and driving. The only way to make it work was to turn the screen off on the device, the GSIII has a better charging chip in it, and it isn't limited to 650maH (from what I can tell since it is charging when using GPS)
I noticed it while using a usb car cigarette adapter as well as a usb port on my laptop. the car adapter is a 2 amp charger capable of charging a tablet. I will see how it performs with the oem wall charger.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 using XDA
Yeah I was charging my phone earlier using a car was adapter with the oem micro usb cable and they phone got very hot.
What do you guys think? Is this a cause for concern? Do I need to buy a manufacturer approved adapter?
Is it safe to leave the phone plugged in overnight? I usually charge the phone when I go to bed, but I've the this might damage some batteries.
hyped89 said:
Is it safe to leave the phone plugged in overnight? I usually charge the phone when I go to bed, but I've the this might damage some batteries.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm curious about this myself....I'm leaning towards not leaving mine plugged all night. I 2 have done this in the past with other phones and can't be certain but maybe this is a rEason I had horrible batt life despite efforts to Better it. So I'm gonna stick with charging/topping off when I can. Gonna start just charging when I wake up while I'm getting ready for work. I did notice that when battery is completely charged a message comes up telling u so and to unplug. So I'm gonna follow directions haha.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 using XDA
All modern smartphones have chips that control power, and cycle charging appropriately to not abuse the battery. Many phones monitor the temp of the battery and such to ensure a good and safe charge. You can leave it plugged in overnight just fine..
It definitely doesn't like 3rd party adapters. I'm hoping it will at least accept the tab adapter with samsung's cable so that I can charge it at work without buying a dozen chargers, but...
(One charger I used is understandable - turns out its only 300ma. Whoops! But using full 1A chargers wasn't helping either, it went up maybe 1% every 15 mins. The stock charger ran it up fast enough that it was charged from 70% in under an hour.)
I use SetCPU and have a setting to reduce the clock when it exceeds a temperate parameter. You could also set a max clock for when it is plugged into a USB (Computer/Car charger). That could help it stay cooler and charge faster while not plugged into the wall.
I charged from empty to full this morning when plugged into the wall in about 3 hours. I haven't tested on my computer yet.
I went through this when I first got my Evo 4G. I did not realize at the time that the 500mA charger I was using with my Blackberry Storm (horrible device) would not charge my Evo while doing anything power intensive (like using GPS) and I quickly drained it on a car trip.
I went on Amazon and bought a $20 Schosche iPad charger that claimed to provide 2.1A which should be plenty. On that charger the phone would charge while using GPS but very, very slowly.
After some more research I found that some chargers caused the phone to switch into "USB" charging mode and others would switch it to "AC" mode which would draw much more power and charge faster.
This is the charger I ended up with and it works great:
http://www.monoprice.com/products/p...=10826&cs_id=1082602&p_id=6766&seq=1&format=2
My Evo charges just as fast as it does on the OEM wall charger. I don't have my SIII yet (thanks Verizon for being the LAST in the US to ship them out...) so I can't yet say if this holds true for the SIII but I assume it will. At $1.22 it's not much of a gamble.

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