Is the capacity mentioned by this app normal or my battery capacity has decreased????
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All readers are requested to share their screenshot
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The battery is rated at 3000 mAh, but capacity will vary depending on conditions.
2951 mAh is completely normal.
vishalrao8 said:
Is the capacity mentioned by this app normal or my battery capacity has decreased????View attachment 4117497
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I don't think that it's accurate lol
negusp said:
The battery is rated at 3000 mAh, but capacity will vary depending on conditions.
2951 mAh is completely normal.
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Which conditions??
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All readers are requested to share their screenshot of devcheck app
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vishalrao8 said:
Which conditions??
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Environmental conditions like temperature for example.
vishalrao8 said:
All readers are requested to share their screenshot of devcheck app
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You're battery is OK. And an app isn't that accurate then a DMM for example to measure capacity. Capacity also depends on charge and first of all discharge conditions. Higher discharge current, lower capacity. That's cause of the internal resistance. I'm stop now with off topic.
Why should everybody post the same screenshot?
vishalrao8 said:
Which conditions??
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Batteries will degrade, sometimes significantly, over time naturally. However, there are a couple factors which will speed up degradation-
- heat
- turbo charging (which increases current, wear, and heat)
- severe cold
- fast discharges
Under normal conditions your battery may degrade a good 200 mAh per year. With heavy use you may lose as much as 20% capacity (400 mAh).
However, 2951 mAh is completely normal and the app isn't particularly accurate anyway.
This seems a little weird...
kunalgupta1 said:
This seems a little weird...
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That's what already been said: The app isn't accurate.
Related
I was able to find a JWIN portable charger that uses 4AA or 4AAA rechargeable batteries and charges the Nexus at AC voltage. It also recharges the batteries three ways; USB, DC and AC. The best part was the price $15.99 locally, was wondering if anyone found something similar locally if so lets share pix.
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lol, I take back my statement, it's a great portable charger. Plus it's at an reasonable price also. Thanks for sharing that with us. I'm going search some locally also
It takes ANY rechargable batteries its a charger as well as a recharger. Sorry if the 1st post wasnt clear. Currently i have 4 2650 mAh AA batteries in it i have charged my PsP off it and now its charging my Nexus
htc fan89 said:
if it took recharge battery such as lithium batteries, it be a great portable charger, but regular battery it's too much hassle.
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That's pretty cool, but how much does it really charge?
On 4 full batteries, how much % does your phone charge?
Paul22000 said:
That's pretty cool, but how much does it really charge?
On 4 full batteries, how much % does your phone charge?
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I just charged a PSP and my Nexus to 100% off my 4 2650mAh AA's, but that is because of the batteries I used. The mAh of the AA's or AAA's is what really matters. Using 4 1500mAh AA's earlier today I got one full recharge with some juice to spare, with my 2650 mAh im still currently testing with just my Nexus.... should be 2 full charges. I will confirm the #of charges in the next 48hours, or less if I can drain my batteries faster lol
Can see the title - I can charge my phone from 4% to full in rougly 90-100 mins using stock charger. This seems significantly faster than reported by other review sites, does this mean my battery is not fully utilizing all its cells?
anotherfiz said:
Can see the title - I can charge my phone from 4% to full in rougly 90-100 mins using stock charger. This seems significantly faster than reported by other review sites, does this mean my battery is not fully utilizing all its cells?
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Mine did the same thing....
Mine charges super fast too, but I still get great life out of it. 5-6 hour screen time, all day and into the next.
This phone gets better battery life than any other I have ever owned. The fast charging is a great bonus.
anotherfiz said:
Can see the title - I can charge my phone from 4% to full in rougly 90-100 mins using stock charger. This seems significantly faster than reported by other review sites, does this mean my battery is not fully utilizing all its cells?
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http://www.qualcomm.com/media/blog/...-charge-10-less-time-charging-more-time-doing
Sent from my Motorola Ghost
It could also have something to do the the 1150mA charger. That's more current than most phone chargers.
scottjb said:
It could also have something to do the the 1150mA charger. That's more current than most phone chargers.
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Could be a mixture of the this plus the chip.
Is this a complaint thread because the phone charges too fast?!
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dwd3885 said:
Is this a complaint thread because the phone charges too fast?!
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On a related note, this thing either charges faster on a car charger or is just much more efficient than the Galaxy Nexus. My Galaxy Nexus's battery would actually drain when using GPS in the car while plugged into my Kinivo BTC450, especially while also playing music. My Moto X actually charges reasonably quickly while using GPS and playing music. There's definitely no need for some high voltage car charger.
Hey guys, please watch this video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dweww9_RF2E&list=UUB2527zGV3A0Km_quJiUaeQ#t=442
what do you think about???
This is the frame!
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it was the same with the moto 360, they'll have the same explanation
This looks like what they did on the Motorola 360.
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What did they do on the 360/what was the explanation?
Or their reply
Motorola said:
The typical battery capacity for Moto 360 is 320mAh and the minimum is 300mAh. In the mobile industry, sometimes both the minimum and typical capacity is listed on the battery, with the typical capacity quoted as the official battery size. Both figures are included on the batteries of our Moto X, Moto E and Moto G devices. In the case of smaller devices, we aren’t always able to list both figures. For Moto 360, we only had room for one figure and choose to list the minimal capacity of the battery. We see how this can be confusing and we will look into ways to add the typical capacity as well in the future.
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According to this app on my Moto X 2014
Sent from my XT1096 using XDA Free mobile app
2160 minimum and 2300 typical
same issue that the Moto 360 had when that looked at the battery.
not a big issue and not getting cheated.
Motorola has shown the minimum spec since the first Motorola phone I bought, the Motorola SLVR.
Honestly, this is the more honest approach, as everyone has a min/nom/max tolerance on batteries.
Difference is, only Motorola display this on their batteries.
Do you feel cheated? I get amazing battery life out of my X, I couldn't care less what the actual rating is.
As stated by @Shadowdancer123, I have also seen that they publish minimum and normal capacity on the battery of their devices. Currently I have Atrix 2 which has 1735/1785 marked on the battery.
There are some cheap Chinese phones which claim to come with 4000, 5000 MAh batteries. I have seen one such phone which started delivering only one day backup after few months of usage. Atleast this doesn't happen with Motorola, battery keeps performing consistently for much longer period of say 2.5-3 years or even more.
_MetalHead_ said:
Do you feel cheated? I get amazing battery life out of my X, I couldn't care less what the actual rating is.
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I love my Moto X and I don't care about battery life because I have juice until the end of day.
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When I first used the OPT, I noticed that it loses battery *in standby* pretty fast. Screen on time was good but just leaving it be would drain a lot of battery. I turned off LTE but also noticed that it often struggled with cell network quality (which usually makes a phone look for other stations etc. thus battery is used a lot).
However, today, after a couple of days of use and maybe 3, 4 recharge cycles, it seems a bit better. Is there a chance that this is an actual effect (it could be something very different). Do batteries also get better after some use or am I just biasing my highly non-scientific measurements here?
sevensirk said:
When I first used the OPT, I noticed that it loses battery *in standby* pretty fast. Screen on time was good but just leaving it be would drain a lot of battery. I turned off LTE but also noticed that it often struggled with cell network quality (which usually makes a phone look for other stations etc. thus battery is used a lot).
However, today, after a couple of days of use and maybe 3, 4 recharge cycles, it seems a bit better. Is there a chance that this is an actual effect (it could be something very different). Do batteries also get better after some use or am I just biasing my highly non-scientific measurements here?
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I've noticed this too. I think that this battery technology does improve its capacity after several charge/discharge cycles.
Correct but what about 100+ cycles... It start loosing its power.... What's the best way to keep a li-ion unit last longer? Any help or suggestions?
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Is it normal that android OS is hogging battery?
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Hassan Askari Suzuki said:
Correct but what about 100+ cycles... It start loosing its power.... What's the best way to keep a li-ion unit last longer? Any help or suggestions?
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Good practice is not let battery overheat, like when you play and charge, also batteries don't like to be fully discharged try to keep at least 20% and start charging again
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Short answer. No, worse.
I have op5 oos 4.5.8
When i charge with dash charger
0-81% it so fast i meter by ampere app current mA is 3.3-3.4mA
But after 81% to 100%
I meter it current mA is 1800mA and drop down to 440 mA
I have clear cache on recovery mode but not come to fasf charge
So why??
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I don't see what your problem is... this is normal behaviour for Dash Charge ,
Dash charge drastically reduce charging speed after the ~70% mark so it doesn't damage the battery = more charging cycles
CC vs CV...
Pouic said:
I don't see what your problem is... this is normal behaviour for Dash Charge ,
Dash charge drastically reduce charging speed after the ~70% mark so it doesn't damage the battery = more charging cycles
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My case is normally right?
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Sensation Freak said:
CC vs CV...
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What mean cc , cv ??
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TONGEXHISPEED said:
What mean cc , cv ??
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Constant current vs constant voltage.
To put it lightly its a safety feature to prevent the battery from overloading.
TONGEXHISPEED said:
My case is normally right?
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Yes. It is designed to reduce charging current at, I think, 80% full.
That's normal behavior to prevent from battery over voltage. Dash chargers only work at full speed up until 60% battery capacity, then the speed is reduced yet again at 75%, 85% and 95%.