Of course, using used equipment is often risky
Of course, using used equipment is often risky
How long has it been off the charger for?
Try a app called Accu battery in play store see if it reads same.I ordered this phone unlocked through wal mart on Wednesday and got it yesterday around 2pm. Yet it appears it already has battery degradation. Did I get a faulty unit?
Battery efficiency and degradation are not neccesarily the same thingI ordered this phone unlocked through wal mart on Wednesday and got it yesterday around 2pm. Yet it appears it already has battery degradation. Did I get a faulty unit?
The OP is posting an image from an Ausurian appWhere is the battery health located? I don't see it on the Verizon Ultra.
Try settings, device careWhere is the battery health located? I don't see it on the Verizon Ultra.
Try settings, device care
Regards -------------
It's not there....lolI do not see 'Battery Health" in there.
As I said in my reply above, this is common for Li-ion batteries (phone or otherwise). You could exchange it numerous times and never get one right at 100% rated capacity. From https://batteryuniversity.com/index.php/learn/article/how_to_prolong_lithium_based_batteriesA brand new phone should NOT have 7% battery degradation right out of the box. I'd exchange it or return it.
Although a battery should deliver 100 percent capacity during the first year of service, it is common to see lower than specified capacities, and shelf life may contribute to this loss. In addition, manufacturers tend to overrate their batteries, knowing that very few users will do spot-checks and complain if low. Not having to match single cells in mobile phones and tablets, as is required in multi-cell packs, opens the floodgates for a much broader performance acceptance. Cells with lower capacities may slip through cracks without the consumer knowing.