How long does your battery last for? how long do you spend on your phone?
I travel a lot and am often dismayed at how quickly every phone's battery seems to go when you actually use its features.
Last night, not traveling, I took a 96% charged phone to bed, read an ebook while listening to MP3s on bluetooth for 60 minutes, then read another half hour longer without music, but phone on (stand-by, not being used), and my battery was down to about 67% when I put it on the charger this morning. That seems like a substantial hit for not much use to me.
I never go anywhere without a spare battery --and that's also why I will NEVER buy a phone without removable batteries.
Over the years, the best comment I've found on phone batteries is the simple truth--technology of the devices has far outstripped the ability of batteries to handle it, given the small form factor of the devices. For the record, lest this be viewed as an attack on Samsung or Android, both of which I like a lot, I was traveling with a friend abroad on business and he was an iPhone user. His phone was constantly dying in the midst of long trips. When mine had problems, of course, I just flipped a new battery.
I have a higher mAh battery fitted,thicker so has a replacement back,lasts over two days with moderate use,plenty on ebay but BEWARE the "Gold" make,their not what they claim,seem to be regular battery relabeled higher mAh
There are SO MANY phony batteries around that make grandiose claims. I've been ripped off so often, I don't see the point of even trying them any more.
If I see a battery the exact size and weight of the OEM but claiming to be 30% bigger, my first question is how?
And if there's a way, that way is probably not going to be achieved by offering a cheap battery that can be sold at 1/3rd the price of the OEM for 1/3rd more capacity.
I measured one supposed "high capacity" (supposedly 50% more) battery I got on eBay from a seller in China with an app and it had no more capacity than the OEM. I left negative feedback. The guy actually had the audacity to say I should remove it and he'd give me my $$ back. I said, "Well, but your battery seems to be a fraud. I tested it. You deserve the negative feedback." If it was legit, he might show me
his tests confirming the supposed capacity of this. Or have some response. Never responded. Gee.
Wonder why?
My general view: if it seems too good to be true, it probably is.