The battery upon purchasing...

SCampbell27

Well-known member
Apr 13, 2011
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Should I let it drain all the way to 0, then charge it? Or should I charge it now while it's still running? I can't remember what you gents told me to do, but I'm def psyched to own this phone.

Any other recommendations?
 
I'm charging it now for some more day use at work and will let it drop to zero tonight.
Doesn't matter too much.
 
With lithium ion batteries you want to try to avoid letting them hit 0. They have a finite number of charge cycles from both dead and partial. Dead to full is a much smaller # than partial to full.
 
I work for Interstate All Battery Center & it does not matter with Lithium Ion batteries. They have no memory effect. So you're good to go! :)
 
I thought I read that you should let it run all the way down, charge it up and run it all the way down again so that Android can calibrate itself to get an accurate reading on battery life. It doesn't actually make the battery better or worse, it just calibrates the phone.
 
I work for Interstate All Battery Center & it does not matter with Lithium Ion batteries. They have no memory effect. So you're good to go! :)
No memory effect is correct, but they do have a finite number of charge cycles.

I thought I read that you should let it run all the way down, charge it up and run it all the way down again so that Android can calibrate itself to get an accurate reading on battery life. It doesn't actually make the battery better or worse, it just calibrates the phone.
Could be, but I've never let mine get that far down and its been just fine for me.
 
Not sure about cell phone batteries but with laptop batteries there is a finite number of charges, at least with my old dell. I have never ran into this problem with cell phone batteries.

One day my laptop wouldn't charge anymore eventhough it had 80% charge remaining and it would run the laptop on the battery until it died and it wouldn't charge anymore. I think that's because there is a chip in laptop batteries that monitor the battery life much more closely. I could be wrong though.
 
This is what I have always gone by. It's a few years old, so I don't know how much, if at all, this has changed.


Similar to a mechanical device that wears out faster with heavy use, so also does the depth of discharge (DoD) determine the cycle count. The smaller the depth of discharge, the longer the battery will last. If at all possible, avoid frequent full discharges and charge more often between uses. If full discharges cannot be avoided, try utilizing a larger battery. Partial discharge on Li-ion is fine; there is no memory and the battery does not need periodic full discharge cycles other than to calibrate the fuel gauge on a smart battery.​

How to Prolong Lithium-based Batteries - Battery University
 
I just charge it up and go. I've never concerned myself with the battery and never had one quit lasting as long etc. Of course I have a tendency to swap phones out ~14 months or so apart so maybe I'm not reaching out into the life span where it would be seen. So I would say if you plan to keep your phone 2 years or less I wouldn't worry much about it except not letting it totally die too often.

I've watched my battery on the Incredible since release and I don't have one drop longer or shorter since day one. It's died completely a few times and came on and off charger a ton depending on the situation and how much power I would need when I was gone from home. The only thing that changes by battery rate was undervolting / overvolting / overclocking it and swapping roms.
 

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