Your charging habit

clevin

Well-known member
Nov 12, 2010
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It is stated that lower DoD (depth of discharge) helps longevity of the battery. It also says that less-than full charge helps longevity of the battery.

So is it better to start charging somewhere around 50% and charge it to 85% instead of 100%?

How do you guys usually handle charging? any particular suggestions?
 
Honestly, I let my battery drain down twice and then charge it nightly. Never had any issues by doing it this way.

Sent from my HTC One X using Android Central Forums
 
I charge my battery any time i feel like it is low during the day and put it on the charger when i go to bed. That is usually between 11 pm and 1 am. Unplug it around 7:15 am.

Never had issues with the battery charging to 100% or lasting for most of the day, or over a year or more.

Sent from my GT-N8013 using Android Central Forums
 
I charge it almost every night to 100% from anywhere between 5%-50%. Been doing this with all phones since 2001 and never had to replace a battery
 
Usually the only time I charge it during the week is when it is in the car dock during the commute. Otherwise, I never charge it Mon-Fri and only barely on the weekends. Battery life is excellent on the HOX (Compared to VZ Gnex or Captivate at least!)
 
I charge it when the battery symbol turns yellow and take it off the charger when I need/want to do something. I don't pay attention to the percentage, battery life is that good for me.
 
I use my phone for the whole day until it pretty much only has 15 to 25% battery left. I turn off my phone when I sleep and charge it to full when I wake up. Usually I can reach 100 in about two hours before heading off to class.

Sent from my GT-I9300 using Android Central Forums
 
Why not just charge it when you are asleep, and leave it on?

Run the ringer down to the bottom if you don't want people calling you at night.

Modern phones are designed to be always on, and can sit on the charger with no harm for months.

The only time I ever turn my phone off is when the Cabin Crew tells me to.
 
not sure that's a good idea, li-ion battery had better longevity when not staying at full charge all the time. it also should not be discharged too deep all the time .
 
not sure that's a good idea, li-ion battery had better longevity when not staying at full charge all the time. it also should not be discharged too deep all the time .

But manufacturers KNOW that, so they set the max charge limit conservativly.

It stops charging, and does NOT trickle charge when still on the charger. That's why you can sometimes take it off the charger in the morning and immediately look at the charge percentage and find that it's down 7% or so.

Every phone manufacturer these days say leaving it on the charger won't shorten its life.

Sent from my HTC One X using Tapatalk 2
 
What Icebike is saying though, is that when your phone tells you it is at 100%, HTC actually told it to stop at 95% and report 100%. When the battery shuts down at 0%, it is probably actually at 20% too. The manufacturers take care of it for you, so you don't have to.
 
What Icebike is saying though, is that when your phone tells you it is at 100%, HTC actually told it to stop at 95% and report 100%. When the battery shuts down at 0%, it is probably actually at 20% too. The manufacturers take care of it for you, so you don't have to.

I understand what he was saying, and I agree the manufacturers offer a lot of pre-configured protections already.

But if you install current widget and check the actually voltage when battery charged to 100%, its well above 4.1v. The protection offered by the manufacturers is good to have, but there are ways to improve the longevity on top of what manufacturers offered. Namely, partial charging, e.g., to ~90%, and charging often, e.g., before it goes below 10-20%.
 
Charge it as you wish, don't listen to people who say giving boost charges damages the battery - that's utter rubbish.

This was only the case on much older devices, they are not made or tested this way anymore.

These battery's are tested by cycles.

A 50-75% boost charge is 1/4 cycle, and regardless of this boost charge, they operate on 'cycles'

Only when a certain cycle amount is reached, does the battery start to deteriorate.



Sent from my HTC One X using Tapatalk 2
 
What Chrisjcks said.

But don't confuse boost charging with bump charging.

Boost is simply charging when you get a chance.

Bump is tricking the charge controller into over charging the battery in the hopes of getting a few more minutes out of the phone. It is harmful to the battery.

Bump charging is charging to full, take it off the charger, wait maybe a minute, then pop it back on the charger. It works with some devices by tricking the charger into overcharging beyond what the manufacturer specified as the max charge.


Boost is good, bump is bad.

Boost is actually the best way to manage your battery, after draining it completely ONCE when new to calibrate the charge controller.

This is where the Battery Swappers have it all wrong. They run their phone till its almost dead then swap in a new battery. Their charge controllers are always confused, and their dead batteries sit in their pocket till they get around to charging them. Bad for the battery in both ways. Then they put the phone on the charger and charge both of them to full. Worse, they buy an external charger that is not matched to the battery, and actually damages the battery.

An external battery makes so much more sense. You can boost charge any time you have a few minutes, (don't try to convince anyone you are on the phone for 8 hours straight), even when its in your pocket.
 
if you read the article linked, you will notice that its not about what is a charging cycle, its about partial charge enables more cycles before losing battery capacity.

nobody here is confusing about what is a charging cycle, we know from 50-75 is only 1/4 of a cycle. the discussion is really about high voltage and high DoD are not good for battery longevity.
 
when charging my phone i usually unplug it as soon as it completes unless it is overnight and im asleep, i have never had problems with my battery by doing so, and i also never let it drain completely which i heard actually hurts battery
 
I don't know why this is argued so much. everyone has their own way of doing things. but its a fact that charging every night from 0% or 80% doesn't hurt the battery over the course of 2 years at least. I get new phones every 18 month's so I don't know what happens after that lol.
 

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