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2012-02-18
, 12:39
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Posts: 560 |
Thanked: 423 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ Switzerland
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#2
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2012-02-18
, 18:21
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Posts: 278 |
Thanked: 114 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ SD, CA
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#3
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2012-02-18
, 19:48
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Posts: 1,808 |
Thanked: 4,272 times |
Joined on Feb 2011
@ Germany
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#4
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2012-02-19
, 00:00
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Posts: 278 |
Thanked: 114 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ SD, CA
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#5
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@balisingh,
It's (probably) not the battery, but how the phone estimates the current charge level.
The N900 has the same issue. You start with, say, 40% and turn on the flashlight for 20min. If you then look at the battery level (using battery-eye), you see it's dropped a lot, but then after a while it goes up again.
The reason for this is BME (battery management entity), which does not report the actual battery percentage, but an "estimation", meaning that if you draw a lot of current for a while, it will *assume* that the battery has gone down by a certain amount.
No idea if N9 uses BME though.
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2012-02-19
, 00:11
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Posts: 560 |
Thanked: 423 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ Switzerland
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#6
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2012-02-19
, 00:43
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Moderator |
Posts: 6,215 |
Thanked: 6,400 times |
Joined on Nov 2011
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#7
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Just recently my N9 has started (4 months old) to have a battery level fluctuation where the battery level drops off suddenlyunder constant heavy use for couple of hours (e.g. maps, playing a game, browsing the web). When i stop using it the battery level comes back (e.g. from 3% to 32% today, other times less depending on the height of the original battery level) after about 30 mins. I know my avg active current is in the high 300mA (~375) but shouldnt there be some safegaurd against battery fluctuations? The hardware should be designed to have a battery that supports max draw for extended periods (usually max draw is a function of total battery capacity).
I read another poster saying this but i couldnt find the thread, it might have been buried.
Last edited by balisingh; 2012-02-18 at 18:24.