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2011-05-12
, 09:32
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@ Bucharest
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#32
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I'd like to see some references for your claim that a partial cycle equals a full cycle.
Considering that what the N900 (and almost everything else) does once the battery reaches full is let it discharge 2-5% and then top it up again, it should be burning through a large amount of "cycles" once it reaches full. (And the green light comes on independent of whether the battery is actually full at that time or not, and stays green until charger is disconnected)
but I think that shadowjk got a point here. If you let the phone charge overnight, in fact it is just charged to full in few hours, then discharged to 95%, then charged again to 100, etc...
Look ndi. N900 battery rounded up got 5Wh - You're right at that. It's capable to safe deliver for our needs 1315 mA constant current @ 3.8V (rounded from 3.3V-4.2V, doesn't matter for our calculations) for time of 1 hour. Also, it can deliver 657 mA constant current for 2 hours, etc. Every fluctuation of current change total time, but after C (current)*V (voltage)=5W or higher, battery is already at 3.3V and is discharged, aka "dead".
Also, if we treat serious Your calculations about 10% beign 180W, that would mean we got 1800W at 100% - real beast. That would allow us for powering up high-power driller for an hour, just using our little battery, no need for wall plug I got nothing against that idea, but for now we must be happy with 5W thing...
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2011-05-12
, 17:10
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#33
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2011-05-12
, 18:06
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#34
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2011-05-13
, 07:54
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#35
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1 Ws is 1 watt for a second, 1 kW for a miliwecond or a wris****ch for a year.
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2011-05-13
, 08:35
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@ Åbo, Finland
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#36
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...
I proved that using 10% of battery power during 15 seconds boot time WILL NOT produce 150W or any other similiar high value, but 150 mW.
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2011-05-13
, 09:16
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#37
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2011-05-13
, 09:24
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@ Denmark
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#38
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2011-05-13
, 20:30
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#39
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2011-05-13
, 22:21
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@ Denmark
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#40
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Most of ndi post is very useful for me, but I think that shadowjk got a point here. If you let the phone charge overnight, in fact it is just charged to full in few hours, then discharged to 95%, then charged again to 100, etc... It's true that RGB diode is green all the time, also battery-eye show it as "full" part of cycle. Unfortunately, N900 doesn't use power directly from charger when plugged - it just use the battery, charging in the same time. When battery reaches "full", power is cut off until battery drop to 95% or so. You can easily monitor it with bq27200 kernel-power module, by:
cat /sys/class/power_supply/bq27200-0/current_now
...when plugged in, you got value under 0 (for example, "-2475") which is exactly (charge current)-(current used by phone to "live"). When battery reach "full", current_now report just positive (i.e used actually) current - exactly the same as if plug is disconnected = non charging.
So, that would mean You got 10-20 cycles every night...
Also, after short logic check i totally disagree with Your calculations about powercycle drain. Precisely, your calculations are correct, but upside down - it is not 180W in couple of seconds, but 0.180W = 180mW!
Look ndi. N900 battery rounded up got 5Wh - You're right at that. It's capable to safe deliver for our needs 1315 mA constant current @ 3.8V (rounded from 3.3V-4.2V, doesn't matter for our calculations) for time of 1 hour. Also, it can deliver 657 mA constant current for 2 hours, etc. Every fluctuation of current change total time, but after C (current)*V (voltage)=5W or higher, battery is already at 3.3V and is discharged, aka "dead".
Then, if we want to calculate how much power could be drained if powercycle would use 3% of battery capacity, we need to keep in mind that Wh = Ch*V, so (Wh = Ch*V) / h -> W=C*V - we need to divide by h, not multiply by h as you did.
Using known values, we want to get 3% power during, lets say, 15 seconds of bootup - it is W*3/100=C*V, V is constant four our calculation (3.8V), W after /h is just 5. 5*3/100=0.15.
We want C (current), so C=W/V (or, if you prefer that, Ch=Wh/V, doesn't matter at all for us now), we get 0.039=0.15/3.8. Our 0.039 is in A, so it is 39mA. When we don't use /h, we get 3% of battery power = 39mAh. If You want to check for mistakes, 39mAh *33.33 = 1299.87 mAh - thats our 1315 mAh capacity rounded down.
@ 3.8V it is 5Wh.
So, we already know and proofed (if anyone understand my not so self-explanatory calculations ), that 3% of battery power is 150 mW (yea, it's logical, but we wanted hard proofs, doesn't we?). 10%, then, is 500 mW, 10% battery capacity use is just 500mW. No need for blue smoke and other things.
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Also, if we treat serious Your calculations about 10% beign 180W, that would mean we got 1800W at 100% - real beast. That would allow us for powering up high-power driller for an hour, just using our little battery, no need for wall plug I got nothing against that idea, but for now we must be happy with 5W thing...
I tried to explain calculations as easy as it can be, but I'm again after sleepless night, so sorry for any hard to understand shortcuts. We can pull here dr_frost from "3000mAh battery mod" thread, he use high W batteries in his RC machines, so maybe he will be able to explain it more user-friendly
Last edited by Estel; 2011-05-12 at 05:11.