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Battery Probs

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fbg40 | 19:21 Thu 14th Jan 2016 | Technology
15 Answers
Hi
My wife and I have the same mobile phones - Samsung Galaxy A3. My battery lasts about 3 to 4 days on one charge. All of a sudden my wife's battery only lasts about 24 hours before it needs charging again. She uses her phone a lot less than I use mine. Any ideas anybody ??
FBG40
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Are you using the same charger? Battery chargers are designed to cut the current when a battery is fully charged. However, as they get older, chargers sometimes 'see' a battery as being fully charged before it really is, so the current is cut off too early, leaving the battery only partially charged. (Try using a different charger).
If the Mobile Data option is switched on it may be constantly going up to the internet and checking things which may drain the battery.
I have a Samsung Galaxy A4 , it would be great if I could get 3 or 4 days on a charge! 24 hours is the most I ever get. It is on 'power saving mode ' and mobile data is off.
I am more wondering how yours lasts so long rather than why your wife's phone last's only a day !
One can be amazed at how much runs in the background, and I'm not just referring to the stuff you can "slide off". Get a few apps that warn you of low resource and find they are always coming up with things to close or hibernate that you'd be amazed are doing anything.
Question Author
Many thanks for the prompt replies folks.
Will look at all options.
Fbg40
It makes a big difference in battery consumption if Bluetooth, WiFi and Location are all left switched on.
My wife is on the telephone more than I am. Perhaps your wife uses her mobile far more than you use yours,

Hans.
What I meant to say was that perhaps, unknown to you, your wife uses her mobile more than you use yours,

Hans.
Question Author
Thanks again for the replies. Bluetooth, WiFi and Location are all switched off. This seems to have happened "overnight" - it has been ok since she had the new phone (about 1 month), but then a couple of days ago this short battery life appeared.
FBG40
Try exchanging batteries for a few days ?
Question Author
Just an update on this - charged the phone to 100% last night before going to bed, phone was down to 26% when we got up ! Taking the phone back to Vodaphone this am.
FBG40
Thanks for the up-date .Feedback is always useful to have in the Technology section of AB.

It will be interesting to hear what Vodaphone has to say.

Hans.
Question Author
Been to the shop, they say there is a definite fault but because the batteries in these phones are not replaceable ( by the user ) it will have to go away for repair or whatever.
FBG40
Darn. Poor modern design then. Probably supposed to sling them away and get another after 3 months.
1. See what's sucking the most juice. Navigate to Settings > Battery to see an organized breakdown of what's consuming your phone's battery. Applications and features will display in a descending list of battery hogs. If you see an application you barely use or a feature you never use, you'll want to uninstall the app or turn off the feature.
2. Reduce email, Twitter, and Facebook polling. Set your various messaging apps to "manual" for the polling or refresh frequency, just as a test, and you'll instantly extend your device's battery life by a significant amount. Once you see what a difference that makes, try re-enabling just the most important ones, and possibly reducing their polling frequency in the process.

3. Turn unnecessary hardware radios off. It's great that today's phones have LTE, NFC, GPS, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth, but do you really need all five activated 24 hours per day? Android keeps location-based apps resident in the background, and the constant drain on your battery will become noticeable, fast. If your phone has a power control widget, you can use it to quickly turn on/off GPS (the largest power drain), NFC, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and LTE. On stock Android, swipe down to bring up the Notification bar, and then tap the icon on the top right corner.
4. Use the extra power saving mode if you have it. The aforementioned Galaxy S5 and HTC One (M8) both have Ultra Power Saving and Extreme Power Saving modes, respectively, that limits the phone to texting, phone calls, Web browsing, and Facebook. This can squeeze extra hours or even a day of standby time out of just a few remaining percentage points of battery.

5. Trim apps running in the background. From Settings > Apps, swipe to the left; you'll see a list of apps that are currently running. Tap on each one to see what they're for; you can stop any apps that you don't need running in the background all of the time.
6. Dump unnecessary home screen widgets and live wallpaper. Just because they're sitting on the home screen, seemingly inactive, doesn't mean they're not consuming power. This goes for widgets that poll status updates in the background, as well as ones that just sit there but look pretty and animated—not to mention animated live wallpaper. (But don't dump everything, as part of what makes Android great are the home screen customizations; just remove the ones you don't use.)

7. Turn down the brightness and turn off Automatic Brightness. It's probably obvious at this point, but you'll be surprised by how much this one alone helps to improve battery life.

8. Update your apps. Applications often get updated to use less battery power, so you should make sure your apps are up to date. Even if you configured the phone for automatic updates, some apps still require that you manually install updates. Check for app updates in Google Play by hitting the menu key and going to My Apps.

9. Keep an eye on signal strength. If you're in an area with poor cellular coverage, the phone will work harder to latch onto a strong-enough signal. This has an adverse effect on battery life. There's not much you can do about this one, but keep in mind that this could be the culprit behind a seemingly weak battery; it's worth popping the phone into Airplane mode if you don't need data or voice calls.

10. Check the reviews. We conduct battery life tests on every single Android phone we review. Unsurprisingly, the results vary widely between handsets, even on the same network. When choosing a phone, make sure that real world talk time is sufficient. You can't go by what the manufacturer says; we see variances on the order of several hours of usage in both directions on a regular basis.

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