Batteries are one of
tech’s most boring subjects … until your phone, tablet or laptop dies, that is.
While most of us live in fear of a fading phone battery when we’re out and
about, we don’t worry too much about that battery’s eventual lifespan (probably
between three and five years), but there are ways to keep your battery in
tip-top shape for a long and fruitful life. Just how should you charge your
iPhone or Android phone?
Batteries do not enjoy eternal life. Most smartphone manufacturers
say their devices rate their batteries at 300-500 cycles. Apple claims that its
laptop batteries reach 80 percent of their original capacity after 1,000
charges. After this point batteries aren’t able to hold as much electricity and
will power your device for increasingly shorter periods of time.
So here’s some tips to extend your battery’s lifespan, be that in
an iPhone, Android phone, Windows phone, tablet, or laptop.
The big questions
about how to re-charge a battery is whether you should let it run to zero
before re-charging to 100%.
What is battery memory
effect?
Battery memory effect
is about batteries remembering remaining charge if you didn’t let them go all
the way to zero too often. So a battery frequently charged from 20% to 80%
might ‘forget’ about the 40% that’s left uncharged (0-20% and 80-100%). Sounds crazy
but that’s sort of true – but only for older nickel-based (NiMH and NiCd)
batteries, not the lithium-ion batteries in your phone.
Lithium-ion (Li-ion)
batteries don’t suffer the memory effect so you almost need to do the opposite
– charge them often but not all the way throughout the day, and don’t let them
drop to zero.
Don’t charge battery from zero to 100%
The rule with Li-ion
batteries is to keep them 50% or more most of the time. When it drops below 50%
top it up a little if you can. A little a few times a day seems to be the
optimum to aim for.
But don’t charge it
all the way to 100%. It won’t be fatal to your battery if you do a full
recharge – most of us are forced to do this every now and again in emergencies.
But constantly doing a full recharge will shorten the battery’s lifespan.
So a good range to
aim for when charging a Li-ion battery is from about 40% to 80% in one go. Try
not to let the battery drop below 20%.
When I should do a full battery charge
Experts recommend
that you do a full zero to 100% battery recharge (a "charge cycle")
maybe once a month only. This recalibrates the battery – a bit like restarting
your computer, or, for humans, going on holiday! The same goes for laptops, by
the way.
Should I use fast battery charging?
Many Android phones
have a feature that allows for fast charging. Samsung even calls its technology
“ultra fast charging”. Motorola boasts about its Droid Turbo that promises an 8
hour charge in just 15 minutes! HTC’s Rapid Charger 2.0 charges devices such as
the One M8, One E8 and Desire Eye 40 percent faster.
These phones have
special code usually located in a chip known as the Power Management IC (PMIC)
that communicates with the charger you are using and requests that it send
power at a higher voltage.
Apple’s iPhone 6
doesn’t feature fast charging but its Qualcomm PMIC is smart enough to
recognise when you use a higher-amp charger (like the one you get with the
iPad), and that’s a good thing because fast charging will heat up that Li-ion
battery and cause it increased wear and tear.
For the same reason,
don’t leave your phone in a hot car, on the beach or next to the oven. A hot
battery will suffer long-term effects on its lifespan. And so will a super-cold
one, so don’t leave your device in the freezer or out in the snow!
So, if you can,
switch off fast charging on your Android phone.
Can I use any charger?
Where possible use
the charger that came with your phone, as it is sure to have the correct
rating. Or make sure that a third-party charger is approved by your phone's
manufacturer. Cheap alternatives from Amazon or eBay may harm your phone, and
there have been several reported cases of cheap chargers actually catching on
fire!
Storing battery tips
Don’t leave a Li-ion
battery li-ing around too long at 0%. Try to leave it at around 40-50%. These
batteries drain at about 5-10% a month when not in use. If you let the battery
discharge completely and leave it uncharged for a long period of time it may
eventually become incapable of holding a charge at all (that’s properly dead).
It’s unlikely you’ll leave your smartphone lying in a drawer for very long, but
some people do leave their laptop, battery packs or spare batteries unused for
long periods of time. So try to keep them all at least half charged.
Credit: pcadvisor.co.uk
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