[Q] does higher mAh harm the battery? - Xperia Z1 Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

the attached charger with z1 is a 1500mAh charger and i bought a 2100mAh charger which charges faster for sure.I wanna know does this harm the battery?i mean if it was ok why the sony didnt attached a 2100mAh or higher with its flagship!?

NiM72NiK said:
the attached charger with z1 is a 1500mAh charger and i bought a 2100mAh charger which charges faster for sure.I wanna know does this harm the battery?i mean if it was ok why the sony didnt attached a 2100mAh or higher with its flagship!?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
mAh tell you about the capacity of the battery. You can even use 1 million mAh.
..and no it won't harm the phone

It does reduce the battery life. Or at least have a little impact on it.
Sent from my C6902 using xda app-developers app

crohit911 said:
It does reduce the battery life. Or at least have a little impact on it.
Sent from my C6902 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Battery life has nothing to to with the capacity of the portable battery? What are you talking about.
Every charging reduces the battery life. That's why it is recommended to only charge the phone when it is at 10-20% and try to charge it to full.

crohit911 said:
It does reduce the battery life. Or at least have a little impact on it.
Sent from my C6902 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
what exactly impacts the battery ? how a 1500mAh charger doesnt harm it and a 2100 does while its a 3000mah?

NiM72NiK said:
the attached charger with z1 is a 1500mAh charger and i bought a 2100mAh charger which charges faster for sure.I wanna know does this harm the battery?i mean if it was ok why the sony didnt attached a 2100mAh or higher with its flagship!?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
no it won't
it will just charge your phone slightly faster,
if there's more than 2000 input then the phone will put a limit on it. so it should be fine

The discharge rate.
I might be wrong though cause I didn't read properly.
But voltage does have some impact.

choihan06 said:
no it won't
it will just charge your phone slightly faster,
if there's more than 2000 input then the phone will put a limit on it. so it should be fine
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
why 2000? what wrong with 2500mAh??!! I think 3000should be the limitation because more than that is going to harm it! isnt it right?

NiM72NiK said:
why 2000? what wrong with 2500mAh??!! I think 3000should be the limitation because more than that is going to harm it! isnt it right?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well the phone is designed that way, i mean sony engineers should be smarter than us so i assume its a best option.
When i use 2.0A galaxy note3 charger on my z1 it takes about 1500-1700mah but no more than 1700.
Sent from my C6906 using Tapatalk

I use a 12000mAh portable charger from New Trent and my phone battery is in perfect shape. It does not harm it in any way. I don't understand where the confusion is coming from.
http://www.amazon.com/New-Trent-iCarrier-Smartphones-Micro-USB/dp/B003ZBZ64Q
mAh is a capacity measure , the bigger the capacity the more times you can charge the phone on a single charge (and usually also the bigger and more expensive the battery)
It's the Amperes which are Voltage/ sec given to your phone that you should worry about. Pretty much all portable chargers are suited to mobile phones and should not cause any harm.

I thought you were talking about travel adapter charger..
Yes current provided and voltage matters.
Silly me I was confused between mah and Amperes..
Thanks man!
But I think he's refering to amperes. Cause the one provided with z1 is 1.5 amp. And the portable battery is 5 ah. So he bought a 2.1 ampere charger.

NiM72NiK said:
the attached charger with z1 is a 1500mAh charger and i bought a 2100mAh charger which charges faster for sure.I wanna know does this harm the battery?i mean if it was ok why the sony didnt attached a 2100mAh or higher with its flagship!?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There seem to be quite alot of confusion here. I am sure you mean the output of the charger, but if you mean the capacity of a portable charger, then it doesn't matter if it is 1000mAh or 1000,000mAh. But if you mean the output of the charger, then we don't really have a clear answer as this was asked few times in the forum, but I will try to explain the conclusion we came to.
our phone is supposed to support quick charge 2.0 which means in theory, we can use chargers with ~4.0 A (if I remembered correctly). why sony used 1.5 A is not clear, but I don't think using 2.0 A would have any effect except slightly faster charging time. I have been using my SGS4 charger (with 2.0 A output) since I got my Z1 (since release date). Last time I looked for even more powerful chargers ~3 months ago, I found that chargers with 4.0 A output has not been released yet and will be released early 2014. When they are released, i will contact sony and see if I can use it with my Z1 as in theory this should mean half charging time. I hope this helps

it won't harm the battery

The higher mAh rating might not have a direct affect on your phone... But what you said that the battery charges faster is a cause of concern. Do check the output of the charger you got with the battery. If the current rating is higher than your stock charger then maybe you're phone circuits may have problems.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk

shem2409 said:
Battery life has nothing to to with the capacity of the portable battery? What are you talking about.
Every charging reduces the battery life. That's why it is recommended to only charge the phone when it is at 10-20% and try to charge it to full.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Its the other way around, avoid going down to ~10% and try to keep it above 50%
Sent from my Xperia Z1

The higher charger will increase HEAT and heating is the battery most bigger enemy .. Thats it.
Sent from my C6903 using Tapatalk

I'm sure he meant the charge rate of the charger.
Maybe it won't affect at all since the charge current rate is set by the battery chip, not by the charger. What the charger label says is the max output current, not necessarily the actual rate.
Sent from my GT-N7100 using Tapatalk

Higher current may hurt abit, higher voltage hurts more

Been using the blackberry rapid charger but not overcharging the phone and its been fine, been using it for years. FYI, chargers are measured in volts and amps. The bb one is 2amp and 5 volts.
Sent from my C6903 using XDA Premium 4 mobile app

You cannot judge or decide anything, except you know what electronic part used by that phone which have specific normal rating and resist maximum ampere. So, everything you do with your charger is Gambling!! But, I suggest not too much the different
~~~
sent from Slim & Thin Andromax

Related

[Q] How to make charging quick?

Do we have any kernel mod or something for making charge quick than normal?
AFAIK, no.
chasmodo said:
AFAIK, no.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for immediate reply.. Am planning to search for higher rating charger ( I mean amp rating) will it make sense? Actually I discussed with xda mates earlier about this sometime ago but not in detailed. So am still in search for answer..
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium
With higher amp, battery would wear out faster than normal.
Best way to charge faster is to never let battery drop down below 30% - 40%.
This would also extend battery life.
Higher ampere charger will force and stretch your battery. It will work but shorten battery lifetime. You don't mind buying spare battery, right?
kopitalk said:
Higher ampere charger will force and stretch your battery. It will work but shorten battery lifetime. You don't mind buying spare battery, right?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes I don't care.. Cause sometimes I get less duration to charge my phone, so I don't care for battery lifetime but I do care the charge holding time/day..
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium
chasmodo said:
AFAIK, no.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This may or may not be related to op's question, but I've been wondering, does the "Enable USB Fastcharge" option available in some of the AOKP-based roms actually work?
The fastest way to make charging quick is to have a fully charged spare battery with you. Then the Note is charged in 20 seconds.
Sent from my superior GT-N7000 using Tapatalk
Zamboney said:
The fastest way to make charging quick is to have a fully charged spare battery with you. Then the Note is charged in 20 seconds.
Sent from my superior GT-N7000 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
FYI a handset cannot be charged... Only a battery.. here topic is about charging a battery..
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium
priyanv said:
Do we have any kernel mod or something for making charge quick than normal?
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Click to collapse
id be very interested in this too as my old htc had a 1.5A charger and a 1250mah battery, the note has a 2500mah battery and only a 1A charger
The note is most likely limited to a maximum charge rate of 800-900ma as the stock chargers only 1000ma
I have a 2100ma usb charger on the way, and with "battery monitor widget pro", it should give me some idea of the maximum charge rate.
http://www.i-luv-uk.co.uk/iAD517BS.html
John.
No, after all, the phone will limit
panyan said:
id be very interested in this too as my old htc had a 1.5A charger
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did you try using with note???
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium
x0952060001 said:
No, after all, the phone will limit
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Click to collapse
What is limiting??? Is that kernel?
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium
But more amp charger could probably damage battery life
Sent from my HTC Nexus One using XDA
Tinderbox (UK) said:
The note is most likely limited to a maximum charge rate of 800-900ma as the stock chargers only 1000ma
I have a 2100ma usb charger on the way, and with "battery monitor widget pro", it should give me some idea of the maximum charge rate.
http://www.i-luv-uk.co.uk/iAD517BS.html
John.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wow that one is awesome.. Pls keep updating here about the performance. You made my search easy I can get it here also.. Thanks.
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium
AC DC said:
But more amp charger could probably damage battery life
Sent from my HTC Nexus One using XDA
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Click to collapse
Definitely.. Only those who doesn't care about life but care about charge duration can go for this..
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium
Simply not a good idea.
The microUSB contacts are rated at 1A max, so any modification to the charge controller to allow charging currents greater than the contact ratings can result in a damaged connector and then your Note will become largely useless.
I understand everyone wants to play and muck about with their Note, but this falls into the category of "A real bad idea" so be warned.
priyanv said:
Do we have any kernel mod or something for making charge quick than normal?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
According to batteryuniversity.com , lin-on/poly battery`s should be charged at between 0.5 and 1C , the Note has a 2.4amp battery , so you could charge it with a 2.4amp, though as i have already mentioned the note is most likely limited to between 800-900mah charge rate.
The good thing about having a powerful charger, is that it will barely get warm, and the components inside will give a much cleaner output, than a low power one, signs of a struggling power supply can be, getting very hot, flickering on the phone that`s being charged`s screen as the power/voltage is fluctuating, also a high pitched noise.
John.
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
AC DC said:
But more amp charger could probably damage battery life
Sent from my HTC Nexus One using XDA
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
and how long does it take you to charge full from 1%?
When I use 1A charger from HTC it takes me +- 5 hours to full....
With charger from Ipad it takes 1,5 hour
So maybe my battery is dead already???

[Q] Charge with 5V/2A..?

Hi guys!
I have recently bought a Nexus7 tablet which has a 5V/2A charger .
Can i charge the i9305 with the Nexus charger (5V/2A) or it will cause problems..?
Thanks in advance!
alexisgt said:
Hi guys!
I have recently bought a Nexus7 tablet which has a 5V/2A charger .
Can i charge the i9305 with the Nexus charger (5V/2A) or it will cause problems..?
Thanks in advance!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm not sure of the voltage of the I9305 but the more volts = faster charging but hotter and hotter means a shorter life for the battery but it should be fine, I would trade it for faster charging. For amps, I have no clue and please correct me if I'm wrong anybody.
Sent from my GT-I9305 using xda premium
Magik_Breezy said:
I'm not sure of the voltage of the I9305 but the more volts = faster charging but hotter and hotter means a shorter life for the battery but it should be fine, I would trade it for faster charging. For amps, I have no clue and please correct me if I'm wrong anybody.
Sent from my GT-I9305 using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm pretty sure that you are saying the opposite way.
You can use more Amp but not more voltage.
More Amp - charges quickly.
More voltage - could blow your device.
Cheers!
Sent from my GT-I9305T using xda app-developers app
AW: [Q] Charge with 5V/2A..?
In principle, the battery would load faster at higher charging current when the battery is capable of fast charging. If not, could reduce the battery life. I believe according to the charging control of Samsung, a current limiter is installed that can always draw only 1 amp. So it brings no benefit to using the charger of the tab. It may also be that the charging control of the current is limited so that is not loaded. The phone should not be harmed.
----------------------------------------------
Gesendet von meinem GT-I9305
ROM: | Pandoriam v6.5 | Kernel: | Perseus a31.2 |
Don't say thanks, hit Thanks!
----------------------------------------------
Charge
Should be fine for short term use.I've used half amp one amp and one and half amp car chargers wouldn't go any more than two amps no need to..may degrade battery a little so what there cheap enough to replace lol..easy peasy.. I live in tents an caravans 24/7 use leisure battery's not problem with amps just volts..bless solar panels..
The phone take what Amp it needs.. No more than its made for. 2A is only what the maximum out is for the charger.
You could make a charger with 50A, the phone still dont take more.
The volt is the value that need to be fixed though.
All phones charged via a usb needs 5V, no more, no less.(Usb =5V allways) Most batterys now days is something like 3.7V. Correct me if Im wrong.
Any way, you need a couple more volts in the charger than the battery to charge it.
Answere=Yes.. go ahead and charge.
Sent from my GT-I9305 using XDA Premium HD app
blisslove said:
I'm pretty sure that you are saying the opposite way.
You can use more Amp but not more voltage.
More Amp - charges quickly.
More voltage - could blow your device.
Cheers!
Sent from my GT-I9305T using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's exactly what I needed, cheers mate.
Sent from my GT-I9305 using xda premium
I have had an HTC HD2 and used it's charger to charge my SGSII and now my SGSIII.
The time taken to charge with that is about the same as the SGSIII charger.
The charging circuits on the phone are smart enough to know that you are charging from a mains' adapter instead of an USB output from a computer and thus adapts the current draw from the system.
I previously did tests on the HD2 regardsing charging times and even with bigger supplies that the 1A one from HTC, it did not charge any quicker.
fred_up said:
I have had an HTC HD2 and used it's charger to charge my SGSII and now my SGSIII.
The time taken to charge with that is about the same as the SGSIII charger.
The charging circuits on the phone are smart enough to know that you are charging from a mains' adapter instead of an USB output from a computer and thus adapts the current draw from the system.
I previously did tests on the HD2 regardsing charging times and even with bigger supplies that the 1A one from HTC, it did not charge any quicker.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That charging circuit is made to cooperate with the battery and the rest of the phone.
So only difference you will notice is slower charge time if you are using a to weak charger that cant deliver the right amp.
As mentioned earlier you could use a 50A charger with out any faster charging time. Amps is allmoust of no interest if its not to weak.
Look at electricity as water. Amp is like how many liters of water a sertain pipe could deliver. Volts is more like how strong the flow is. To mouch pressure will destroy the flower. But with Amps you could pretend that the flower demands a certain amount of water and it will not suck more just becaus it could get more.
Sent from my GT-P7500, JellyBean rom v6, A1 kernel v1.7

Question about charger

Hello I have two questions... First is if I can charge all the phones with the fast 1500mah charger of Xperia Z1???
To my old Xperia sp, charger was 850 mah, can I charge an Xperia SP with 1500mah charger?
Yes your phone.will only take as much.current as it needs
Sent from my C6903 using xda app-developers app
nobby00900 said:
Yes your phone.will only take as much.current as it needs
Sent from my C6903 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
so i can charge with the 1500 mah charger a battery that is 1650mah capacity ? but it wil charge FASTER than a normal charger ? that's the point ?
Wait, you are mixing things up! Your Xperia Z1 Charger does supply 1500 mA (which means 1,5 Ampere) of current at 5,0V DC.
Your Xperia S Battery has a Capacity of 1650 mAh (or 1,65 Ampere Hours) which means that it can supply 1,65 Ampere of continuous current for 1 hour (at 5V, I guess)
So: Yes, you can use a bigger charger and it will charge your phone faster, in this case nearly twice as fast. This will not damage your phone, as it will (as already said) just take the maximum current it can make use of.
OfficerTux said:
So: Yes, you can use a bigger charger and it will charge your phone faster, in this case nearly twice as fast. This will not damage your phone, as it will (as already said) just take the maximum current it can make use of.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I thought it was the chipset/kernel which had fast charge capabilities, not the charger?
If the phone only takes the maximum current it will make use of, it doesn't matter what the charger is spitting out, the phone will only draw what it needs to.
I could be wrong, but my Nexus 4 charged at exactly the same speed when I used my Nexus 7 charger as it did with the stock charger.
El Presidente81 said:
I thought it was the chipset/kernel which had fast charge capabilities, not the charger?
If the phone only takes the maximum current it will make use of, it doesn't matter what the charger is spitting out, the phone will only draw what it needs to.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You are perfectly right! And it's also what I wanted to say. Of course if your phone is not able to draw more than 750 mA, a bigger Charger is useless.
But one can safely try it out!

Using higer amp charger

This might be the stupidest question i have ever asked in XDA forum but..... I really want to know the answer to make sure it won't do anything bad to my Z1.
I used galaxy note 2 charging adapter which is a bit stronger than the original z1 charger (1500mA Vs 2000mA) and found out that charging time difference is quite noticeable. i guess 500mA difference is huge.
Since I read few news that people were experiencing fire or explosion while they were charging (or something, which i don't know if it's 100percent true) i want to know if putting too much power is bad for the Z1.
the charge for z1 is 2A. You can plugin 3A, but it wont take that extra, can only accept max 2A.
Generally speaking having extra 1A wwill heat up device but wont cause fire, unless you put in 1000A then it will explode
long1988 said:
the charge for z1 is 2A. You can plugin 3A, but it wont take that extra, can only accept max 2A.
Generally speaking having extra 1A wwill heat up device but wont cause fire, unless you put in 1000A then it will explode
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
wait..what?
.... my charger says 5.0vdc == 1500mA
choihan06 said:
I used galaxy note 2 charging adapter which is a bit stronger than the original z1 charger (1500mA Vs 2000mA) and found out that charging time difference is quite noticeable. i guess 500mA difference is huge.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Use whichever charger you have. Using a 2A charger will of course decrease charge time. Using a 3A charger will do nothing for you, because phone only accepts 2A if I remember correctly.
long1988 said:
the charge for z1 is 2A. You can plugin 3A, but it wont take that extra, can only accept max 2A.
Generally speaking having extra 1A wwill heat up device but wont cause fire, unless you put in 1000A then it will explode
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Using a 1000A or 3A charger will not make a difference. Phone will not heat up more than using a 2A charger. The phone will draw those 2A and nothing more. Unless there's a custom kernel parameter we can change to increase charging current.
choihan06 said:
wait..what?
.... my charger says 5.0vdc == 1500mA
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is correct. Stock supplied charger is 1.5A, at least in the scandinavian countries.
I charge my Z1 with N7 charger (2.0) and everything is O.K.
Just like guys said - Z1 can use up to 2.0 and it's perfectly safe to use it but make sure charger is good, if you use junk for 1$ you could damage your device.
If we gave 1000$ for device we can pay 10$ more for good charger.
Sent from my Z1
I only ever use the 1.5A factory charger if I'm leaving it overnight. Its too slow otherwise so I also use a 2A charger from my Asus transformer
Hey you who pretend to know it all, let me clarify
You are saying the official charge is 1.5, but also say it take 2a as well, let me ask you, why do you think the phone can only overcharge up to 2 a and not to 3a as you were denying me?
My charger say it is 2a, it is official, dont being rude and frankly deny other opinion, at least try "from my poimt of view"
Sent from my C6903 using xda app-developers app
U might have a real special packaging as it usually comes with only 1.5mA
Also snapdragon 800 supports quickcharge 3.0 which allows chargers up to 4.0mA
These chargers will release in 2014

HTC Rapid Charger 2.0

Just found out HTC is going to release a charger that will charge any snapdragon 800 and above HTC device; 60% in 30 mins. I may actually get that depending on the price BUT then again I hardly ever need to charge my device more than once a day unless I didn't charge it overnight.
Also Motorola has a quick charger too. Not sure if its faster than the HTC one BUT it is compatible with HTC devices.
I wonder how much faster does it charge than the note 3 charger?
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using XDA Free mobile app
One thing to keep in mind though, charging the battery that fast can actually decrease the battery's life span. a healthy recharge would be a slow one. Yet i can see why some people would need a rapid charger.
This topic should probably go under the accessories.
Shu. said:
One thing to keep in mind though, charging the battery that fast can actually decrease the battery's life span. a healthy recharge would be a slow one. Yet i can see why some people would need a rapid charger.
This topic should probably go under the accessories.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I agree 100%, its a simple fact in all battery's, faster charging means also less capacity from each charge and faster draining of battery and also shorter battery life in general..
From what I understand, this is not just a case of throwing more voltage and current up it.
The QC2.0 chargers are different. They utilise technology within the charger and the phone, I'm assuming to distribute the voltage and current in a stabilised battery friendly way. You can use a 2a charger on any device and it'll charge a battery quicker but risk reducing battery life. These QC2.0 chargers only charge Qualcomm devices rapidly. So they have to be different to regular chargers.
I'm lead to believe they kick out 9-12v at 2.1a.
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using Tapatalk
I'd assume HTC would work on trying to not weaken battery life span while charging at quick speeds.
Sent from my HTC6525LVW using XDA Free mobile app
Ndaoud360 said:
I'd assume HTC would work on trying to not weaken battery life span while charging at quick speeds.
Sent from my HTC6525LVW using XDA Free mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It doesn't matter what software/hardware configuration is in it, as long as it's the same lithium polymer being used it will still be susceptible to stresses like deep discharges, charge voltage, temperature and load currents.
Also, the 60% in 30 min refers to Qualcomm's benchmark tests with a 3300 mAh battery. The M8 has a 2600 mAh batt.
100% in 30 minutes.... I'm drooling. For those long double days.
PcFish said:
It doesn't matter what software/hardware configuration is in it, as long as it's the same lithium polymer being used it will still be susceptible to stresses like deep discharges, charge voltage, temperature and load currents.
Also, the 60% in 30 min refers to Qualcomm's benchmark tests with a 3300 mAh battery. The M8 has a 2600 mAh batt.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yea your right. HTC said 40% faster charging.
It's quite a nice idea for people who travel a lot and always be on the way. I feel satisfied with my OEM though, charges a full cycle in 2.5-3 hours and I usually charge it at night so it's not a hassle
Does anyone know if there is any substantive data on whether chargers utilizing quickcharge 2.0 do, in fact, reduce overall battery life? I could see this being useful in some scenarios, but I like the battery life on my M8 and do not want to do anything to jeopardize it.
daboscovellen said:
Does anyone know if there is any substantive data on whether chargers utilizing quickcharge 2.0 do, in fact, reduce overall battery life? I could see this being useful in some scenarios, but I like the battery life on my M8 and do not want to do anything to jeopardize it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not until end users have done extensive testing. Qualcomm and handset manufacturers and accessory manufacturers are hardly going to advertise this information.
I personally do not believe it will affect battery life drastically. As I said before, it's a technology utilising chips and software within the charger and handset. It's not like shoving a 2a or greater bog standard charger up it.
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using Tapatalk
Chris_c81 said:
Not until end users have done extensive testing. Qualcomm and handset manufacturers and accessory manufacturers are hardly going to advertise this information.
I personally do not believe it will affect battery life drastically. As I said before, it's a technology utilising chips and software within the charger and handset. It's not like shoving a 2a or greater bog standard charger up it.
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
BUT then again phone companies like to make your phone die quicker so you can buy their latest device. I don't HTC would do that so I believe they would try to make the battery stay the same length of time.
Ndaoud360 said:
BUT then again phone companies like to make your phone die quicker so you can buy their latest device.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Of course, I'm assuming you have evidence of that statement!?
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using Tapatalk
Chris_c81 said:
Of course, I'm assuming you have evidence of that statement!?
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's just been rumored throughout the years. It's like how some companies like Version (rumored again that most people believe) force some manufactures to not have an sd card slot or something like that so people can use cloud storage which means using more data and possibly going over your monthly limit and paying extra per month for overages. Don't know how true it is but all this rumored.
Wife just got a Droid Turbo...I'll try to remember to do a test in the morning and report back...
I use my Samsung 5.3v 2a charger...I go from 0 to 100% in 2 hours that saved me over 30 min charge. Time...
Sent from my SM-P600 using XDA Premium HD app
Can you get this Rapid 2.0 charger by HTC is it out yet? HTC site says out of stock but I didn't know if it was even available yet or if anyone else had it. I tried to google it and couldn't find it anywhere. Someone at work stole my original HTC charger that came with my M8. I know HTC does there 50% off deals too alot on Tuesdays.
Rose4uKY said:
Can you get this Rapid 2.0 charger by HTC is it out yet? HTC site says out of stock but I didn't know if it was even available yet or if anyone else had it. I tried to google it and couldn't find it anywhere. Someone at work stole my original HTC charger that came with my M8. I know HTC does there 50% off deals too alot on Tuesdays.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yeah they are out already. i bought two earlier this week. I just got them yesterday. haven't had alot of time to test them out. I believe the rapid chargers dont last long on their website. i been trying to buy one for weeks and it wasnt until last monday that i was able to purchase them
Any body know a quality cable to use with it?? My original broke and every syncing cable has been snotty at best

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