In nougat roms temp stays at 33 to 35 at normal usage but in oreo roms temp always reaches to 3 9 to 41 in normal usage why so much deference
sorry, can't verify that:
which kernel? and which governor?
you've spent 61% of time at 1400MHz, so the temperature is not a surprise.
Use NOS or use init fix processes of Gabriel kernel. There's something is non fixed in Oreo is ramping up the CPU which causes the heat and battery drain.
(some rom has internet and charging heat too)
Related
I've received Nexus 6 from FlipKart, Its great but two major concerns:
1. Screen is very yellow (warm color) and on reducing brightness it becomes magenta. When compared to any other phone including Nexus 5, its extremely yellow. Tried couple of apps, none of them do a good job of fixing the yellows. Did anyone find a good app/setting to calibrate this screen right?
2. Battery life is pathetic: From 100% to 10% in half day. SOT is barely 3 - 3.5 hours (Greenified Facebook, Encryption off), no gaming, where as my friend gets 5hours. Sometimes phone hangs and switches off. When I switch on, it looses 15% battery. It has only been charged 2-3 times (only got it 2 days ago). Does it get better with time? or Am I having a faulty battery?
Update: forgot to mention my phone shuts down at 28% battery. And it didn't boot at all. I realized battery was zero. Is this calibration issue? Or bad battery
Flash elementalx, you'll be able to change color values and battery life is great
1. You can change your RGB using any kernel with support to it. Almost every single kernel have support to RGB LCD KCAL. Use a app such as Trickster to modify the RGB once you flashed a kernel of your choosing.
2. Battery life is subjective to how you use your device. Just because someone was able to achieve 5 hours+ SOT doesn't mean you will either because there are way too many factors that play into effect such as: cellular signal strength, wakelocks, apps installed, etc. If you want to maximize your battery life, look into underclocking the CPU/GPU frequency and flash a custom kernel (e.g. Franco) that removes mpdecision. Mpdecision is a huge battery drain and the frequencies that it selects is completely random and unnecessary in my opinion.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=57808725&postcount=7 my battery life with Franco pre-r1.
I agree that mpdecision really does drain battery a lot. I have mine OVERCLOCKED to 2.88 ghz with sensei kernel and intelliplug. And I am still getting way better battery life than stock. Just flash this kernel with intelliplug and there goes your battery issues. And you can also adjust your screen colors.
rmx36 said:
I agree that mpdecision really does drain battery a lot. I have mine OVERCLOCKED to 2.88 ghz with sensei kernel and intelliplug. And I am still getting way better battery life than stock. Just flash this kernel with intelliplug and there goes your battery issues. And you can also adjust your screen colors.
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Click to collapse
For more elaboration on mpdecision,
All Qualcomm based phones have Qualcomm prorprietary userspace binary called "mpdecision" aka m(ake)p(oor)decision. Instead of letting the kernel itself to decide what frequencies and how many cores to run, this "mpdecsion" binary polls the kernel run queue statistics and decides for the whole system the "optimal" frequency and the "optimal" number of cores to use. The concept is fine, except the decision making is done in userspace and it's 100% closed source so there's no way to tweak it and there's a latency (because all userspace binaries needs to "poll" the kernel for the latest information which is slightly delayed). - faux123
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In other words, mpdecision makes your phone sit at 1.5GHz for doing the most simplest tasks, even composing a email it'll bring your frequency to be at 1.5GHz.
Download CPU Spy and use your phone, then look at CPU Spy and you'll see how much time is spent in that frequency. Then flash another kernel that does not use mpdecision then you'll see the difference, the phone sits at frequencies that makes sense for the load that is on the device.
The alternative solutions would be, Franco's Hotplugging Algorithm or intelliplug by Faux.
Battery life is very subjective.
I am still 100% stock, encrypted, auto brightness and get over 6 hours SOT every charge. Mainly WiFi, some LTE. No gaming.
I will root and switch to another kernel when I have time and see the difference. I would expect more battery.
However if you are only at 2.5 hours SOT on a full charge, I wouldn't expect it to double just by changing kernels.
JasonJoel said:
Battery life is very subjective.
I am still 100% stock, encrypted, auto brightness and get over 6 hours SOT every charge. Mainly WiFi, some LTE. No gaming.
I will root and switch to another kernel when I have time and see the difference. I would expect more battery.
However if you are only at 2.5 hours SOT on a full charge, I wouldn't expect it to double just by changing kernels.
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Click to collapse
Thats so impossible. I've switched to 2G only but i run on Wifi all time and yet 1 day standby and 3.5hrs SOT.
zephiK said:
1. You can change your RGB using any kernel with support to it. Almost every single kernel have support to RGB LCD KCAL. Use a app such as Trickster to modify the RGB once you flashed a kernel of your choosing.
2. Battery life is subjective to how you use your device. Just because someone was able to achieve 5 hours+ SOT doesn't mean you will either because there are way too many factors that play into effect such as: cellular signal strength, wakelocks, apps installed, etc. If you want to maximize your battery life, look into underclocking the CPU/GPU frequency and flash a custom kernel (e.g. Franco) that removes mpdecision. Mpdecision is a huge battery drain and the frequencies that it selects is completely random and unnecessary in my opinion.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=57808725&postcount=7 my battery life with Franco pre-r1.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Impressive! I'm trying ElementalX kernel right now. Is it safe to switch-off MP-decision on that using trickster or shall I go with franco blind folded.
taranfx said:
Thats so impossible. I've switched to 2G only but i run on Wifi all time and yet 1 day standby and 3.5hrs SOT.
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Well, not impossible as it has been that way on my phone since day 1.
But i agree that it is really odd how some people are getting 3 hours and others getting 6.
I had the opposite on my Note 4 though. Everyone got 6 and I got 4. So who knows?
taranfx said:
Impressive! I'm trying ElementalX kernel right now. Is it safe to switch-off MP-decision on that using trickster or shall I go with franco blind folded.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You only want to disable MPDecision if theres a alternative. For Franco, mpdecision is 100% removed so you don't need to disable anything.
I don't know ElementalX so I can't say, ask in their thread. If you use Franco, everything is done for you and you don't need to do anything on your part.
My battery life with LK is pretty good as well! I was able to tether for 10 hours straight and still had 22% left after sleeping ~8 hours.
Just want to buy the phone from a friend but noticed twrp reads 71 degrees when doing backup , no compression or anything
Also battery drains 8%/h no wakelocks, all managed
is this the normal , what can i do to reduce the temp in twrp...
and also battery drain ...no wakelocks
Hey, was just wondering what settings you all have under Kernel Auditor in order to ensure 5 hours+ SOT. I personally have a dual core setup and have the other two cores kick in when the load gets to 90%, but this seems sort of sluggish now and I only get about 3.5-4 hours SOT and I don't play any games; just simple browsing and productivity. Others manage to get up to 5-6 hours SOT and I wonder how, I have NEVER been able to get this much. Standby is great though, 10 hours overnight and I lose only 3% battery. I am running on Pure Nexus Project ROM and latest Hells Core Kernel.
thats about the regular time I get outa mine. If I had to guess a lot of these 5+ hours are from watching videos or something that doesn't involve touching the screen. I've been using HC kernel with just zen decision on max performance settings and gpu on performance governor (since it idles 27mhz anyway might as well ramp up to full 600mhz for touches) for smoothness.
I have it setup that all my cores are on all the time, no hotplugging. ondemand/deadline, mpdecision disabled, fsync disabled. and I get 5+ hours sot every single day. no, I do not watch videos. but I do keep my brightness all the way down.
Hey, where do you go to disable fsync
aroy97 said:
Hey, where do you go to disable fsync
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it has to be an option in the kernel that youre using, at least the kernel has to expose it so that you can disable it. if its not xposed in general, then you cant disable it. im using despair kernel.
Try undervolting. Unless you severely under clock your cores you won't really see battery life improvement.
I keep my max CPU speed at 2803mhz. You might think "oh well if you're running higher frequencies then more battery drain". Not exactly. The difference between 2649mhz and 2803mhz will be negligible in terms of battery life so I'm seeing a slight performance increase with no significant battery loss. For example, on 2649mhz after a full day of normal usage I'd have about 49% battery life. On 2803mhz I'd have about 43%. I got a good performance increase and a more snappier device in terms of loading web pages, apps, opening documents etc so that extra 6% I lost doesn't matter to me, because its not significantly impacting me, I barely notice most of the time.
So yeah, the same goes for lowering CPU speeds to unless you significantly lower them. Putting max CPU speed to something like 2572mhz, you wouldn't even notice e the difference in battery. Now lowering it to like 1958mhz, or 2188mhz and you'll see a difference because at that point your severely under clocking.
You could also be draining your battery by hotplugging. That's why some people like Zen and MP Decision to keep all cores online when screen is on. If you use your device often, its better to have all cores running. If you don't and its kept in your pocket for hours at a time, hotplugging is the way to go.
Try under volting too. I do. Global Under Volt of -60.
TransportedMan said:
Try undervolting. Unless you severely under clock your cores you won't really see battery life improvement.
I keep my max CPU speed at 2803mhz. You might think "oh well if you're running higher frequencies then more battery drain". Not exactly. The difference between 2649mhz and 2803mhz will be negligible in terms of battery life so I'm seeing a slight performance increase with no significant battery loss. For example, on 2649mhz after a full day of normal usage I'd have about 49% battery life. On 2803mhz I'd have about 43%. I got a good performance increase and a more snappier device in terms of loading web pages, apps, opening documents etc so that extra 6% I lost doesn't matter to me, because its not significantly impacting me, I barely notice most of the time.
So yeah, the same goes for lowering CPU speeds to unless you significantly lower them. Putting max CPU speed to something like 2572mhz, you wouldn't even notice e the difference in battery. Now lowering it to like 1958mhz, or 2188mhz and you'll see a difference because at that point your severely under clocking.
You could also be draining your battery by hotplugging. That's why some people like Zen and MP Decision to keep all cores online when screen is on. If you use your device often, its better to have all cores running. If you don't and its kept in your pocket for hours at a time, hotplugging is the way to go.
Try under volting too. I do. Global Under Volt of -60.
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Click to collapse
undervolting doesnt really save you battery, but it does reduce heat. and hotplugging or having all your cores on doesnt really factor in when you dont use your device that much. as, if you have all your cores on or hotplugging, your phone should be in deep sleep anyways. it does make a difference when your phone is awake. i get much better battery life when all my cores are on all the time.
Should there be a sticky of suggested settings of differing requirements of speed, battery life, etc?
ronaldheld said:
Should there be a sticky of suggested settings of differing requirements of speed, battery life, etc?
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honestly, I don't think so. as the settings/setup used is always dependent on how you actually use the device. and many people have different opinions on how it should be set up.
hi there.
I almost try every oreo rom on xda.
in summer (35 degrees)
30 min idle battery temprature is like 33 degrees on oreo . On nougat I almost see 28-29 degrees. On heavy usage I saw 40.5 degrees (nougat max reached 36.5)
in winter ( lets say with room temprature 25 degrees)
I saw only 23-24 battery temp. degrees on nougat. Oreo gives me 30.5 degrees idle.
I am confused with that.
Does the issue about with rom?
or kernel.
or oreo?
What are your experiences about that issue?
I have measured temps via ampere.
Especially I need information that people use stock oreo rom and stock kernel.
Any help will be appreciated.
After installing pixel experience , although it is great and smooth too but my cpu remains at 100 percent it lowers for 0.1 second then goes back to 100 , battery and charging time are also becoming worst , I have used avast to full scan my phone and have even installed the rom 3-4 times still it's the same problem cpu at 100 percent usage can anyone help me ?