Related
Hello Guys!
I'm French sorry for my bad english.
I share here a product that I bought that works very well for The Elephone P9000!
I bought a good size and functional product for Elephone P9000 on French Amazon.
The price is very low.
It loads very quickly and recognizes the smartphone instantly.
it is a universal product for all brands and also for Iphone.
It is of very good quality.
The links doesn't work in my New Thread.
I think you can find it too on Google Search. :good:
Buying to : amzn.eu/0MJaY37
Product: Quick charge Seneo
Model Number : STSNPA014AB
Work very well for : Elephone P900
Samsung; Nokia Lumia 920; Nexus.
Samsung Galaxy Note 8 / S8 / S8 Plus / S7 / S7 Edge / S6 Edge Plus / Note 5 et iPhone 8 / iPhone 8 Plus / iPhone X.Samsung s8/S7/S7 Edge/S6/S6 Edge/Galaxy Note 5; LG G4, Nexus 6, Moto Droid Turbo, Nexus 5/7 (2013) / 4, Nokia Lumia 1020/920/928, MOTO Droid Maxx / Droid Mini, HTC Droid DNA, HTC Rzound , Blackberry Z30.
Photo camera: Pentax WG-III.
Tablet Qi-Enabled
I don't want to rain in your parade, but the P9000 doesn't support Wireless Quick Charge (just regular wireless charge) and even wired Quick Charge (PumpExpress+) is dodgy to say the least. Mine charges just a little faster than the regular 5V 2A chargers via PE+, something like 5-10 minutes faster.
Main Features:
This wireless charger pad works with all Qi enabled devices
Dual-coil design, extends the charging area
10.8W fast charge transmitter pad, higher efficiency
Built-in mini fan heat dissipation to keep the charger cool always
Not only a wireless charger, but also one phone bracket
Non-slip pads on the bottom to prevent the charger from slipping
Easy to use
Compatible with: 9V smartphones as Samsung Galaxy S8, Galaxy S8+, Galaxy S7, Galaxy S7 Edge, S6 Edge+, Note 5
5V smartphones:
LG: G6 ( US version ), D1L, LTE2, G2, G3, G Pro, AS870
Google: Nexus4, Nexus5, Nexus6, Nexus7 HD
HTC: Droid DNA ( US version ), Butterfly ( US version ), Incredible 4G LTE, 8X, 8XT
SHARP: SH-07D, SH-04D, SH-02D, SH-13C
Other smartphones: Motorola Droid 5, Yota phone2, ZTE GrandS EXT, Blackberry Z30, SONY Xperia Z2, SONY Z3V, etc.
http://www.gearbest.com/chargers-cables/pp_624044.html?vip=2259069
Hello people,
please be so kind and tell me is this charger something neccessarry to be bought or people (we) can live without and charge our Note 8 with the included wired fast charger?
I really do not know whether to buy it or not.
It looks so cool, and to charge phone fast looks interesting.
For example, I have charged my phone via wired charger from 19-20% to 100%, in about 90 minutes.
Edit - what are the pros/cons?
Thank you in advance for your advice.
I got one free as part of the launch promo and I love it. I think the thing I like the most is the convertible part combined with the always on display. As my phone is my alarm clock I can have it charging at night with the always on display visible and when I grab it in the morning I am not pulling cables out of chargers or knocking things off of the headboard.
tldr: I love it.
I wouldn't say that it is necessary to have. It does look cool especially on my desk at work. The only downside is that even with wireless fast charging it still does not charge anywhere near as fast as with the cable. The "fast" only implies that it is faster than the original wireless charger. I had one next to my bed but eventually stop using it as I found that more often than not I would want to still use my phone while it was on the charger or I wanted to get a faster charge when I was getting ready to leave the house.
I, too, got one as part of the free bundle from Samsung. I just set it up. It does look cool, but if it is set up to use it as a dock, it won't charge my Note 8 with my Otterbox Defender case on it. So sad. It will charge if you have the charger flat with the Otterbox on. I believe the problem is that the charger surface is slightly curved. The phone has to touch it in just the right spot to charge. It probably would work better without the case. I was hoping since the box says, "up to 9 Watt wireless Fast charge" it might be faster than my last generation flat Samsung wireless Fast charger, but it's not. I put my phone at 30% on both. Both say 2 hr 2 min to charge. If you take the cable out of the convertible wireless fast charger and plug it directly into your phone, it says 1 hr 15 min to charge. The good thing is, this convertible charger comes with a USB C cable and the standard Samsung Fast charger, so it can be used as a spare. The last generation flat wireless charger came with a microUSB cable and standard Fast charger. My final conclusion is, since mine was free, I might keep it. I personally wouldn't buy one that won't charge my Note 8 with my Otterbox on in the upright position. As a side note, the convertible charger won't charge my Note 8 in the landscape position either with the Defender case on it.
If mines didn't come free with promo, I would of end up buying it.
Never use it, waste of space. Generates heat, but cable slow charging does not.
Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
Limeybastard said:
Never use it, waste of space. Generates heat, but cable slow charging does not.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Weird. My pho ne does not get warm on the official wireless charger
myechophone said:
Weird. My pho ne does not get warm on the official wireless charger
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Mine either and OP it is great! I got mine for free with phone and was like I will never use this thing, well i haven't plugged my phone in at home! Goes right on there and convenient! Love having mine after months!
Rubbish. All the wireless charging naturally causes heat. It's the nature of the beast.
Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
It failed me! I placed my phone on it last night and woke up to a non charged phone! Way to ruin my day ?
Limeybastard said:
Rubbish. All the wireless charging naturally causes heat. It's the nature of the beast.
Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I bet it's cooler then fast charging plugged in
Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
oneandroidnut said:
I bet it's cooler then fast charging plugged in
Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Might be. I don't fast charge cable either LOL
Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
Wireless not necessary but what is very handy is having a couple 10 foot long cables...
- R. Kruse Ludington
Galaxy Note 8<-5<-3<-S3<-Nexus; Droid X; HTC HD2<-Touch Pro 2<-Tilt<-8525; O2 XDA II<-XDA
KruseLudsMobile said:
Wireless not necessary but what is very handy is having a couple 10 foot long cables...
- R. Kruse Ludington
Galaxy Note 8<-5<-3<-S3<-Nexus; Droid X; HTC HD2<-Touch Pro 2<-Tilt<-8525; O2 XDA II<-XDA
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
True it's handy for some. , I agree.
Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
Limeybastard said:
Might be. I don't fast charge cable either LOL
Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
LOL so it has same amount of heat as wireless charging!
oneandroidnut said:
LOL so it has same amount of heat as wireless charging!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wouldn't know never tried it
Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
Limeybastard said:
Wouldn't know never tried it
Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
LOL trust me then it is
oneandroidnut said:
LOL trust me then it is
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It is the fact as the performance/efficiency of wireless charging is always less the than cable charging.
In mine the fan is constantly on! I mean all the f time!! I cannot wirelessly charge at night because is so annoying! Also I think is too flimsy and I don't like the leather like texture , feels like the plastic on a ps3 controller analog cap.
I find it perfect for next to the bed charging..
https://www.androidauthority.com/samsung-galaxy-note-8-battery-problem-dead-charge-825899/
Gonna test mine today.
NIKKOTUASON said:
Gonna test mine today.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
NO! Running the battery down to zero is hurtful to the battery and shortens it's life.
- R. Kruse Ludington
Galaxy Note 8<-5<-3<-S3<-Nexus; Droid X; HTC HD2<-Touch Pro 2<-Tilt<-8525; O2 XDA II<-XDA
I saw this too and wanted to know what is going on. My phone has never hit zero and idk if I should test.
22jk said:
I saw this too and wanted to know what is going on. My phone has never hit zero and idk if I should test.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
NO! Running the battery down to zero is hurtful to the battery and shortens it's life.
- R. Kruse Ludington
Galaxy Note 8<-5<-3<-S3<-Nexus; Droid X; HTC HD2<-Touch Pro 2<-Tilt<-8525; O2 XDA II<-XDA
KruseLudsMobile said:
NO! Running the battery down to zero is hurtful to the battery and shortens it's life.
- R. Kruse Ludington
Galaxy Note 8<-5<-3<-S3<-Nexus; Droid X; HTC HD2<-Touch Pro 2<-Tilt<-8525; O2 XDA II<-XDA
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, I'm sure we would like to know if we have a defective phone or battery and get Samsung to warranty it while it's still covered. For me, I've never ran my battery down to zero, but now I will, because I don't want to find out when it's too late.
I ran into this issue a month ago. Couldn't find anything on the net about it. Wound up just letting it charge for a day. Never got an LED letting me know it was charging or anything. The next day, got bored...figured it was a paper weight so was gonna go to TMobile the nexy day to figure out my options. Had it plugged into my power bank. Sat there for the duration of a movie just switching the power bank on and off with the phone connected. About an hour after the movie was over I swear the red LED light come on. So I let I charge for another 4 hours and hit the power button and it actually booted up.
I was so relieved lol
Could there be any way to check if my phone might have this problem without actually draining the battery?
Curious, there any way this may be fixable by Samsung? May be firmware change to switch off at low battery?
This used to happen on my galaxy tab 4. I would do this to bring it back.
Someone else's word can describe it better. This is a quote from android central
"It's called Stack Charging. Some devices need a tiny amount of current to run the charging control. You get a few seconds of charging before the charge control system kicks in, so plugging in and unplugging about 30 seconds apart builds up enough of a charge for the phone to take over. I have done this before, more than once, to revive a seemingly dead device. Sometimes it took 20 minutes of plugging and unplugging - but it did work."
I think it's over hype.. Every note I have had, it's gone down to zero (never hurt my battery life), and I've had this one too zero a few times also already. Who knows, could be something in that software..
I saw them mention the same three senarios in like 5 stories.. And they've sold a lot of notes (mine included).. So, there probably are a few with issues of some type unfortunately. But I don't (hope) think it's the crrraaaaazzzzzyyyyy situation like the 7. If it does come down to that (which I seriously and personally doubt) I'm done..
Point is, wouldn't panic personally.. And I'm not going to..
Sent from my note 8...
Tested. No issues. Charging right back up.
Edit for clarity: after displaying the message, the device powered down.
Verizon variant.
Stock/not rooted
Snapdragon
I hope I have that issue. Maybe I can swap the phone then and get one without OEM issue.
Gesendet von meinem SM-N950F mit Tapatalk
Which models # have this battery / charging issue ?
This is the actual statement for Sammy:
Of course, Samsung is taking all reports of this kind seriously, we only received a very small number of customer inquiries that could be linked to charge management, and unfortunately we can only comment on the matter further if we have more detailed information about the affected devices. If you have any questions about your device, please contact Samsung Customer Service at 06196 77 555 66 (costs according to the contractual partner’s terms for landline or mobile phone connections.) Service times: Monday to Friday: 8: 00-21: 00 clock, Saturday: 9: 00-17: 00 clock) or under: http://www.samsung.com/de/info/contactus.html).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have exynos. Had trouble getting it to charge after 0% 2 times in a row. Had to fiddle to get it charging.
I am now remembering that this issue is not so uncommon, I had a nokia n95, a nokia n97, a galaxy s3 that behaved exactly the same, if batt reached zero and autopowering off, I had to connect them for a while, then disconnected for another while, after that the devices charged normally, letting a device to reach zero is very, very negligent, So, do not panic, do not start spreading concerns about batteries, just take good care of the charge levels, most important, your battery will have a longer useful life
winol said:
I am now remembering that this issue is not so uncommon, I had a nokia n95, a nokia n97, a galaxy s3 that behaved exactly the same, if batt reached zero and autopowering off, I had to connect them for a while, then disconnected for another while, after that the devices charged normally, letting a device to reach zero is very, very negligent, So, do not panic, do not start spreading concerns about batteries, just take good care of the charge levels, most important, your battery will have a longer useful life
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try telling that to my kids, who regularly let their phones run all the way down, no matter how many times I tell them to keep their phones charged and why they need to stay charged. SMH
Hi,
I have a note 8. I had thought today that is therr any possibility that somehow when mobile is connected to the DC it bypass the battery and use the direct current instead of charging the battery and using the AC.
Means maybe we can have the toggle to get the battery charged or use the DC when pluged in.
Anyone can shed some light on this concept?
TIA.
Sent from my SM-N950F using Tapatalk
It already does that as the battery reaches 100%. Why would you want it to NOT charge the battery when plugged into DC if the battery is not 100%?
- R. Kruse Ludington
Galaxy Note 8<-5<-3<-S3<-Nexus; Droid X; HTC HD2<-Touch Pro 2<-Tilt<-8525; O2 XDA II<-XDA; Motorola StarTac
KruseLudsMobile said:
It already does that as the battery reaches 100%. Why would you want it to NOT charge the battery when plugged into DC if the battery is not 100%?
- R. Kruse Ludington
Galaxy Note 8<-5<-3<-S3<-Nexus; Droid X; HTC HD2<-Touch Pro 2<-Tilt<-8525; O2 XDA II<-XDA; Motorola StarTac
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Dear @KruseLudsMobile as i have heard if we use the mobile while charging it reduces the battery life. Like i play games and sometimes i need the phone for use but battery is needed to charge in that case i want to usw DC and charge it later once i have done with game.
Further the earlier statement of yours is not endorsed by anyone as overcharging may harm your battery according to alot android forums.
I would like to seek further clearance on this. And what you suggest i may plug in my phone at 9 pm and sleep and can unplug the phone at 9 am and there would be no effect on battery, is that you are saying?
Sent from my SM-N950F using Tapatalk
h30_u10 said:
Dear @KruseLudsMobile as i have heard if we use the mobile while charging it reduces the battery life. Like i play games and sometimes i need the phone for use but battery is needed to charge in that case i want to usw DC and charge it later once i have done with game.
Further the earlier statement of yours is not endorsed by anyone as overcharging may harm your battery according to alot android forums.
I would like to seek further clearance on this. And what you suggest i may plug in my phone at 9 pm and sleep and can unplug the phone at 9 am and there would be no effect on battery, is that you are saying?
Sent from my SM-N950F using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I charge overnight every night.
Mr. Orange 645 said:
I charge overnight every night.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
And you sure your battery is fine?
Sent from my SM-N950F using Tapatalk
h30_u10 said:
And you sure your battery is fine?
Sent from my SM-N950F using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, LOL
To be thorough in our answer, we have two items here:
1. We do not know the details of how Samsung's circuitry manages powering the phone while on and charging the battery at the same time. Ideally they would be separate and the battery would still be charged while only the DC power supplied would be accessed by the phone for power usage to run the phone. On older phones I have seen the battery % go down even while plugged in to a charger if it is using something intensive like a game. Does that happen here with both generic chargers as well as Samsung adaptive chargers or Samsung Fast Chargers? If it stays at 100% while you are using it when plugged in, that is the best scenario because you are not using the battery at all!
2. Leaving the phone plugged in while idle for long periods of time such as overnight while you are asleep. In this case, overcharging used to be possible but with this phone (and all modern phones) there is circuitry in place which stops the charging when the phone is at 100% so this is not an issue.
Lastly, with Lithium Ion batteries, the life is shortened by A. draining it often as it only has a limited number of charging cycles, B. Draining it down to a very low level such as down to 2% or 0%, and C. Storing it unused for long periods when charged to 100% (that is why you see most batteries only have 50-75% of a charge when you buy it new - that is the optimal storage level when not used for a long time.
When reading documentation on batteries, be sure you read it from a good source and it is written recently (older documentation sometimes refers to Nickel Cadmium batteries (without saying so) which are very different).
I leave mine turned on and charging overnight, and whenever possible, keep it plugged in while in use. This gas prolonged the life of my phone batteries - mine typically last 4 years. Keeping it plugged in and using it while at 100% allows you to use the phone without even using the battery at all, and that really prolongs it's life because it is not using any of the finite charging cycles.
About charging cycles: draining the phone to 50%, charging it to 100%, then using it down to 50% again, then recharging it to 100% again - in that case you have used one charging cycle. Make sense? There is software on the play store that tells you how many charging cycles your battery has been through, called "Charge Cycle Counter". I've attached a picture of it from my phone.
Hope this helps...
- R. Kruse Ludington
Galaxy Note 8<-5<-3<-S3<-Nexus; Droid X; HTC HD2<-Touch Pro 2<-Tilt<-8525; O2 XDA II<-XDA; Motorola StarTac
KruseLudsMobile said:
To be thorough in our answer, we have two items here:
1. We do not know the details of how Samsung's circuitry manages powering the phone while on and charging the battery at the same time. Ideally they would be separate and the battery would still be charged while only the DC power supplied would be accessed by the phone for power usage to run the phone. On older phones I have seen the battery % go down even while plugged in to a charger if it is using something intensive like a game. Does that happen here with both generic chargers as well as Samsung adaptive chargers or Samsung Fast Chargers? If it stays at 100% while you are using it when plugged in, that is the best scenario because you are not using the battery at all!
2. Leaving the phone plugged in while idle for long periods of time such as overnight while you are asleep. In this case, overcharging used to be possible but with this phone (and all modern phones) there is circuitry in place which stops the charging when the phone is at 100% so this is not an issue.
Lastly, with Lithium Ion batteries, the life is shortened by A. draining it often as it only has a limited number of charging cycles, B. Draining it down to a very low level such as down to 2% or 0%, and C. Storing it unused for long periods when charged to 100% (that is why you see most batteries only have 50-75% of a charge when you buy it new - that is the optimal storage level when not used for a long time.
When reading documentation on batteries, be sure you read it from a good source and it is written recently (older documentation sometimes refers to Nickel Cadmium batteries (without saying so) which are very different).
I leave mine turned on and charging overnight, and whenever possible, keep it plugged in while in use. This gas prolonged the life of my phone batteries - mine typically last 4 years. Keeping it plugged in and using it while at 100% allows you to use the phone without even using the battery at all, and that really prolongs it's life because it is not using any of the finite charging cycles.
About charging cycles: draining the phone to 50%, charging it to 100%, then using it down to 50% again, then recharging it to 100% again - in that case you have used one charging cycle. Make sense? There is software on the play store that tells you how many charging cycles your battery has been through, called "Charge Cycle Counter". I've attached a picture of it from my phone.
Hope this helps...
- R. Kruse Ludington
Galaxy Note 8<-5<-3<-S3<-Nexus; Droid X; HTC HD2<-Touch Pro 2<-Tilt<-8525; O2 XDA II<-XDA; Motorola StarTac
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Last photo upload didn't work. Here you go...View attachment 4679190
- R. Kruse Ludington
Galaxy Note 8<-5<-3<-S3<-Nexus; Droid X; HTC HD2<-Touch Pro 2<-Tilt<-8525; O2 XDA II<-XDA; Motorola StarTac
KruseLudsMobile said:
but with this phone (and all modern phones) there is circuitry in place which stops the charging when the phone is at 100% so this is not an issue
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm not sure if I buy into that. I've plugged many 'modern' phones (if we're talking after 2015) for extended periods of time (more than two months connected to charger) and the battery swelled up on all of them. Specifically I'm talking about my Nexus 6P, LG G4, Lenovo K3 Note and Moto Z.
I use some of these phones as an IP cam, and without a charge limiter set in place, it will all eventually swell. From what I've heard, the ASUS ROG phones and Sony phones are currently the only ones that bypass the battery when it reaches 100%.
NeonHD said:
I'm not sure if I buy into that. I've plugged many 'modern' phones (if we're talking after 2015) for extended periods of time (more than two months connected to charger) and the battery swelled up on all of them. Specifically I'm talking about my Nexus 6P, LG G4, Lenovo K3 Note and Moto Z.
I use some of these phones as an IP cam, and without a charge limiter set in place, it will all eventually swell. From what I've heard, the ASUS ROG phones and Sony phones are currently the only ones that bypass the battery when it reaches 100%.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Fair enough... my experience the last couple of years (you are replying to a very old post) I've been using the Samsung Galaxy Note series of phones - and that has been my experience - leave plugged in or on wireless charger whenever near same... battery never swells and lasts maybe 3-4 years!