I know this was covered in a different post, but I've been wondering how this app can actually make a difference in battery life. I've tried many of these, and "Repair Battery Life" is the only one that seemed to help. I understand that, like everything Android/Linux, the battery is a file, and that file can be manipulated to show whatever percent (a bad ROM/Kernel combination once showed -%1078663).

I've got a Galaxy S3 (i747). There are times when my phone will sit charging for an hour or so, yet only have 10%-15% charged. When that happens, I run this app, and it manages to find 2 or 3 "bad cells". After fixing them, my phone then charges much quicker, and battery life is back to normal. I was under the impression the only thing you can do to impact the apparent battery life was recalibration, which I'm not convinced matters. It's also worth mentioning that I've installed this app several times after wiping my phone and flashing a ROM, and it had upgraded itself to the Pro version with absolutely no input from me. The first time I ever used this, it upgraded itself. Next couple times I reinstalled it, it didn't upgrade. This past time, it did - again, for no reason. So, I'm really confused, here, because I don't understand why the app randomly upgrades, and I still can't figure out how this app "fixes" my battery.


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It's also worth mentioning that every so often, it "finds" new "bad cells" randomly. And every time I have it "fix" the problems, well, it actually seems to fix the battery issue. Doesn't make sense to me.

However, my phone has been through some semi-traumatic events in it's life (well, in my possession). It has fallen out of my pocket while crossing a road, and after I realized it was gone, I retrieved it. Luckily, it had been face-down. It had been run over a few times, and it cost me my rear camera, which still worked for a few months but finally crapped out entirely (any camera app crashes almost immediately). It has also been victim to an unexpected dip in a pitcher of water for about 10 seconds, while playing music and downloading, so it was also running a bit hot. After letting it dry overnight on the air vent, it worked. Mostly. About 90% of my touches didn't register, and so I figured I'd have to either replace the digitizer or just get a new phone. Later that day, it finally started working again, perfectly. I did read, however, that people who had the same luck with their screens were complaining that after about 6 months or so, their phone would behave erratically and eventually die completely.

Battery not working correctly? Well, just defrag it! It's all so obvious now. No, but really, there's an app in the Play Store that claims to repair your battery and basically looks like a hard drive defrag program.

Anyone who knows much about technology will immediately be suspicious of this app's claims. If it were possible to wave a magic wand over your battery and fix the "data cells," you can be sure the engineers who made your phone would have built that into the software.

It's doubtful for this app to really be able to access the battery, compared to other reputable optimization apps, like Greenify (this app doesn't access the battery directly either, but it can kill apps that may drain much power, improving the battery life in a sense).

We've warned you in the past about low voltage problems in lithium batteries and the negative impacts of fully draining a battery on its lifespan and the same holds true here. But, if your phone battery is causing you real problems, it's worth taking the risk.

Remember that it is not recommended to perform this process regularly. Even when your battery is so dead your phone won't even turn on, your battery still has enough reserve charge to avoid system damage. But you don't want to poke the tiger with a stick. Perform this process once every three months at the most. If it is required more often than that, you have bigger problems at hand.

Put plainly: fully discharging a battery is bad for it. Trying to overload a battery is also bad for it. The good news is that charging batteries will shut off automatically when they've reached their safe limit and there's always a little in reserve even if your phone won't start. Again: only do this when really necessary, because it does have a negative impact on battery life.".

APPs which 'seem to work' have a fancy UI, a little 'Scanner', a 'Report Section' that almost always finds a 'problem' and then claims it can fix it - but you need to let your phone discharge and let it shutoff, then recharge it - that causes the phone's battery's "Protection Circuitry" (that protects it from exploding or deep discharging) to recalibrate the zero and full points.

Once your Battery is over four years old the only thing to do is either get an expert to disassemble the Phone and replace the battery or buy an external battery that plugs into the USB and carry a bulky 'Charging Case' or a 'brick' in your pocket.

When the battery on your Android device is too old it usually starts failing, and needs to be charged more and more frequently. Repair Battery Life is a practical application with which you can give your device some extra minutes of life, repairing some of the problems that might come up.

This application scans every sector that makes up the battery hardware and analyzes the parts that are inactive, the ones that are healthy, and the ones that are working slowly. Once you have the map of your battery status, you can restore it and solve some of its problems.

The first time you open the application the analysis can take some minutes, but once it is finished you won't need to use Repair Battery Life in some time. It works very similarly to those apps that kill inactive processes, lengthening your battery life.

So I have been working hard trying many different things in order to fix my horrible battery life. I have used several tools including Powercfg options etc and noticed two main problems. First, when sleeping, my Surface book would drain large amounts while "asleep." Second, when using the surface book, my battery life was only around 5-6 hours. I was frustrated because my surface book otherwise seemed free of defects. I, and others on this forum, have tried many things, and I have two procedures that have significantly improved my battery life. I now get minimal drain during sleep (not perfect but much better) and my battery life for normal activity (i.e browsing and typing etc) has skyrocketed to 10-12 hours.

To fix the significant sleep drain: type "sign-in options" under search and open them up. Under Windows Hello - select REMOVE. Apparently the driver for the camera is preventing sleep and drains large amounts of power at this time. A fix from Microsoft needs to come to repair this in the future.

I have verified significant improvement in battery drain (while Idle and running programs) with Batterymon. Before installing the drivers, I was getting a discharge rate of around 8000-9000 mW when simply running 3-4 tabs on internet explorer. Now, my discharge rate is only 5000mW.

I hope this can help others who are having significant battery issues. I, like others, was considering returning my surface book as I was worried that this was a severe hardware issue. Now that my battery life has dramatically improved, I'm willing to stick it out and let Microsoft fix the rest of the conflicts.

This is the 4th phone in a row with the same problem. I had a 128GB iPhone 7+ Verizon Model back in October and it worked great for about 2 weeks that I had it, I decided to sell it and bough the Google Pixel XL until December 15th when I got another iPhone 7+, this time a 32GB T-Mobile version (A1784), it worked as expected for 2 weeks then suddenly on Dec. 28th when I got to my office the phone began draining the battery a lot faster than normal and when I checked the battery stats I noticed that the Battery Standby and Usage were increasing at the same rate, without even using the phone.

One more thing, once I leave the office it goes back to normal, but this is totally unacceptable that I must be re-charging all day decreasing my battery life span by a lot for something that seems to be affecting just me on 4 different phones in the last 3 weeks.

The battery drain happen from time to time. And I can notice the phone quite warm to the touch. Even if I kill all the apps using App Switcher.. it doesnt stop the drain. The only fix is to reboot. After reboot, thing went back to normal... but it will come back maybe weeks later out of blue moon. ff782bc1db

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