Ask Slashdot: What’s the Best Way to Charge Your Smartphone Battery?
To stop their smartphone battery from swelling, long-time Slashdot reader shanen bought a Samsung Galaxy with a “restrictive charging option.” But what setting should they use?
The way this battery protection option worked was to stop charging the phone at 85%. That left me enough charge for my normal daily travels, which rarely took the phone below 50%, and the battery remained unswollen after a year, which included a month of quite heavy tethering, too. Unfortunately… After a recent upgrade, now my Galaxy has three options for the battery where it had two. The 85% option is still there, but it has been lowered to 80%. I’ve been using that for now and it still seems good enough. However my main concern is with the best option to maximize the overall lifespan of the smartphone…
The other old option says something about using AI to control the battery charging, but I don’t trust it and think it is just the old approach that causes phones to die quickly… The new third option is the one that is interesting me. This seems to be a kind of flutter charge where the phone will charge to 100% and then stop until it has dropped to 95% before charging again, even if it remains plugged in. This sounds attractive and would give me more battery insurance when I’m traveling, but maybe it reduces the overall lifetime of the phone?
They tried getting answers from Samsung, but “I think I have been flagged as a low-profit customer.” And of course, this raises several other questions? (Are other smartphones better? Have iPhones solved the battery-swelling issue?) And most importantly: is there a way to charge batteries without reducing their lifespan?
Share your own thoughts and experiences in the comments.
What’s the best way to charge your smartphone battery?
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
To stop their smartphone battery from swelling, long-time Slashdot reader shanen bought a Samsung Galaxy with a “restrictive charging option.” But what setting should they use?
The way this battery protection option worked was to stop charging the phone at 85%. That left me enough charge for my normal daily travels, which rarely took the phone below 50%, and the battery remained unswollen after a year, which included a month of quite heavy tethering, too. Unfortunately… After a recent upgrade, now my Galaxy has three options for the battery where it had two. The 85% option is still there, but it has been lowered to 80%. I’ve been using that for now and it still seems good enough. However my main concern is with the best option to maximize the overall lifespan of the smartphone…
The other old option says something about using AI to control the battery charging, but I don’t trust it and think it is just the old approach that causes phones to die quickly… The new third option is the one that is interesting me. This seems to be a kind of flutter charge where the phone will charge to 100% and then stop until it has dropped to 95% before charging again, even if it remains plugged in. This sounds attractive and would give me more battery insurance when I’m traveling, but maybe it reduces the overall lifetime of the phone?
They tried getting answers from Samsung, but “I think I have been flagged as a low-profit customer.” And of course, this raises several other questions? (Are other smartphones better? Have iPhones solved the battery-swelling issue?) And most importantly: is there a way to charge batteries without reducing their lifespan?
Share your own thoughts and experiences in the comments.
What’s the best way to charge your smartphone battery?
Read more of this story at Slashdot.