- If you need clarification, ask it in the comment box above.
- Better answers use proper spelling and grammar.
- Provide details, support with references or personal experience.
Tell us some more! Your answer needs to include more details to help people.You can't post answers that contain an email address.Please enter a valid email address.The email address entered is already associated to an account.Login to postPlease use English characters only.
Tip: The max point reward for answering a question is 15.
It's not the charger, it's the battery pack. The way phones are wired, power goes to the battery pack first and then to the phone electronics. If the battery is more than 18 months old and you keep it plugged in a lot; i.e., don;t allow the phone's battery to discharge near empty each time then battery life will be shortened. Keep phones in temperature extremes will have the same effect. Would recommend you consider getting one of those emergency chemical batteries for your cell phone and try that first before shelling out the bucks for a new NimH battery. (Remember, phone companies don;t make batteries... most are made by Mashushita (Panasonic) or Sanyo (bought out GE's rechargable battery business many years ago.) This may help you locate less expensive OEM batteries for your phone.
had the same problem since New Year. Bought a replacement battery from eBay last week and now its back to normal. What ruined my last battery was using an in-car charger. Only ever use the wall charger, and discharge the battery completely at least once a month to keep in good condition.
Magnet should not cause any additional discharge on battery, if you are just looking at the battery. however, it is ill-advised to keep a magnet near your phone as has negative effects on the performance.
your magnet is a possible cause. try removing it, if it still has the same symptom, then try replacing the battery. If not, then there may be a leakage problem with your unit.
Yes its normal. To maintain the most power adjust your brightness bar down to 1/4 or 1/2. Keep the push mail function off when you don't need it. Don't recharge the battery until the unit shuts itself off. Then recharge the battery to max before using. This is called conditioning the battery, even though many say you don't need to on lithum ion batteries because there is no memory effect. But their full of sh.t, cause you do the first time you get the battery and should do it once a month to extend the life of the battery.
As with all batteries, Topping them up by keeping them on charge is very bad for the cells, whats best is a good charge and then a good discharge, looks like you need a new battery - Uniden cordless batteries
Possible Problems:
1. Maybe there's a virus.
2. Often restart can drain the battery.
Possible Solution:
Format it by pressing the green key or call key + no. 3 + asterisk(*) at the same time. But 1stly, turn off ur fone, then b4 the NOKIA logo appears, hold these following keys altogether. You will see the "Formatting" word afterwards..
OR...
Format it by typing *#7370.
I have the same problem. I believe the camera is defective since the rapid discharge has ocurred since I bought the camera in June of this year. My sister has the same camera which she bought at least 2 years ago. Her batteries last at least triple the amount of time as mine do and she takes far more pictures that I do. As an experiment, I used her batteries in my camera and they discharged after 30 shots at the most. When the same batteries were recharged and loaded into her camera, the batteries lasted for more than 120 shots. I'm really frustrated. I bought this camera per my sister's recommendation and it cost more than $350. The store has offered to send it back to Sony for a fee but I'm afraid Sony will say I am at fault and not replace or refund.
×