I am a technician this is not fake. He is correct this does work. The battery has an electronic circuit inside to stop them from going to zero volts. This is also what happens to laptop batteries but because you cannot open the laptop battery it is harder to jump start if not impossible. Sometimes, in a laptop, it will be only one of the cells that go low. You cannot open laptop batteries without damaging the battery case. If you leave them in storage they can go below the recharge line. Great video. Thank you.
If some one tell fake . .. don't take it personal ....just ignore. You are a nice and a TRUE knowledge person. :) kudos to you cheers. Amazing simple video.
Your patient in that heat was admirable and the safety you stressed was appreciated, don’t let the haters bother you so much, you seem like a trust worthy person.
Thank you, this was very informative. I was able to resuscitate a Samsung Note 3 that had been unused for about 4 years. I ended up charging the battery a lot longer than depicted in the video. But in the end I got there. I think the battery was reading about 3.8V when the phone finally came on (first reading after "waking" the battery was 2.5V). When I was charging my battery, I kept my voltmeter connected to the contacts, which gave me real-time battery voltage level. That was really helpful to keep an eye on the charging process.
Great explanation! My problem is I broke the micro USB connector on the phone and was looking how to fix it, but I stayed all the way to the end of this clip because it was very educational. Thanks.
@@UltimateDIY I did it but now my phone is just coming on the galaxy screen then going off on it's own and then again the screen comes out and this goes on what shall I do
Yer dog was tryin to tell me something but I don't speak his language. 🤔🤨 Awesome job explaining this you make it a clear relaxing and easy to understand topic. Salute!
This is SUCH GREAT INFORMATION! And the same principle works with different kinds of batteries and phones--I just used it to jumpstart my Samsung Galaxy 8 active battery after prying open the phone. The phone store probably would have tried to sell me a new phone! Doing this makes you feel empowered! ;)
Nice one. Resurrected my 10yr old Nokia battery that I'm charging to use on a DIY GSM network using a software-defined radio. I seriously thought the battery would be toast after living in a drawer for several years.
It was explained extemely well and I am very grateful to you; also found it was deminstrated so well that I was able to follow you since simple terms and slowly explained. Thank you so much. I wish all other videos were done similar to yours.
It worked! Thank you so much, I thought I had to look for and buy a new phone battery, now it's not necessary, the old one is fine, it just needed a jump start.
I'm in Jamaica Beach, Tx. Last commenter...want to swap locations for a day? Haha. Thank you for your instructional video on this topic. I'm hopeful to get my older phone revived enough to save everything onto flash drive...
Seen a few videos on this. Some say be careful and then they look like they have a plane to catch. Like how you followed steps and have respect for what you're illustrating.
My *Samsung Galaxy Note 1* Was Dead. I Havent Even Used It Since 2016. But This Video Is Super Helpful!! Thanks For This Video And It Worked!!!!!!!!!!!!
Great and helpful video. On another video I watched, the guy recommended holding the red & black wires against the battery points for about 5 minutes to get it charged properly
The actual required duration depends on many factors, so it's impossible to give an exact number. For some 5 minutes cound be perfect, for others not enough or worst case too much.
Great video, ive used this process with my dewalt tools. Old batteries were "shot" so i hooked the old battery up to my newer 20v battery for a very short time. It resurrected the old battery Im going to try your prrocess on a samsung a23 that has the same symptoms. Thanks for sharing
@@UltimateDIY just wanted to update you and once again thank you. I just finished jump starting my battery out of a galaxy a21s (a215u). The phone would flash the charging circle for a second and go black screen. Using your steps I found the battery was at 2.01v and I rigged my multimeter up while I tapped into a USB power brick charger. Once it hit 3.7v I disconnected and tried the regular plug in charger. It's ALIVE! . Thanks again
@@UltimateDIY i knew about 12v and other auto and marine deepcycle. i did not think to apply it to cordless no. but i have a pile and will see. Cellular not at all. but we get insurance on devices anyway. so why mess with it. However other freinds do not. i wil use this soon
Worked like magic. Have an old Xperia X10 in my drawer that refused to start charging, even if the battery is like 3.6V. After a few tries with this, it started charging.
@@UltimateDIY thank you I'm testing it right now I just finished holding the wires to it and have plugged it into the phone charger however if you don't mind I dont know how long I leave it on the charger before attempting to turn it on
there is a tip. if you dont want to sacrifice a USB cable than pluug a usb cable into your laptop or pc and let it connect to your phone(battery inserted.). sometimes this do the trick without cutting a USB cable.
Very informative, thank you. I didn't know that the Li-Ion batteries were that "smart." Here is a challenge for you that you might find interesting: Some phones have the contacts for a wireless charging pad to put inside the phone but the wireless charging pad is no longer available. I tried connecting a wireless charging pad made for a Galaxy S3 to my LG G4 with no success. How easy would it be to make your own wireless charging pad? Is it just a dumb loop? How many turns? Or is there a single diode? Or perhaps a FWBR? I tried searching with no luck and was not going to destroy my Galaxy S3 wireless charging pad to find out.
Thank you for watching. I think it needs some electronics to controll it. For a phone that does not have this option there are aftermarket pads that you just plug in the micro usb port. Although that uses the port so you are stuck with wireless charging.
There is no safe or proper way of rescuing Lithium batteries that drop below 2.7 to 2.6v, this is because when a lithium battery drops below a certain amount the chemistry is forever changed in the battery. Most of the time you end up with a battery that will not hold charge after a small to medium amount of charges, or they can even explode. If you don't mind the possibility of a exploding mobile phone, then get a universal batter charger that has adjustable pins and can charge pretty much all the batteries on the market, they only cost around $3 to $5 from Ali Express, Banggood, or any other Chinese site.
This is partially correct, but there are several big channels on youtube that tested revived lithium and had 0 failures or loss of capacity. So, I really don't know what to say about this matter.
@@UltimateDIY it's a little more communicated than that. Basically you have 3 pin or 4 pin batteries, most genuine batteries will use protection circuits using mosets, diodes and resistors to prevent overcharge, overheating and even cut off when a battery dips below a certain voltage (when the chemistry changes) now when you see 0 volts, often this is not the real value, and often why when charging within seconds it jumps from 0 to 2.7 or above. So some PCB protection boards prevent you seeing the real value. A battery that has discharged to 2v or below will definitely have some internal damage to the chemistry, at this point, I would consider the battery dangerous and the severity is based on the capacity of the battery, since a 800mah battery will likely just smoke or die, while a 4,400mah battery can smoke of explode, the energy in higher batteries is far more worse.
I came back to do this video see if it could fixed old phone that is a old phone that is a touch screen and same for a tablet because this one device always back out at last three times and gets back on affer all the times of going black and i guess it still charging but i think it kinda would need to be fixed just like the phone so maybe i do a reset to see if it helps.
timestamps would be super helpful if possible :) Would double charging from a split usb lead and a direct charge through the port at the same time help?
I received a new battery but the phone is still not turning on. The last (-) pin with (+) shows 0v, other 2 (-) pins that are in middle shows 3.70v. Its normal?
@@UltimateDIY I have the same as in the video. The battery has 4 pins. 3 (-) and 1 (+). When I check the last (-), which is closer to the side with (+) shows 0v and the other 2 (-) in middle with (+) shows 3.7v.
That is what I try to say. The fact that is has 4 pins does not mean it has the same configuration for them. As long as you get 3.7V between 2 of them, then your battery has a good charge. But without seing myself I can't give you any advice.
Instead of using a computer as a power source for the jump start, can i use a regular wall outlet or maybe my laptop? I just dont have a computer tower.😊
Hi, good video. I have a problem with the batteries on my wife's LumeaPercision Philips device (light epliator). The case there is that there are 2 separate batteries but they are connected in a pack. If I heard you correctly I have to charge each individually, right ?
Phones now don't allow to have access to the battery. My Motorola Moto G5S plus battery is dying. And I can't find an original battery. Probably, I'll have to use it permanently connected to a powerbank. What do you think ?
That is the sad reality. Phones are much harder to keep working for many years, even if the hardware is still good enough. I would try to find an aftermarket battery that has good reviews.
@@UltimateDIY Yes, the hardware is still working very fine. Can play everything. I think the industry is forcing us to purchase a new phone every 2 years. I can't afford to do that nor it's necessary. My phones are always brand as new. I use to collect things, and I know how to preserve. I hate having to purchase the same thing twice. Instead, I would like to purchase another thing I need. The industry is a criminal.
Thanks I was thinking about to do this, but I didn't actually needed it because I had 2 phone batteries with like 2,8V. And the battery logo didn't appear while charging. So I assumed that the batteries were dead. But yeah they weren't 0,0V so charging it with the correct adapter did the trick for me. It only took long though to get it to work which was at 3,8V. Thanks for showing this I might use it in the future.
Lol atm 1 battery doesn't wanna charge any further at 3,2v and then it goes down to 3V via USB normal charging. The other battery was actually at 3,8V and it turned on (but it crashed a lot of times due to water inside before), but I noticed I actually charged it with the wrong adapter which also was kinda identical to another phone of mine. That phone was useless to me anyways and I'm gonna throw that one away.
I've just charged the battery to 3,8V with doing your method with the original adapter instead of the PC, but it doesn't still charge after it. Every time if I charge it when the battery is into the phone the voltage will be lowered. On the battery itself there is 3,8V and also 4,35V but I assume that is the max. So idk what is wrong with it why it just won't charge after 3,8V. I've changed the USB cable and tried to charge it on the PC / original adapter.
Yes that must be it. Yesterday it was 3,8V and it went down to 3V. The battery was only into the phone. So I was thinking about to buy a new battery. Ty for saying this, because it probably will be the same if I bought a new battery.
believe it or not i was very interested in watching the whole thing, even though I knew it would not help me since I have a Pixel 2 XL and no removable battery... I've always liked watching gadgetry. Great job "showing everything". But maybe i can ask and you will know? My Pixel 2 will not accept a charge, i have tried every troubleshooting sequence including a factory reset. But even after that, and depleting battery of charge, then trying to charge again, I get the unhelpful battery charge icon, but even after several hours charging it still wont come on. I noticed that the screen was bulging...
I enjoyed the video greatly! I was browsing videos of how to replace the charge port (didn't have to do that thankfully), but liked the demonstration that you gave, would've liked to see the doggie (haha), I understood your graph, and it's been many years since engineering school for me, but it makes sense. Out of curiosity, what is/are your native languages? I'll browse some of your other videos, this one was worth the 20 minutes.
I know what your doing works. Ive done the same thing with cordless tool batteries and hit them for a couple of seconds, with a higher power source of course.
@Mohammed Kiani My Samsung Note Pro SMP-900 went into a short boot loop where the samsung logo would come up for 1 second then the tablet would go off. I couldnt get to any of the usual pages to do the download or the page where you can do the wipe of the cache. I tried everything I could find on the internet and nothing worked. Then I changed the good battery in my Samsung phone for an old one and trhat phone went into a boot loop right away. So the dead battery caused it to boot loop. When I put the newer battery back min it worked fine and booted up normally. So I ordered a new battery for the Note-Pro SMP-900 and I think it should boot up normally or at least take me to the screen that will allow me to correct the booting problem. I hope that helps and when I get the new battery I will let you know if it solved the problem.
Just to be clear my Samsung S4 phone works normally even tho it is old. I put the weak battery from another S4 phone into my Samsung S4 phone and it went into a boot loop. When I put the good battery that was in my S4 phone back in the phone it booted up normally SO A WEAK BATTERY THAT WONT HOLD A CHARGE WILL CAUSE THE PHONE TO BOOT LOOP. I am going to change the battery in the 12" Note Pro Tablet and see if that solves the issues of boot looping on that device.I will let you know. I should be here in the next couple of days. So look for my message very soon.
My Samsung Note Pro SM-P900 (2015) was totally bricked and it is now working fine with a new operating system. If you are still in need of help let me know and I will give you the info to get yours working again.
ruclips.net/video/1MdCdyax3do/видео.html ruclips.net/video/Q0To5QRR950/видео.html Go to these 2 websites The first one is the one I used to un-Brick my Tablet. It has a robotic voice talking but it is the best video I found and it works. If you have questions let me know. The second one tells you how to get the software and download the extraction program and the Odin program. Odin is actually in the tool bar of the extraction program. Its very important that you download the proper OS for your device. If you watch the videos carefully you can save your device. I did and mine was bricked pretty hard.
cell charger is slow charge if you had Left it on charge long enough the battery would have charged up and cell would have come on without application of direct power to the battery.
Yes, but no. The problem is that the battery circuit deactivates the battery. Standard phones will not try to charge it anymore after it's deactivated. What you say is valid for an overdischarged battery, but not yet deactivated.
Thank You for your time & knowledge good tutorial buddy just found spare heavy duty USB cable to modify & will try on my old Laptop battery as guessing same actions will apply but take longer to get it to chargeable level
@@UltimateDIY Thanks I know but mine is refurbished but he did-not charge the rechargeable cells 1by1 b4 installation which in another video I saw on YT while ago said he should have & secret is to now trickle charge it so I will use an battery box with leads own jumper leads takes aa aaa & C batteries + 6-12V In/Output & so failing that just remove all cells & charge them in my multi rechargeable battery - charging unit & reassemble later lot of work but laptop is immaculate & even has a remote control for watching movies on big screens via HDMI & not risk losing my new Notebook when away from home
Sadly I tried that too a few times and it did not work. The problem is that most laptop electronics flag the battery as bad, even after a single cell goes once below the minimum safe voltage and even if you charge them individually, the electronics is still locked. You need to reflash the electronics. But this depends a lot on battery manufacturer and model. You can try, maybe you are lucky, but be really, really, really careful with laptop cells, as they can cause a fire quite easily if you do anything wrong, even after you put it back together.
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ஜ۩۞۩ஜ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
T H A N K Y O U F O R W A T C H I N G !
P L E A S E L I K E A N D S U B S C R I B E !
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ஜ۩۞۩ஜ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
In it also makes no sound probably that is not the case. Try to leave it to charge for a few hours.
@Kodine Chase it might be permanently damaged then.
@@UltimateDIY Internals were damaged.
"ജ "this is the design u have used this is a language called malayalam in India my mother tongue 😘
Thank you for this info :)
Shown very clearly and well explained! And thanks for not putting annoying background music. Excellent video and very useful.
Thank you for watching!
Your video is 4 years old and is still helping in 2023! Great job man and thanks for not putting annoying music or dumb chet in the video. Thank you
Welcome! Glad my video continues to help ✌🏼
Excellent , Worked first time after phone unused for 2 years. Great tutorial.
Great! Thanks!
I am a technician this is not fake. He is correct this does work. The battery has an electronic circuit inside to stop them from going to zero volts. This is also what happens to laptop batteries but because you cannot open the laptop battery it is harder to jump start if not impossible. Sometimes, in a laptop, it will be only one of the cells that go low. You cannot open laptop batteries without damaging the battery case. If you leave them in storage they can go below the recharge line. Great video. Thank you.
Thank you!
If some one tell fake
. .. don't take it personal ....just ignore. You are a nice and a TRUE knowledge person. :) kudos to you cheers. Amazing simple video.
Thank you! :)
Your patient in that heat was admirable and the safety you stressed was appreciated, don’t let the haters bother you so much, you seem like a trust worthy person.
Thank you!
Absolutely great!!! I used it for a 36V battery for lawnmower which was on steep sale - it saved me a great money - thanks a lot~!!!
Welcome!
Thank you, this was very informative. I was able to resuscitate a Samsung Note 3 that had been unused for about 4 years. I ended up charging the battery a lot longer than depicted in the video. But in the end I got there. I think the battery was reading about 3.8V when the phone finally came on (first reading after "waking" the battery was 2.5V).
When I was charging my battery, I kept my voltmeter connected to the contacts, which gave me real-time battery voltage level. That was really helpful to keep an eye on the charging process.
Nice 👍🏻
Glad my video helped!
Done this with an old tablet for experimental purposes and it actually worked!
Yup, works on most rechargable devices.
Great explanation! My problem is I broke the micro USB connector on the phone and was looking how to fix it, but I stayed all the way to the end of this clip because it was very educational. Thanks.
Thank you! Hope you get it fixed :)
@@UltimateDIY I did it but now my phone is just coming on the galaxy screen then going off on it's own and then again the screen comes out and this goes on what shall I do
That has nothing to do with the battery.
Do you have the charger plugged in?
@@UltimateDIY the battery started to heat super hot so I got scared and disposed it
You did the right thing. That battery was not safe anymore.
Thank you very much! This helped me to revive a fairly new battery, but I had let it get too low.
i was so happy when i saw he ad the shitty same phone as me and the same problem. worked perfectly thank you!
Yer dog was tryin to tell me something but I don't speak his language. 🤔🤨 Awesome job explaining this you make it a clear relaxing and easy to understand topic. Salute!
Glad my video helped! 😆
Thank you. I am going to try this soon on a phone that has some very important pictures that I can't retrieve.
Did you try it?
Excellent insight into battery working. Thanks a ton.
Welcome!
Thank you. I've just done this procedure and it worked perfectly. Steve in the UK Sept 29 2024
Welcome!
Thank you worked perfectly on a friends old phone that had been lying dead for months. I used a 9v battery instead of USB cable. Cheers.
Glad my video helped 👍🏻
This is SUCH GREAT INFORMATION! And the same principle works with different kinds of batteries and phones--I just used it to jumpstart my Samsung Galaxy 8 active battery after prying open the phone. The phone store probably would have tried to sell me a new phone! Doing this makes you feel empowered! ;)
Glad my video helped! :)
Awsome hack it brought back my dead phone and saved me the cost of new one, no replacement battery available , thank you.
Welcome!
Nice one. Resurrected my 10yr old Nokia battery that I'm charging to use on a DIY GSM network using a software-defined radio. I seriously thought the battery would be toast after living in a drawer for several years.
Glad my video helped. Just keep an eye on the battery for the first few charges to make sure it does not get too hot.
Thanks for the video! Not having much luck with some cell batteries but I got 2 old camera batteries to work this way! Nice!
Welcome!
It was explained extemely well and I am very grateful to you; also found it was deminstrated so well that I was able to follow you since simple terms and slowly explained. Thank you so much. I wish all other videos were done similar to yours.
Welcome! Glad my video helped 👍🏼
Thank you for sharing a good information. That saved me a lot!
this was like a physics class XD
Thanks!
A big THANK YOU - this worked for me.
It worked! Thank you so much, I thought I had to look for and buy a new phone battery, now it's not necessary, the old one is fine, it just needed a jump start.
Welcome!
I'm in Jamaica Beach, Tx. Last commenter...want to swap locations for a day? Haha. Thank you for your instructional video on this topic. I'm hopeful to get my older phone revived enough to save everything onto flash drive...
Glad my video helped ✌🏼
Thank you! Love learning from true professionals!
Welcome!
I tried it and it worked. Thank you so much, sir.
Welcome!
Thank you! Your graph helped very much!
Welcome!
Thanks. This explains a lot in a most interesting detail. Great video!
Welcome! Glad my video helps 👍🏻
worked! LG G4, charged like 3 4 times with direct USB cable like yours, then it turned on, thanks
Perfect!
i have LG G2 need to do this, but it's long story to reach the battery in this phone xD
Thank you very much for this video. Its well explained. Please bring more videos .
Welcome and thank you!
Seen a few videos on this. Some say be careful and then they look like they have a plane to catch. Like how you followed steps and have respect for what you're illustrating.
Glad my video helped 👍🏼
Thank you it really worked and my old phone revived, I didn't sacrifice my usb cable for nothing hahaha
You are welcome
Thank you for this video! I just fixed our dead tablet with this.
Welcome!
Just saved me money! Worked step by step. Not fake at all, Thank you sir!
Great! Welcome!
it worked thank you i bought my new phone and it was charging and i followed your instructions
Welcome!
thanks tons man
it worked. I found out the hard way that the problem was in the connectivity
Welcome!
My *Samsung Galaxy Note 1* Was Dead. I Havent Even Used It Since 2016. But This Video Is Super Helpful!! Thanks For This Video And It Worked!!!!!!!!!!!!
Welcome!
Great and helpful video. On another video I watched, the guy recommended holding the red & black wires against the battery points for about 5 minutes to get it charged properly
The actual required duration depends on many factors, so it's impossible to give an exact number. For some 5 minutes cound be perfect, for others not enough or worst case too much.
@@UltimateDIY That's true, thanks
@@UltimateDIY What if the wires are red white and green? Which is positive and which is negative in that case?
Great video, ive used this process with my dewalt tools. Old batteries were "shot" so i hooked the old battery up to my newer 20v battery for a very short time. It resurrected the old battery
Im going to try your prrocess on a samsung a23 that has the same symptoms.
Thanks for sharing
Welcome! Glad I could help!
@@UltimateDIY just wanted to update you and once again thank you. I just finished jump starting my battery out of a galaxy a21s (a215u). The phone would flash the charging circle for a second and go black screen. Using your steps I found the battery was at 2.01v and I rigged my multimeter up while I tapped into a USB power brick charger. Once it hit 3.7v I disconnected and tried the regular plug in charger. It's ALIVE! . Thanks again
thanks for the info its working more power to you sir.. Godbless
very clear explanation, i understand the concept very well
Glad my video helped ✌🏼
Thank you so much! I just revived my old phone. Keep you to good work
Welcome!
Good job with all the best information and knowledge 😃
Thank you!
Very useful. Great English.
Welcome and thanks!
Same theory apllies with Cordless tool batteries. What happens is battery eventually drops below what charger wants to see to charge.
Thank you for the info. Did not have a cordless tool do that until now.
@@UltimateDIY i knew about 12v and other auto and marine deepcycle. i did not think to apply it to cordless no. but i have a pile and will see. Cellular not at all. but we get insurance on devices anyway. so why mess with it. However other freinds do not. i wil use this soon
It's working! THANK YOU!
Welcome!
Worked like magic. Have an old Xperia X10 in my drawer that refused to start charging, even if the battery is like 3.6V. After a few tries with this, it started charging.
Awesome!
@@UltimateDIY will this work for my Android? It has been in a drawer for 3 years and it's the same battery in this video
You need to test and see. But it should work.
@@UltimateDIY thank you I'm testing it right now I just finished holding the wires to it and have plugged it into the phone charger however if you don't mind I dont know how long I leave it on the charger before attempting to turn it on
@@lindathetford3776 it's not an exact period. Try half an hour.
Thanks for the easy to understand video. Instead of plugging the USB wires to the computer, would it be dangerous to plug it into a wall adapter?
If it's a 5V usb wall adapter with low mAh output, it should be ok.
there is a tip. if you dont want to sacrifice a USB cable than pluug a usb cable into your laptop or pc and let it connect to your phone(battery inserted.). sometimes this do the trick without cutting a USB cable.
Many thanks for posting this. I will give it a try in the morning and post the feedback.
Welcome! Hope it works for you.
Just ignore negative commentators, there will always be those
Thank you!
I have done this. In fact, I'm doing it right now. it works.
Great!
Very informative, thank you. I didn't know that the Li-Ion batteries were that "smart." Here is a challenge for you that you might find interesting: Some phones have the contacts for a wireless charging pad to put inside the phone but the wireless charging pad is no longer available. I tried connecting a wireless charging pad made for a Galaxy S3 to my LG G4 with no success. How easy would it be to make your own wireless charging pad? Is it just a dumb loop? How many turns? Or is there a single diode? Or perhaps a FWBR? I tried searching with no luck and was not going to destroy my Galaxy S3 wireless charging pad to find out.
Thank you for watching. I think it needs some electronics to controll it. For a phone that does not have this option there are aftermarket pads that you just plug in the micro usb port. Although that uses the port so you are stuck with wireless charging.
that is the exact phone i have that doesnt boot up. problem solved! THANK YOU!
There is no safe or proper way of rescuing Lithium batteries that drop below 2.7 to 2.6v, this is because when a lithium battery drops below a certain amount the chemistry is forever changed in the battery. Most of the time you end up with a battery that will not hold charge after a small to medium amount of charges, or they can even explode. If you don't mind the possibility of a exploding mobile phone, then get a universal batter charger that has adjustable pins and can charge pretty much all the batteries on the market, they only cost around $3 to $5 from Ali Express, Banggood, or any other Chinese site.
This is partially correct, but there are several big channels on youtube that tested revived lithium and had 0 failures or loss of capacity. So, I really don't know what to say about this matter.
@@UltimateDIY it's a little more communicated than that. Basically you have 3 pin or 4 pin batteries, most genuine batteries will use protection circuits using mosets, diodes and resistors to prevent overcharge, overheating and even cut off when a battery dips below a certain voltage (when the chemistry changes) now when you see 0 volts, often this is not the real value, and often why when charging within seconds it jumps from 0 to 2.7 or above. So some PCB protection boards prevent you seeing the real value. A battery that has discharged to 2v or below will definitely have some internal damage to the chemistry, at this point, I would consider the battery dangerous and the severity is based on the capacity of the battery, since a 800mah battery will likely just smoke or die, while a 4,400mah battery can smoke of explode, the energy in higher batteries is far more worse.
I came back to do this video see if it could fixed old phone that is a old phone that is a touch screen and same for a tablet because this one device always back out at last three times and gets back on affer all the times of going black and i guess it still charging but i think it kinda would need to be fixed just like the phone so maybe i do a reset to see if it helps.
timestamps would be super helpful if possible :) Would double charging from a split usb lead and a direct charge through the port at the same time help?
Sorry, but only if YT generates them automatically. Otherwise, I have no time to create them :(
@@UltimateDIY you can now
Thank u so much for this tutorial
What are your thoughts about using hair dryer technique to heat up the phone and temporarily increase the voltage of the non-removable batteries?
Could sometimes work, but depends on situation. I also do not really like to heat up batteries...
Thanks you,and thanks for that explanation, it was cool
Welcome!
Thank you so much! It works
Still helping in June 2024
Great!
Brother never bother what people think because that's there loss🇬🇧👍🙏
True! But sometimes, when you just try to help...it gets to you...
I received a new battery but the phone is still not turning on. The last (-) pin with (+) shows 0v, other 2 (-) pins that are in middle shows 3.70v. Its normal?
I don't know for your particular batery model. You need to search on forums.
@@UltimateDIY I have the same as in the video. The battery has 4 pins. 3 (-) and 1 (+). When I check the last (-), which is closer to the side with (+) shows 0v and the other 2 (-) in middle with (+) shows 3.7v.
That is what I try to say. The fact that is has 4 pins does not mean it has the same configuration for them.
As long as you get 3.7V between 2 of them, then your battery has a good charge.
But without seing myself I can't give you any advice.
I jump started my cordless drill lithium battery, one cell🔋 at a time 🇬🇧
Good job! 👍🏼
Instead of using a computer as a power source for the jump start, can i use a regular wall outlet or maybe my laptop? I just dont have a computer tower.😊
You mean a regular phone charger, or a laptop usb port? Yes, you can.
Man, he is clearly very knowledgeable. I can't believe people thought his previous video was fake.
Sadly, it happens on most of my videos. Some people are unable to follow simple instructions, so they blame me for their fail.
You are doing just fine and remember that most people are stupid
Thanks 😁
Good video nice explanation. Excellent work keep it up.
Thank you!
this works! I just did it with a kindle paperwhite!! THANK YOU DUDE
Welcome!
he ant lie in its just like jump in ah car but wit ah phone battery life saver
👍🏻
"We are right here, above the red line"
Piston flies out
Hi, good video. I have a problem with the batteries on my wife's LumeaPercision Philips device (light epliator). The case there is that there are 2 separate batteries but they are connected in a pack. If I heard you correctly I have to charge each individually, right ?
Hi. Thank you. Yes, it's safer individually.
What cable did you use to boost the battery
Phones now don't allow to have access to the battery. My Motorola Moto G5S plus battery is dying. And I can't find an original battery. Probably, I'll have to use it permanently connected to a powerbank. What do you think ?
That is the sad reality. Phones are much harder to keep working for many years, even if the hardware is still good enough.
I would try to find an aftermarket battery that has good reviews.
@@UltimateDIY Yes, the hardware is still working very fine. Can play everything. I think the industry is forcing us to purchase a new phone every 2 years. I can't afford to do that nor it's necessary. My phones are always brand as new. I use to collect things, and I know how to preserve. I hate having to purchase the same thing twice. Instead, I would like to purchase another thing I need. The industry is a criminal.
100% agree with you!
my phone has not been on 7-8 possibly 10 years
Nice the best choice is to charge the battery in someone's phone
If the battery is too drained, another phone will not help.
Thanks I was thinking about to do this, but I didn't actually needed it because I had 2 phone batteries with like 2,8V.
And the battery logo didn't appear while charging. So I assumed that the batteries were dead.
But yeah they weren't 0,0V so charging it with the correct adapter did the trick for me.
It only took long though to get it to work which was at 3,8V.
Thanks for showing this I might use it in the future.
Lol atm 1 battery doesn't wanna charge any further at 3,2v and then it goes down to 3V via USB normal charging.
The other battery was actually at 3,8V and it turned on (but it crashed a lot of times due to water inside before), but I noticed I actually charged it with the wrong adapter which also was kinda identical to another phone of mine. That phone was useless to me anyways and I'm gonna throw that one away.
I've just charged the battery to 3,8V with doing your method with the original adapter instead of the PC, but it doesn't still charge after it. Every time if I charge it when the battery is into the phone the voltage will be lowered. On the battery itself there is 3,8V and also 4,35V but I assume that is the max. So idk what is wrong with it why it just won't charge after 3,8V. I've changed the USB cable and tried to charge it on the PC / original adapter.
I think the charging circuitry is your phone is defective.
Yes that must be it. Yesterday it was 3,8V and it went down to 3V. The battery was only into the phone. So I was thinking about to buy a new battery. Ty for saying this, because it probably will be the same if I bought a new battery.
Yup ☹️
Just tried this and it worked. Thanks
Great video but the yellow lines are almost invisible
Indeed, it was not a good color choice.
believe it or not i was very interested in watching the whole thing, even though I knew it would not help me since I have a Pixel 2 XL and no removable battery... I've always liked watching gadgetry.
Great job "showing everything". But maybe i can ask and you will know? My Pixel 2 will not accept a charge, i have tried every troubleshooting sequence including a factory reset. But even after that, and depleting battery of charge, then trying to charge again, I get the unhelpful battery charge icon, but even after several hours charging it still wont come on. I noticed that the screen was bulging...
Hi. That is a defective battery and needs replacing for sure.
I enjoyed the video greatly! I was browsing videos of how to replace the charge port (didn't have to do that thankfully), but liked the demonstration that you gave, would've liked to see the doggie (haha), I understood your graph, and it's been many years since engineering school for me, but it makes sense. Out of curiosity, what is/are your native languages? I'll browse some of your other videos, this one was worth the 20 minutes.
Hello. Thank you! My native language ia Romanian.
yep it worked although my phone dosent charge the battery by itself
It didn't work for me cause my phone battery can't come out
same
I know what your doing works. Ive done the same thing with cordless tool batteries and hit them for a couple of seconds, with a higher power source of course.
@Mohammed Kiani My Samsung Note Pro SMP-900 went into a short boot loop where the samsung logo would come up for 1 second then the tablet would go off. I couldnt get to any of the usual pages to do the download or the page where you can do the wipe of the cache. I tried everything I could find on the internet and nothing worked. Then I changed the good battery in my Samsung phone for an old one and trhat phone went into a boot loop right away. So the dead battery caused it to boot loop. When I put the newer battery back min it worked fine and booted up normally. So I ordered a new battery for the Note-Pro SMP-900 and I think it should boot up normally or at least take me to the screen that will allow me to correct the booting problem. I hope that helps and when I get the new battery I will let you know if it solved the problem.
Just to be clear my Samsung S4 phone works normally even tho it is old. I put the weak battery from another S4 phone into my Samsung S4 phone and it went into a boot loop. When I put the good battery that was in my S4 phone back in the phone it booted up normally SO A WEAK BATTERY THAT WONT HOLD A CHARGE WILL CAUSE THE PHONE TO BOOT LOOP. I am going to change the battery in the 12" Note Pro Tablet and see if that solves the issues of boot looping on that device.I will let you know. I should be here in the next couple of days. So look for my message very soon.
My Samsung Note Pro SM-P900 (2015) was totally bricked and it is now working fine with a new operating system. If you are still in need of help let me know and I will give you the info to get yours working again.
ruclips.net/video/1MdCdyax3do/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/Q0To5QRR950/видео.html
Go to these 2 websites The first one is the one I used to un-Brick my Tablet. It has a robotic voice talking but it is the best video I found and it works. If you have questions let me know. The second one tells you how to get the software and download the extraction program and the Odin program. Odin is actually in the tool bar of the extraction program. Its very important that you download the proper OS for your device. If you watch the videos carefully you can save your device. I did and mine was bricked pretty hard.
I also have an old Samsung battery, i jump charged it to 3.47V (i cannot go higher) but still the phone does not charge it unfortunately.
Could be a different problem...
Good video.
We need that tester device
Glad my video helped 👍🏼
cell charger is slow charge if you had Left it on charge long enough the battery would have charged up and cell would have come on without application of direct power to the battery.
Yes, but no. The problem is that the battery circuit deactivates the battery. Standard phones will not try to charge it anymore after it's deactivated. What you say is valid for an overdischarged battery, but not yet deactivated.
@@UltimateDIY Yep! I left my old phone on charge for over 24 hours and got nothing. Found this video and had it powered on before the video ended
Very smart tutorial. nice .
Yes it does work!! Great video
Great 👍🏻
Could this be done with an iPhone 7 battery? What would need to be done to get to the battery?
Sorry, but as far as I know iPhone batteries have small connectors, so it's close to impossible to do this.
Hi , do you think it will work on a iPhone without disconnecting the battery ?
I have no idea.
Interesting, I will try this. I just received three devices that were locked away
Hope you revive them :)
@@UltimateDIY Thanks for the inspiration. Would sending you a short Vid of the operation be possible?
You can upload to yt and send the link.
@@UltimateDIY ruclips.net/video/S45HxBDSzy8/видео.html
It should work as long as it gets 5V trough that usb cable.
sir i tried it on my samsung galaxy note gt n7000 and
it works but it is stuck on a battery logo that is loading and nothing happens
That is a software problem I think.
Genesis Archer Rivera try resetting it using holding the button to reset..at least you have power..just reset it
Wow man you explained that soo good
Thank you!
Thank You for your time & knowledge good tutorial buddy just found spare heavy duty USB cable to modify & will try on my old Laptop battery as guessing same actions will apply but take longer to get it to chargeable level
Sadly, this will not work on most laptop batteries. They have more complex electronics. I have tried a few timesc, but always failed.
@@UltimateDIY Thanks I know but mine is refurbished but he did-not charge the rechargeable cells 1by1 b4 installation which in another video I saw on YT while ago said he should have & secret is to now trickle charge it so I will use an battery box with leads own jumper leads takes aa aaa & C batteries + 6-12V In/Output & so failing that just remove all cells & charge them in my multi rechargeable battery - charging unit & reassemble later lot of work but laptop is immaculate & even has a remote control for watching movies on big screens via HDMI & not risk losing my new Notebook when away from home
Sadly I tried that too a few times and it did not work.
The problem is that most laptop electronics flag the battery as bad, even after a single cell goes once below the minimum safe voltage and even if you charge them individually, the electronics is still locked. You need to reflash the electronics.
But this depends a lot on battery manufacturer and model. You can try, maybe you are lucky, but be really, really, really careful with laptop cells, as they can cause a fire quite easily if you do anything wrong, even after you put it back together.