Stop Charging your Phone Overnight!

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024
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Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @KR7PT
    @KR7PT 6 лет назад +4308

    Just leave your phone off all the time and it'll last years.

    • @KaoticReap3r
      @KaoticReap3r 6 лет назад +25

      Nathan Locke thas a hassle

    • @nik0huelel
      @nik0huelel 6 лет назад +69

      @Omega Closeups, yeah because only charging it to 60% and discharging to 50% isn't :D at that point its just easier to not use it at all

    • @user-os8sq3uh4n
      @user-os8sq3uh4n 6 лет назад +31

      Just remember to charge it to about 60% (40-80%) before storing it.

    • @Joshuachicken
      @Joshuachicken 6 лет назад +63

      If you don't turn your phone on, it doesn't need a battery at all

    • @gregorymirabella1423
      @gregorymirabella1423 6 лет назад +14

      finally someone gets it

  • @nikolai60
    @nikolai60 5 лет назад +1311

    "what did you do at work today?"
    "Got stuffed into a car with the rest of my coworkers"

  • @g43654
    @g43654 5 лет назад +5138

    I don't think you should care about your phone's battery, care about your teeth instead. You have only one set of adult teeth and fixing just one dead tooth can cost more than an iPhone XR Max. You have been warned.

    • @post_low
      @post_low 5 лет назад +848

      Whats my dentist doing here

    • @huh2634
      @huh2634 5 лет назад +442

      thanks mom.....

    • @mehraneh1554
      @mehraneh1554 5 лет назад +290

      my dentist is stalking me

    • @pastamazingminecraft
      @pastamazingminecraft 5 лет назад +58

      g43654 it costs just 5$ here with pretty good service lol

    • @huh2634
      @huh2634 5 лет назад +57

      g43654 they did surgery on a grape

  • @josephperez8682
    @josephperez8682 4 года назад +863

    Imagine a wireless charger that knocks your phone off when it's at 100% lmao.

    • @xaifer2485
      @xaifer2485 4 года назад +84

      Oh wait it's at 100% JOHN YEET THE PHONE

    • @clydescrab0rg194
      @clydescrab0rg194 4 года назад +65

      Get Micheal Reeves on this immediately

    • @gblargg
      @gblargg 4 года назад +18

      You want it to knock it off *before* 100% (around 65% or so).

    • @googlegamer4047
      @googlegamer4047 4 года назад +5

      I bet you could write Tasker profile to do that

    • @gblargg
      @gblargg 4 года назад +9

      Apparently most phones and laptops *cannot* in software stop the charging; it's hardwired into the charging chip. A nifty universal solution would be a charger with a microphone and an app that plays a particular tone/sequence that tells the charger to turn off. Would work with any phone.

  • @guyman3361
    @guyman3361 5 лет назад +319

    1:42 I see Linus is a man of culture

    • @dipp9120
      @dipp9120 5 лет назад +14

      Indeed he is, who would've thought.

    • @c3.
      @c3. 4 года назад +49

      1:55 on his watch it says "LOLI"

    • @bukanmatin5973
      @bukanmatin5973 4 года назад +2

      Holy shit man, thanks for pointing that out!! I didn't noticed it cuz i'm watching youtube at my phone and didn't look at the phone properely cuz i'm doing something else simultaneously rn 😆

    • @Svre3009
      @Svre3009 4 года назад +7

      17:07 ....military time

    • @NetheriteMiner
      @NetheriteMiner 4 года назад

      @@Svre3009 the video's 7:18...how do you get 17:07?

  • @Yorenzo27
    @Yorenzo27 6 лет назад +3125

    Life’s too short to be worrying about a god damn battery life.

    • @abhishekdhoriyani2312
      @abhishekdhoriyani2312 6 лет назад +340

      Lorenzo Cordero give this man a battery

    • @Duragung
      @Duragung 5 лет назад +25

      @@jldude84 only if you are using an iphone

    • @a-10warthog51
      @a-10warthog51 5 лет назад +3

      @@jldude84 only if your using a iphone

    • @thr2648
      @thr2648 5 лет назад +1

      Makes sense

    • @ImranKhan19920
      @ImranKhan19920 5 лет назад +15

      Lorenzo Cordero why the fuck did you watch the video then?

  • @f0g868
    @f0g868 5 лет назад +327

    I clicked this video knowing it wouldn't change my mind

    • @Karmy.
      @Karmy. 4 года назад +3

      Same

    • @togbot3984
      @togbot3984 4 года назад +1

      69 likes nice

    • @Frosty2
      @Frosty2 4 года назад +3

      i was gonna like it but it’s at 69 likes nice

    • @Dankdalorde
      @Dankdalorde 4 года назад +2

      I’m still confused and forgot what to do

    • @haseenabadshah5381
      @haseenabadshah5381 4 года назад

      169 likes lmao

  • @echofunandgames7874
    @echofunandgames7874 5 лет назад +821

    The phone should automatically stop charging at full battery and start charging again when it's replugged.

    • @darkvader125
      @darkvader125 5 лет назад +28

      Exactly the point is

    • @ajaiiix2978
      @ajaiiix2978 5 лет назад +216

      The god damn nintendo 3ds does this. Why cant modern smart phones

    • @maselitoamazigh1385
      @maselitoamazigh1385 5 лет назад +124

      basically they want you to damage your phone to buy replacement or smth

    • @darkvader125
      @darkvader125 5 лет назад +5

      @@maselitoamazigh1385 that's not true

    • @maselitoamazigh1385
      @maselitoamazigh1385 5 лет назад +67

      if we think about solution there are even better ones
      like setting a time for phone to be ready
      example of an option that should be available:
      i plug my phone at 00:30 and set the phone to be ready at 8:00
      the phone knows that he just needs 1 hour to fully charge se it dont start charging until 7:00 so at 8:00 it would be ready and fully charged and then there should be another option that it would stop charging like its unpluged
      and the third option is to set a timer or a porcentage to begin the charging again . example : i didnt uplug my phone at 8:00 when it was ready the phone started discharging because of the second option but i set it to begin to charge again if discharges to 75%
      that mean you would never find your phone dead but still 99% of the time you wont hurt the battery ...

  • @PopStrikers
    @PopStrikers 6 лет назад +2561

    If I stay between 25-80%, I'm only getting 55% of my battery capacity, which is the equivalent of massive battery health degradation done on purpose from day one, so I don't really see the point.

    • @sam23696
      @sam23696 6 лет назад +322

      This. I have never had a phone or device battery die on me, including devices I have left charging over night or even hooked up for months in a static location. Sure, there will be a loss in capacity over a period of years of use. But the screen also has some scratches, and the ports have wear and tear. Things just age with use.
      Easily the biggest factor that makes the phone's age apparent is software updates. As better software is released it utilizes more and more flash memory for primary storage, and the CPU spends more time hanging at 100%, which in turn drains the battery faster. The battery and hardware degradation is negligible compared to that.

    • @JulianUccetta
      @JulianUccetta 6 лет назад +73

      Sam same, except laptops. I've had plenty of laptop batteries die on me, but that's usually after years and years of use and abuse. Never had a phone battery die.

    • @Skelath
      @Skelath 6 лет назад +28

      Or how about flaslights from Imalent and Nitecore that can drain 8 3400mAh batteries in as little as one hour and charge all 8 of those batteries (3400mAh 'each') in less than 3 hours (via built in charger inside the torch) with a life span of 500 total complete 0% to 100% charges before the health of the batteries start to slowly decline, and then there is the fact that using an Imalent DX80 at max 32,000 lumens burns your hand if you hold it in the light and sets fire to news paper in less than 3 seconds and the batteries are in the same body and 3 centermetres away from the LEDs which go up to 90 degrees celsius.
      All inside 4mm+ thick aluminum housing.
      Cellphone batteries declining from heat by charging? What a joke, overcharging prevents those batteries from reaching 100%, when you see 100% on your phones is that the MAXIMUM capacity of your battery? No.
      People take said rechargable batteries and use specific charges that allow for overcharging which let's them put more juice into the battery.
      A cellphone battery is in no way at any point of its life time "100% charged to its maximum capacity".

    • @Kabbone
      @Kabbone 6 лет назад +40

      It's more about keeping the battery healthy, so if you know you will need a lot of power you can still use full capacity ocassionally. The bigger problem is, that nowaday phones don't even last longer than one day, except for example Moto Z Play, which can last for 3-4 days.

    • @Skelath
      @Skelath 6 лет назад +84

      Kabbone
      A cellphone battery is in no way at any point of its life time "100% charged to its maximum capacity".
      That is why the term "overcharge" protection exists.
      This video is based on no credible facts whatsoever.
      When you see 100% in the phone the battery is actually around 85% to 90%.

  • @hawkeye2816
    @hawkeye2816 6 лет назад +465

    Hi, Electrical Engineer here. You can't charge a battery on a voltage it doesn't discharge, it doesn't work that way. Batteries only accept the voltage they discharge. Stepping down a voltage, as you would from the wall power, steps up the current proportionately, since it has to follow Ohm's Law. From the wall, power is usually stepped down to 5V, which is the USB voltage rating. By stepping the voltage down by a factor of 24 (in the US), you are stepping up the current by a factor of 24, which is something no charging cable could handle so current is then limited to something reasonable like 2A. However, in the phone it must be stepped back up to the discharge voltage of the battery. In my S7, that voltage is (drum roll) 9V. By stepping the voltage back up by a factor of 1.8, you reduce the current by a factor of 1.8, leaving you with a charging current of 1.11A. By giving the phone a voltage that is already something the battery can accept, you can charge it without reducing current significantly. A fast charger for my S7 would supply 9V at 1.8A, and the difference in current results in faster charging.
    Additionally, phones have had a little feature for literally years now that actually prevents reaching a 100% charge for any protracted length of time. If such a battery level is reached, the phone begins discharging, even while plugged in, to reduce the charge level to something closer to a safe level. Further in the favor of the battery, modern batteries, last I checked, have safe charge/discharge levels between about 90% and 20%, with the ideal level for long-term storage being around 50%. I wouldn't quote me on those numbers, though.
    Furthermore, the only batteries I would expect to be damaged from heat are cheap ones found on some Chinese section of Amazon or in an Apple phone. The heat is not caused directly by current flowing through the battery, but rather by the chemical reaction within the battery itself. Lithium-based batteries operate off of a chemical reaction that creates an ion drift from one pole to the other, and this reaction generates gas and heat. Coincidentally, this reaction becomes significantly more efficient at higher temperatures, but can be limited by limiting current. Modern phones have such current limiting capabilities, and good quality batteries are sturdy enough to withstand the heat generated by normal charging and discharging. Again, the only batteries I would worry about are cheap ones, and those can be deadly dangerous since lithium is one of the most reactive elements on the table.

    • @reinbeers5322
      @reinbeers5322 6 лет назад +47

      hawkeye2816 So Apple batteries are low quality? Not a salty apple fanboy asking, just a curious viewer.

    • @hawkeye2816
      @hawkeye2816 6 лет назад +40

      It was just a dig at the expanding batteries a few years ago. Same sort of thing as the exploding batteries Samsung had for a while, but I don't think Apple did a recall. Could be wrong, though.

    • @reinbeers5322
      @reinbeers5322 6 лет назад +16

      hawkeye2816 They blamed it on the consumer when some iPhone 7s "turned up the heat".

    • @Arheisel
      @Arheisel 6 лет назад +10

      Not to mention that almost any modern Li-Ion battery has a built in chip that will protect it against over-current and over-voltage (and I think some of them even have temperature cut-off), even if you take it out from the phone and connect it directly to a cheap battery charger (which I wouldn't do btw)

    • @extremepillows
      @extremepillows 6 лет назад +4

      tl;dr. someone?

  • @FatMan2539
    @FatMan2539 5 лет назад +1464

    "non-replaceable" **laughs in Galaxy S5**

    • @SuperDamiano1997
      @SuperDamiano1997 5 лет назад +194

      Laughs in cheap-ass plastic phone*

    • @FrostyFoxGamingIGM
      @FrostyFoxGamingIGM 5 лет назад +269

      @@SuperDamiano1997 this cheap ass plastic phone is the most durable shit you could ever afford

    • @JamesV1
      @JamesV1 5 лет назад +80

      @@FrostyFoxGamingIGM Also it's struggling to run modern apps/OS and has 4 year old hardware, lol

    • @FBIIlIlIlIIlIl
      @FBIIlIlIlIIlIl 5 лет назад +12

      Cries in any other smartphone that doesn't have plastic body

    • @minbcraft
      @minbcraft 5 лет назад +15

      Well hey at least it have a replacable battery
      I would prefer to use a note 4 if I wanted replacable batteries in my phone tho

  • @arastiacreations594
    @arastiacreations594 4 года назад +68

    "Non-replaceable battery"
    Me with my Galaxy J3 Prime 2017: Sorry, is this sort of rich joke that I'm too peasant to understand?

    • @Frosty2
      @Frosty2 4 года назад +1

      oh god bless your kind soul

    • @Temzy
      @Temzy 4 года назад

      Horrible Histories reference 😂

    • @Dankdalorde
      @Dankdalorde 4 года назад

      Sheesh update your phone!

    • @jamestor6700
      @jamestor6700 4 года назад

      some of the "non-removable batteries" literally just have a metal plate over them

    • @mynamesnotimportant6941
      @mynamesnotimportant6941 4 года назад

      I mean hey, that's newer than what I got

  • @CKTDanny
    @CKTDanny 6 лет назад +3507

    I wish we didn't move away from easily user replaceable batteries

    • @jplowe7556
      @jplowe7556 6 лет назад +86

      SDG Danny samsung didnt apple did

    • @SinisterRubberDuckie
      @SinisterRubberDuckie 6 лет назад +317

      JP Lowe cant replace the batteries in newer samsungs easily like the older models

    • @JohnPaul-nb5iu
      @JohnPaul-nb5iu 6 лет назад +319

      JP Lowe why do people use apple products?
      I just don't understand.
      They made a phone without an earphone jack, and changed there charger type like 5 times, yet people keep going back.

    • @jacksondrake8178
      @jacksondrake8178 6 лет назад +169

      John Paul they changed the charger once...

    • @techmaniac69
      @techmaniac69 6 лет назад +59

      chillin with my LG G5

  • @nikobreun
    @nikobreun 6 лет назад +1434

    Or buy a Nokia 3310, charge it one time and never again.

    • @lextatertotsfromhell7673
      @lextatertotsfromhell7673 5 лет назад +48

      NOTE 7 IS BETTER, AND YOU ONLY CAN CHARGE IT ONCE

    • @Amiaaaaaaaaa
      @Amiaaaaaaaaa 5 лет назад +12

      Joseph Catanzarit I think you were misinformed over the years about the Note 7 incident. What happened was when Samsung rolled out an update for the Note 7, then shit started to get out of hand. Batteries swelled, heat generated, and then combustion and explosions. Which means if you didn’t update your Note 7, and manage to block automatic updates from happening, you can still use your Note 7 like a normal phone.

    • @alamcho
      @alamcho 5 лет назад +8

      My old nokia 1100 battery used to last like 2 weeks charged

    • @ch.illmatic
      @ch.illmatic 5 лет назад +9

      Or buy a brick, no charger needed😂

    • @Justin9503238275
      @Justin9503238275 5 лет назад +4

      Which phone comes in every fone topic?..just for fun!. Yeah u named it!

  • @mwbgaming28
    @mwbgaming28 4 года назад +136

    It's bad enough that I can't even get a full days usage out of my battery, now you want me to only use half of its capacity?

    • @Karmy.
      @Karmy. 4 года назад +4

      Ikr

    • @fire3769
      @fire3769 4 года назад +2

      MWB Gaming bruh i saw your comment on * 28 days later vid roasting some muslims 🔥🔥🔥

    • @mwbgaming28
      @mwbgaming28 4 года назад +2

      @@fire3769 I aim to please

    • @mirage_panzer2274
      @mirage_panzer2274 4 года назад +1

      he didnt ordered you to do so, the choice is yours either using it half or not.

    • @mirage_panzer2274
      @mirage_panzer2274 4 года назад

      @Sushant M 1:40 how about Linus? he kept that anime girl pillow 😌

  • @rezidentseagull5651
    @rezidentseagull5651 5 лет назад +8

    Just as a heads up, I personally use AccuBattery on a non-root S7. It doesn't hard cut the power, but it does come with a configurable battery percentage limit and an alarm notification when you've charged up to the limit. If you pair that with not charging your phone at night, it works pretty painlessly. Plus, it has a decent "battery wear" metric, so you can get a decent approximation of how much wear you've put your battery through historically, as well as about how much wear you induce per charge session (charging past ~60-70% seems to dramatically increase the wear on the battery)

  • @robertf9063
    @robertf9063 6 лет назад +478

    Speaking of premature death, Tunnelbear

    • @burningglory2373
      @burningglory2373 6 лет назад +15

      And now for a dead meme

    • @zerounit87
      @zerounit87 6 лет назад +12

      Good because TunnelBear sucks

    • @zerounit87
      @zerounit87 6 лет назад +14

      soundspark No... It's not a good vpn and the security for it sucks

    • @VicInCommentSection
      @VicInCommentSection 6 лет назад +7

      PIA, which is the new VPN sponsor of Linus Tech Tips, is excellent. It's the best I've ever used and much better than what I most recently used, TorGuard.

    • @sanguineel
      @sanguineel 6 лет назад

      Victor L have you use ExpressVPN? How do they compare?

  • @maoraharon21
    @maoraharon21 6 лет назад +844

    TL;DW Don't use your phone

    • @cloudninja8748
      @cloudninja8748 5 лет назад +3

      Maor Aharon *TL;DR
      FTFY

    • @maoraharon21
      @maoraharon21 5 лет назад +47

      @@cloudninja8748 TL;DW Is a thing

    • @samhughes711
      @samhughes711 5 лет назад +1

      @@maoraharon21 what does TLDW mean then

    • @mr_maniacz74
      @mr_maniacz74 5 лет назад +68

      @@samhughes711 too long didn't watch. Tell me sir, how are you going to read a video?

    • @Keykey70
      @Keykey70 5 лет назад +15

      Subtitles

  • @Renuclous
    @Renuclous 4 года назад +100

    So basically you want to optimize your batterylife by turning your device into a wired device on and off most of the day? That kinda defeats the purpose of a battery, doesn't it?

    • @thesage1096
      @thesage1096 3 года назад +8

      only when it convenient and when you do need a long life battery ie a long work day or a weekend out then u can give it the 100. thats the point of it. preserve the battery when you need it to last

    • @thesage1096
      @thesage1096 3 года назад

      common people.

  • @MeepMeep88
    @MeepMeep88 6 лет назад +343

    So our smart phone isn't smart enough to stop charging at a certain percentage? Greeeeeat

    • @nowonmetube
      @nowonmetube 5 лет назад +18

      Not true

    • @donaldbaird7849
      @donaldbaird7849 5 лет назад +16

      It is smart enough, he says this in the video

    • @Dralyn06
      @Dralyn06 5 лет назад +19

      This is the best comment by far. Especially since the profile pic is trump

    • @jamesbacon300
      @jamesbacon300 5 лет назад +37

      When a battery reaches 100, it trickle charges to stay at 100....that's like eating till you're full and then continuing to casually nom random snacks to remain full.

    • @Juz032
      @Juz032 4 года назад +1

      How is it supposed to be the phone to stop charging? Is there a charger doing it? Back to physics class... chargers should get smarter, get info from phone to stop at 95%. A programmable charger would be the best.

  • @swisstraeng
    @swisstraeng 6 лет назад +473

    first of all : when an OS says the battery is at 100%, it is never FULL.
    Second : The battery has protection circuits, which will anyway limit the battery charge to not make it vent out.
    third : the worst with lithium batteries is to keep it discharged.
    4th, lithium DO dislike being fully charged, but there is NO WAY to know if your battery is really fully charged when your phone says so.
    5th : What lithium batteries hate the most is heat. Which is why I highly recommend avoiding gaming on modern phones, while they can do it, they heat up which in the long term will reduce the battery's life.
    The worse thing to do is to charge the phone WHILE playing, as it gets even hotter. But keep in mind it will not kill the battery directly...
    6th your battery WILL get used. Deal with it. No magic tricks exist to make it last forever, and honnestly, if you're having battery problems, try disactivating bluetooth, wifi, anything you can if you don't use your phone. Also screen brightness changes things a lot.

    • @nikkopt
      @nikkopt 6 лет назад +47

      traeng finally someone who understands something

    • @maxfisch1950
      @maxfisch1950 6 лет назад +30

      5th: your phone will start running off the wall once the battery is "fully" charged, so it's not really a problem. Like you said, it vents. Also, it doesn't move ions, but electrons. That really bugged me.

    • @Chronophylos
      @Chronophylos 6 лет назад +5

      yeah i was wondering where the ions suddenly came from

    • @vnyggi621
      @vnyggi621 6 лет назад

      Admiral Chronophylos maybe inside the battery? That Lithium or something else, dunno

    • @wolf0491
      @wolf0491 6 лет назад +2

      play the shit out games on my phone lol. I've played from 5% charging all the way to 90. Whatevs I'll buy a new phone in 2 years be all good. So far I haven't ntoiced much reduction in battery life form 1 year.

  • @samic
    @samic 6 лет назад +124

    The truth is Lithium ion battery degrades just by existing.

    • @TOO2150
      @TOO2150 6 лет назад +9

      Sad but true. That's why you have to maintain stored batteries so they don't self discharge completely and kill themselves.

    • @ganzeige
      @ganzeige 6 лет назад +23

      This all sounds like lithium batteries are really depressed in some way...

  • @MeldinX2
    @MeldinX2 4 года назад +10

    I usually charge my phone BEFORE going to bed. And that works pretty well. I mean the phone wont lose that much charge when not in use when sleeping anyway. It's usually between 95-85% left when i leave for work in the morning.

  • @finnianbuckley1675
    @finnianbuckley1675 4 года назад +8

    1:09 Me looking at my average after studying for three hours.

  • @TheHeroofCourage
    @TheHeroofCourage 6 лет назад +50

    Keep this in mind, though. Over 2 years by charging up to 100% and then back down without worrying, you'll lose on average about 20% - so your battery health will be ~80%, but usually better. By only charging 60-80% to keep its health... you're essentially sitting at how much charge you'd have lost over the years anyway. It's not too much of a worry at all.

  • @Southmuzik81
    @Southmuzik81 6 лет назад +1440

    Nah man. I need my phone at 100% before I go to work lol

    • @kamildouglas
      @kamildouglas 6 лет назад +28

      COD4LIFE same here

    • @krowwithakay
      @krowwithakay 6 лет назад +10

      Same

    • @toncizizic
      @toncizizic 6 лет назад +75

      i charge is before bed and turn on airplane mode when i go to sleep, in the morning its on 97% try it

    • @TheFinalMaelstrom
      @TheFinalMaelstrom 6 лет назад +6

      get an external battery

    • @valy1244
      @valy1244 6 лет назад +3

      Or school😂

  • @cetler123
    @cetler123 5 лет назад +83

    Batteries don't "sit at 100%" Linus. When your phone says 100% when plugged it's actually cycling between roughly 90 to 100% full for this exact reason.

    • @SKYELOVER
      @SKYELOVER 5 лет назад +6

      My indicator on my battery is completely wrong cause did what this jerk said and now when I unplug battery says 1% plug in and says 100% so yeh I can't risk my phone going dead

    • @minhkhoinguyen88
      @minhkhoinguyen88 4 года назад +4

      Chris Etler totally right, actually we can charge any phone for double the power , but then the battery can only last for 1 week, so the manufacturer kind of using just half of the battery, so when your phone say 100%, its just half of the real battery inside

    • @pravda9646
      @pravda9646 4 года назад

      @@SKYELOVER how is that his fault

    • @SKYELOVER
      @SKYELOVER 4 года назад

      @@pravda9646 because he lieeee

    • @pravda9646
      @pravda9646 4 года назад +1

      @@SKYELOVER cause your battery indicator is wrong

  • @gohan2642
    @gohan2642 4 года назад +21

    Linus: You shouldn't charge your phone!
    Me: No, I replace the batteries when it runs out.

  • @curious_elephant
    @curious_elephant 6 лет назад +641

    how am i supposed to have a charged phone for the day without charging overnight? wake up at 3am to take it off the charge pad?

    • @CutoutClips
      @CutoutClips 6 лет назад +104

      You could make a little robot arm do it for you and put it on a timer

    • @mynamesaretakenwtf
      @mynamesaretakenwtf 6 лет назад +61

      Or wake up at 3 to charge, that way you get 100% when you wake up

    • @dedoyxp
      @dedoyxp 6 лет назад +13

      plug in on night and plug it out when u want to sleep... then continue charging when u wake up
      I got 80-90% battery by doing that or you could just wake up earlier about 30 minute to get ur phone 50% charged

    • @Patorino
      @Patorino 6 лет назад +36

      I like how your picture compliments your comment

    • @Furchee
      @Furchee 6 лет назад +1

      Outlet timer plebian

  • @AceNallawar
    @AceNallawar 6 лет назад +308

    Ions are huge, dude. You cannot transport ions through a wire, unless it's a salt bridge.
    Electrons get transferred.

    • @Dieze
      @Dieze 6 лет назад +14

      always ace i doubt he was trying to say the battery gets filled up from the wall
      ions get transferred as he said, just inside the battery

    • @Bobbelebob
      @Bobbelebob 6 лет назад +7

      Laurie O they are not, ions are atoms that have more or less electrons than their uncharged atom depending on if they're positively or negatively charged ones.

    • @Minib34ts
      @Minib34ts 6 лет назад +2

      transport does not = transferred when talking about atomic transfer

    • @faizanahmed5368
      @faizanahmed5368 6 лет назад +1

      Battery has salt bridge

    • @Gungus-v1g
      @Gungus-v1g 6 лет назад

      Schleck re Still massive compared to electrons

  • @ethanmcintyre7148
    @ethanmcintyre7148 5 лет назад +93

    what’s the point of having good battery health if you never use it all

    • @minhkhoinguyen88
      @minhkhoinguyen88 4 года назад +3

      Ethan McIntyre you win the internet today sir

    • @andremartinez418
      @andremartinez418 4 года назад +7

      Because on the rare day that you might need your phone for an extended amount of time you can have it.

    • @sansfreedom1629
      @sansfreedom1629 4 года назад +1

      @@andremartinez418 But I've been straight up abusing my Note 8 battery for 2 years and it's still fantastic. I dont think all the worry is worth it

    • @tiortedrootsky
      @tiortedrootsky 3 года назад

      Some people dont use their phones that much as they have computers. But they really need phones for just a little when they are away.
      My 2016 xiaomi redmi 3s was discharging from 80% to 40% in 48 hours for a long time. Now it holds it for about 36 hours.
      So the point is not wasting money on new phones (as quality of replacement batteries is disgusting).
      What would be absolute perfection is making the phone work on external standard batteries.

  • @irly15
    @irly15 4 года назад +17

    1:42 I have a new found respect for you Linus

  • @ashwinmohan4503
    @ashwinmohan4503 6 лет назад +25

    TLDR, dont worry about it!! Continue charging overnight. A discharged battery will definitely ruin your phone, but a fully charged battery will only discharge a small bit of electricity and get ruined after 4 or 5 years (which is the lifespan of normal batteries). Check RC lipo battery experiments. Keeping batteries fully charged and unused does NOT ruin them. U might get a month or 2 extra life at the end of its life, but the device would have been outdated by then anyways. Only real answer is to buy replacement battery when it dies.

    • @Nighterlev
      @Nighterlev 6 лет назад

      +Ashwin Mohan
      Wrong. It's actually better to keep your battery around the 40-80% mark in terms of charge for your battery to last the longest and for the longest possible charge in those long term scenario's where having it at 100% constantly made it only last 1-2 years, while having it at 40-80% could've made it last all the way to 6 years.
      Like Linus said, if you're the type of guy who switches phones every 2 years, don't worry about it, and whoever you sell the phone to on Ebay it'll be his problem, not yours.

    • @ashwinmohan4503
      @ashwinmohan4503 6 лет назад

      Nighterlev u are WRONG. Might have been true when lipo was just coming out. These days, the difference is like an extra 2 months of battery life after 5 years. Like Ashwin said, don't worry too much about it. Main thing is to avoid draining Ur battery too low. Keeping it topped up is actually fine.i have done RC planes and drones for 12 years. Keep all my batteries fully charged and they last 4 to 5 years. a battery built to last 2 years will last 2 years wether u charge to 80 or 100 percent.

    • @Nighterlev
      @Nighterlev 6 лет назад

      +Ashwin Mohan
      LOL WHAT Did you not pay attention to what Linus himself said? You can increase your phone's battery longevity by YEARS by doing this simple trick. All phone batteries are the same, the only difference is there capacities (3500mah vs 5500mah etc).
      As I already stated, in the short term, you won't have nearly as long of a battery life vs keeping it at 100% all the time, but in the long term, having only 80% battery and having it last over 1-2 days vs your other phone you kepted at 100% all the time only last maybe 12-24 hours.. It's a huge difference altogether.
      A battery built to last (aka batteries that cost over $200 on there own, hence why RC planes and such tend to cost pretty top dollar for the quality one's like you mentioned) are just fine keeping it at 100% all the time even if you can actually make it's battery life last far longer doing the same trick, but no one really cares when you could just make it last 5 years at 100% all the time and still have the same life span. You're literally comparing top dollar batteries built to last and are pretty heavy on there own vs cheap relatively light weight, heat inducing lithium batteries that manufactures like Apple or Samsung put in there phone's to save like $400-500 in profit.
      I also don't think you realize, but phone batteries in particular when kepted at 100% all the time, will only last you like 3-4 months before you start noticing problems if you're the type of guy who kepted it at 100% all the time. You can increase said phone battery's longevity by YEARS by literally doing this simple trick.

  • @AliusSave
    @AliusSave 6 лет назад +209

    That's why I still have my LG V20 as my daily driver. Easily swap batteries whenever. Zero down time (except when swapping batteries). I wish LG made a upgraded version of the V20.

    • @Propainus
      @Propainus 6 лет назад +17

      The LG V30?

    • @akshaydsilva3646
      @akshaydsilva3646 6 лет назад +2

      Even I use a V20, but then still it won't even last a day

    • @akshaydsilva3646
      @akshaydsilva3646 6 лет назад +4

      And by the way, does your phone powers off when it's between 15%-5%? Cuz mine just powers off all of a sudden.

    • @fhesseti7976
      @fhesseti7976 6 лет назад +6

      PandaGD no as it doesn't have a removable battery ir blaster or as durable

    • @krowwithakay
      @krowwithakay 6 лет назад +1

      They did, the LG v30

  • @sharp252
    @sharp252 5 лет назад +7

    Linus: Are you looking for an affordable and easy to access VPN? (Not sure if that's exactly what he said)
    Me: No. Skips ahead 20 seconds

    • @bluesailormercury
      @bluesailormercury 5 лет назад

      You missed his eyebrows clicking like a mouse then

  • @BradTech.
    @BradTech. 5 лет назад +7

    "as well as Xperia™ phones!" gotta love their builtin batterycare and 4k displays

  • @xlion
    @xlion 6 лет назад +438

    When my phone battery isn't full,I felt unconfortable

  • @andrewn327
    @andrewn327 6 лет назад +211

    Lol, Anker has tons of faith in their product, so of course they sent it to you.

    • @WelshDdraig
      @WelshDdraig 6 лет назад +64

      You can't really go wrong with Anker - all the products I've used from them have the build quality of tanks
      "Which leads me on to today's sponsor - World of Tanks" - I jest.

    • @andrewn327
      @andrewn327 6 лет назад +3

      #sponsor

    • @TruckerGuy135
      @TruckerGuy135 6 лет назад

      Alexp10v2 except for the included cables

    • @andrewn327
      @andrewn327 6 лет назад +1

      Nah, those are good too.

    • @WelshDdraig
      @WelshDdraig 6 лет назад

      TBH - I've never trust included cables with anything (unless pre-attached), so I can't say anything in that department.

  • @afelias
    @afelias 5 лет назад +4

    1) The rechargable batteries you had when you were a kid and the ones we have now are entirely different. Ni-Cd and similar batteries at the time had a memory effect. Today's Li-ion batteries do not have that, yes. But what you were told as a kid was true back then, to a certain degree.
    2) If you have to worry about overcharging then that means that the protection circuit in your battery is faulty. It's supposed to prevent you from reaching a point where you can damage the battery just by charging. "100%" is an arbitrary value placed at where it should still be safe to charge. Just think about it; why would anyone design a battery to fail under normal circumstances? That would easily be noticeable in the hands of users and they would complain about consistently bad batteries.

  • @brurpo
    @brurpo 5 лет назад +3

    Hey, Sony phones have the option to prevent full charges and increase the battery lifespan.
    They also have an analizer for the charging habbits that will Control the charging rate, so It will only finish charging by the time you disconnect. They also have another feature that analizes your battery's health and adjusts the charging current acordingly.
    My old z5 already had those features.

  • @Jinzo9988
    @Jinzo9988 6 лет назад +13

    I can't imagine a life that cares that much about the battery health of their phone and constantly babysitting it to get the most longevity out of it.

    • @rifdifirebolt
      @rifdifirebolt 6 лет назад

      Jinzo9988 I am that guy.

    • @jakecole7447
      @jakecole7447 6 лет назад +1

      "constantly babysitting" more like "Take the charging cable off before sleep, and plugs back in when waking up"

  • @JehanKateli
    @JehanKateli 6 лет назад +1049

    I've been charging my OnePlus One overnight every day for 3 years with no noticeable loss of battery life.

    • @tangerinetech5300
      @tangerinetech5300 6 лет назад +27

      Jehan Kateli shhhhhhhh

    • @TheAdamAdy
      @TheAdamAdy 6 лет назад +335

      Jehan Kateli Oh you would notice if you compared to new battery.

    • @silvrcel
      @silvrcel 6 лет назад +82

      I've got a oneplus one that had 8-9hrs screen on when new. Now it is only able to do 5hrs screen on.

    • @TheAdamAdy
      @TheAdamAdy 6 лет назад +34

      darkfire2022 5h is still pretty awesome, my 3 months old S7 does around 3.5-4h and thats still good. Some people get 2h. What oneplus model is it?

    • @silvrcel
      @silvrcel 6 лет назад +7

      Adam Vulture - I actually usually have my mobile network off since I'm usually at a place with WiFi. If I had my mobile network on, I would get like 3hrs screen on. I have the oneplus one model which is more than 3 years old

  • @VoxelMusic
    @VoxelMusic 4 года назад +6

    1:42
    "Its gonna be lit"

  • @MrDaniyalAh
    @MrDaniyalAh 5 лет назад +201

    The most disappointing video from Linus so far. As an expert in electronics and batteries especially, this capacity and battery health loss you talk about that happens from charging to 100% is extremely minimal. There is a negligible difference and a very big hassle to try and keep your battery between a certain range. A very good example is my sisters Galaxy Grand 2 ( I know it's old) which was charged over night for the past 5 years and according to my battery capacity tester, it still has it's 80% of its original capacity. I call that a win win.

    • @B0MC3R
      @B0MC3R 5 лет назад +2

      Hi, how do you test the battery capacity of a phone like the Samsung Galaxy s7 edge?

    • @Kyo-uz1zi
      @Kyo-uz1zi 5 лет назад +3

      @@B0MC3R accubattery pro. Thank me later

    • @chrismawson4430
      @chrismawson4430 5 лет назад +12

      Daniyal Ahmed Coming from a lot of experience in the FPV Racing community this video was kind of a let down for me as well. Granted, I use exclusively LiPo batteries with my gear but the premise is the same. Lithium batteries don’t degrade in any significant way from being charged to 100% and kept there for one night. You could keep it at capacity for a few days without any notable loss of its discharge capability. You only lose capacity (really just increasing the internal resistance) by holding it at full charge on the order of a couple weeks or more OR concurrently charging and discharging the battery.

    • @peterg880
      @peterg880 5 лет назад +1

      @@chrismawson4430 so you're saying that with new Lithium batteries, it is more prudent to charge and forget than charge and use...like I currently am?

    • @chrismawson4430
      @chrismawson4430 5 лет назад +8

      @@peterg880 Charging and discharging (using) a battery at the same time puts alot of strain on it. The way chargers work is that they'll pump the max current the battery can handle into the battery up til it's about 75% charged, and then it will slow down and trickle it up to 100%. When you're charging and discharging at the same time it will stay in that max current state for much longer, and there is alot of heat buildup that will further contribute to the decay of the battery cell. BUT, with that said, LiPo batteries are capable of MASSIVE energy discharge relative to other battery types, and can handle alot of abuse. So it basically doesn't matter in the very low power use (relative to the battery's capability) in phones.

  • @Blu3ManiC
    @Blu3ManiC 6 лет назад +26

    Your rechargeable discman and gamegear batteries weren’t lithium ion back in those days, NimH and Ni-Cd batteries didn’t have the ability to remember their charge, so if you didn’t charge them fully and then discharge them fully they lost the ability to remember capacity charge.
    Modern Lithium ion batteries don’t have this problem, and will always charge to capacity even if you use them without a full charge, but they WILL eventually die from charge cycles.
    What you were told as a kid was actually true about your batteries.

    • @alexatkin
      @alexatkin 6 лет назад +1

      Blu3ManiC Actually NiCD would physically damage from charging when not empty and NiMH it's more that chargers are pretty dumb. Get a good intelligent charger and you don't need to do full charges for NiMH. In fact cordless phones rely on that.

    • @Blu3ManiC
      @Blu3ManiC 6 лет назад

      Alex Atkin there wasn’t such a thing as “intelligent” chargers back then, I’m talking about what he said in the intro, that as a kid he was told to only fully discharge then fully charge or the batteries would stop remembering their charge. Which was true at the time.

    • @NameHierEinfuegen
      @NameHierEinfuegen 6 лет назад

      Well I had several intelligent chargers while growing up ... with NiCd they would discharge completely and then start charging, when full they would just keep if from discharging. And for NiMH they would not discharge before charging (NiMH will take damage when fully discharged) and up the power to increase charge speed.
      For both types you would want to get them as low as possible (for NiMH without fully discharging) to fully utilize the limited ammount of cycles. Lithum batteries are way more forgiving in that regard... as long as you stay in the optimal zone it does not matter if you charge 4 x 10% or 40% at once.
      NiCd batteries are amazing for low powered stuff you seldomly use. Even fully discharged you can store them for years without killing them or loosing max charge.

  • @achman2621
    @achman2621 6 лет назад +152

    I had always thought batteries of today have been intelligently manufactured especially "Lithium batteries" such that it ceases to allow excess voltage when it reaches the threshold of the voltage it needs. I have been charging my phone overnight and I must say that I have not experienced any issue of battery degradation whatsoever.

    • @taz874
      @taz874 5 лет назад +25

      What i know is when your phone is fully charged it starts to trickle charge basically like having little snacks to stay full. And your battery would have degraded over time every battery will degrade no matter what. Just depends on how much it degrades to see if its rather noticeable. Your battery probably hasn't degraded all that much hence why you haven't noticed it

    • @dbro3440
      @dbro3440 5 лет назад +5

      It takes current not voltage to charge it. The voltage is the pressure applied to the current to get it down the cable and into your battery 😁

  • @shane_gentle
    @shane_gentle 5 лет назад +2

    When you're at school and see an ad for a VPN

  • @bananastasia_ana
    @bananastasia_ana 4 года назад +17

    "As long as you have enough battery to get through this sponsor" convinced me to check my battery percentage and im at 3% with an iphone.

    • @Raulxz
      @Raulxz 4 года назад +1

      Why did you have to specify that it’s an Iphone? Nobody cares about what phone you have

    • @pewnice92
      @pewnice92 4 года назад +1

      @@Raulxz iphones usually has smaller batteries

    • @fatchipmunklove
      @fatchipmunklove 3 года назад +1

      @@Raulxz is it because you don’t have one?

  • @polycarbonate
    @polycarbonate 6 лет назад +123

    So charging the battery is bad. Discharging the battery is bad. Keeping the battery at 100% is bad. Moral of the story, batteries are bad. I’ll invent another form of providing an electronic device with electrons. #fundshiloh

    • @diegosanchez894
      @diegosanchez894 6 лет назад

      Shiloh A GRAPHENE SUPERCAPACITORS!

    • @iAmTheSquidThing
      @iAmTheSquidThing 6 лет назад

      Really long wires?

    • @ponyslavestation2973
      @ponyslavestation2973 6 лет назад +3

      Elon Musk, where the blyat u at? Sending cars to space!? we dont need that shit! Make us new baterries, blin!

    • @vnyggi621
      @vnyggi621 6 лет назад +4

      You could use water to store energy: pump it up (charging), and then let it run down through a turbine to turn it into electricity again. Great stuff for phones, no idea why its not a thing

    • @polycarbonate
      @polycarbonate 6 лет назад +2

      So I’m thinking you need to move ions from one area to another through the introduction of electrons. A small electron beam targeted at an area of a device containing ions from the cathode to the anode, where the cathode itself is made of a material that provides little to no wear and is strong enough to a much higher extent to defy expansion and contraction during cycles, thus allowing the sustainability of a discharge current indefinitely or just for a very fucking long time.

  • @MISTER_CEO
    @MISTER_CEO 6 лет назад +341

    Tldr using your phone in any way reduces battery health. In other news grass is green and water is wet.

    • @something3118
      @something3118 6 лет назад +25

      Water isn’t wet tho...

    • @minecraftminertime
      @minecraftminertime 6 лет назад +15

      Actually, the TLDW is that charing your phone to or near 100% reduces your battery's lifespan, and so does discharging it to or near 0%. The point of the video wasn't that using your phone in any way reduces battery health. Also, it's called TLDW, not TLDR.

    • @TheFiXNormal
      @TheFiXNormal 6 лет назад +3

      I must've been lucky with charging overnight to 100% on my Xiaomi Redmi Note which is now around 5 years old and still working fine.

    • @Epicalcaik
      @Epicalcaik 6 лет назад +1

      MischievousMoo In that case what does the "W" stand for?

    • @Axonteer
      @Axonteer 6 лет назад +3

      watch

  • @FerralVideo
    @FerralVideo 5 лет назад +3

    Two cents from a battery semi-pro:
    Li-Ion batteries have three significant full charge threshold voltages.
    3.95v: "Long Service Life" charge. This setting reduces available power, but maximizes the possible cycle life of the battery. Used in military applications or places where the service life of the battery is of utmost importance. Battery will last nearly indefinitely, eventually failing due to simple calendar age.
    If your laptop has a "Conservation Mode" (Lenovo) or "Plugged In Mode" (Dell) or something similar, it reduces your full charge voltage to 3.95v.
    4.20v: "Normal Mode". This is the typical full charge voltage level of MOST Li-Ion batteries, e.g. in traditional laptops and older cellphones. Good quality cells that're well cared for can last up to 5 years of pretty serious use.
    4.35v: "High Voltage". This mode pushes the batteries very hard, and compromises service life to get longer runtime and more capacity. All modern smartphones use this mode to squeeze as many mAh into the phone as possible. Dies in 1-2 years of routine use.
    PLEASE PHONE MANUFACTURERS GIVE US THE OPTION TO CHANGE OUR TERMINATION VOLTAGE. Even if it's buried in some obscure advanced setup menu.
    I'd happily trade my phone having a few hours less of runtime in lieu of NOT NEEDING TO REPLACE MY BATTERY IN TWO YEARS without having to be paranoid of my charge percentage...

    • @danpascooch
      @danpascooch 2 года назад

      Thanks for the info! My Galaxy S22 now includes a feature to stop charging at 85% which I use (not sure if it's built into Android or Samsung's UI that sits on top of it). I wonder what that turns out to be termination voltage wise

  • @_baller
    @_baller 5 лет назад +3

    Isn't it weird how electrons act a lot like humans entering an elevator....

  • @TheDutyPaid
    @TheDutyPaid 6 лет назад +582

    I replaced my phone battery last week, just popped the back off my Samsung S5 flicked out the battery and put a new one in.

    • @hippopotamus86
      @hippopotamus86 6 лет назад +3

      Two weeks the battery in my S5 lasts if I literally don't use it at all.

    • @RiedlerMusics
      @RiedlerMusics 6 лет назад +1

      Try the motorola Z family, they are Moto mods compatible so you can put a extended battery on it.
      The internal battery is not replacable, but who needs that when you can just switch the extended Battery.
      ...But its not stackable. That would be awesome.

    • @eoinduignan376
      @eoinduignan376 6 лет назад +1

      Riedler Musics do not buy a Motorola phone. Follow this link to see a 117 page forum explaining the crap battery life with Moto z phones solve Motorola released android 7.1.1 update. My phone doesn't last 2 hours off charge. forums.lenovo.com/t5/Moto-Z/Moto-Z-extreme-battery-drain-after-7-1-1-update/td-p/3758100/page/117

    • @ponyslavestation2973
      @ponyslavestation2973 6 лет назад +4

      I have lg g3 its so good to have phone, with removable battery...

    • @TheSpiikeisme
      @TheSpiikeisme 6 лет назад +6

      Lucky you. Sent my s6 phone in to get battery replaced by geek squad 4 months later, 150 phone calls, and much lying, I walked into best buy told them my story and now I'm getting a $784 gift card in the mail. Lucky I had my wife's old s6 active!
      P.s. Maybe manufacturer battery replacement is a better option?

  • @MarekBaczynski
    @MarekBaczynski 6 лет назад +805

    Oh come on Linus :( Scaring people that fast charging is at a high voltage of 14.5V? I though you're better than that! That's the voltage on the USB cable, and as soon as it gets into the phone it gets step-downed to the cell voltage by the charge controller. You might as well say "Don't go to Europe, as they charge their phones with 230V chargers!!!11!!". The higher voltage of fast charging USB adapters is there only to avoid high currents on the tiny USB wires and connectors.

    • @crimsongaming7841
      @crimsongaming7841 6 лет назад +52

      I'm pretty sure USB outputs at 5V my dude

    • @asiudominick12
      @asiudominick12 6 лет назад +30

      Crimson Gaming not fast charging on Samsung's phones

    • @copiouschuk
      @copiouschuk 6 лет назад +35

      My samsung fast charger outputs at 9v @ 1.87A or 5v @ 2A

    • @michalsimanek6988
      @michalsimanek6988 6 лет назад +10

      yeah. the fast charging means that the charger sends more amps rather than voltage. the 5V stays the same. If you look at the charger, it says on it it's specs like output voltage (5V) and max current (2.1A on my powerbank)
      also they DO make "fast charging" cables able to whistand more current. basically a larger cable.

    • @isavedtheuniverse
      @isavedtheuniverse 6 лет назад +48

      You can't "send more amps rather than voltage" that isn't how electricity works. E(voltage) = I(current) x R(resistance). If you want more current then you need either less resistance or more voltage. Since at a given charge level the internal resistance of the battery is fixed, to get more current you HAVE to raise the voltage, there is no other choice. You can't just "send" some extra amps.

  • @Pauls2theWall
    @Pauls2theWall 4 года назад +16

    The best battery charging metaphor I've heard is like your building a stack of boxes next to a ladder. The first few stacks are easy and you can do it without climbing the ladder. Towards 100% capacity though, you have to lug the box all the way up the ladder, then go all the way back down for the next box. So it takes longer.

  • @bluzboi1
    @bluzboi1 5 лет назад

    I’ve been coming across this man’s videos for about a year or so and I’ll tell you what, those sponsorship bits he does are so smooth I don’t mind listening to them like “did you just get me with an ad or is this still part of the video?” 😂 you officially get my SUB!

  • @TheDutyPaid
    @TheDutyPaid 6 лет назад +667

    What if you work nights and sleep days?

    • @FateBoost
      @FateBoost 6 лет назад +44

      J3 Prime But you can’t charge it overnight either, so you aren’t allowed to charge them at all?

    • @aidandelgado5065
      @aidandelgado5065 6 лет назад

      No

    • @frogwest
      @frogwest 6 лет назад +1

      just apply the opposite mentality charge at night don't charge in the day

    • @JOSEPHZZ123
      @JOSEPHZZ123 6 лет назад

      TheDutyPaid no vamps.

    • @masterk5066
      @masterk5066 6 лет назад

      2nd shift 6 to 6. I charge mine soon as I get home in the morning & try to unplug it in the 90% percents. My battery is 3200 so it easily lasts all day until the following morning, unless I burn it up with RUclips/videos. An if I take it easy with videos, 2 days no issue. Adjust your charging schedule, I don't even have a car charger cause this is so effective for me

  • @bladudemovies
    @bladudemovies 6 лет назад +106

    Honestly it's probably less work to just disassemble your phone every 2 years and replace the battery.

    • @griffin8062
      @griffin8062 6 лет назад +1

      For most phones yeah

    • @TheProgrn
      @TheProgrn 6 лет назад +12

      Agreed. People get so bent over batteries. These are real physical objects that wear down. It’s not planners obsolescence. It’s just regular wear and tear.

    • @nowonmetube
      @nowonmetube 6 лет назад

      bladudemovies true!!!

    • @Schradermusic
      @Schradermusic 6 лет назад +2

      I'm sure RUclips enabled links in comments only so they can ban the people who use that feature...
      Makes sense. /s

    • @walkinmn
      @walkinmn 6 лет назад +2

      Now, if only it was easy to find reliable or original replacement batteries at a decent price...

  • @CURTlS
    @CURTlS 4 года назад +6

    In my opinion the best tactic is to use the phone's battery as much as you want until it starts degrading a lot (roughly 2 years). Then just get the battery swapped out (it's like 80$ at an Apple store or free with apple are+) and then use the device for another 2 years. At that point, it's probably about time to switch phone.

  • @vernearase3044
    @vernearase3044 5 лет назад +2

    The act of charging heats your battery, and use of magnetic induction heats the coil.
    Since the phone is a thin device, the additive heat between the battery and coil can damage your battery further.
    Use a lower wattage wired connection if you want to keep your battery health pristine as possible.

  • @howtotruckdriver101
    @howtotruckdriver101 6 лет назад +10

    I have the perfect plan leave your phone in the box. You will never have to worry about anything, it'll never fall, it'll never get dirty and it will last forever. Then five years from now you can sell it on eBay.😂😎

  • @user-tb9jf2jp6n
    @user-tb9jf2jp6n 6 лет назад +22

    one thing I noticed people mention “storing” the battery at a certain percentage (40-50%). the reason they do it is because the time it’s not being used (charge/discharge) is prolonged (as in more than 24h)
    that doesn’t apply to a battery that’s being used daily and no, you can safely charge your phone to “full” (which is when the phone stop pulling current through the adapter), and not worry about degradation.
    the discharge/charge cycle is a complete drain from the battery full to empty state controlled by the operating system (100-0)
    using your phone to 50%, the charging to 75% and using another 25% is only 3/4 of a cycle, for example. the OS won’t allow you to completely empty the battery, until you force it, and that is to prevent the electrolyte from being “strangled” with no source to “feed” from
    charge as you wish. by the time your phone starts to be affected by battery degradation it will be obsolete anyway.

    • @sahibjot01
      @sahibjot01 6 лет назад

      SR_Qianna true.

    • @GabrielIgnacio
      @GabrielIgnacio 6 лет назад +2

      Even then, you'd possibly have bigger wear and tear related things to worry about like microscratches, dents in metal frame, cracks in the glass if you didn't repair them, diminished water resistance over a long period of time, etc.
      Don't forget burn in ;)

    • @user-os8sq3uh4n
      @user-os8sq3uh4n 6 лет назад

      Not true. Pokémon Go for a month or 2 when it was popular is largely responsible for my 66% max capacity health not quite 2 years old.

    • @Mike-dy8sj
      @Mike-dy8sj 6 лет назад

      SR_Qianna do you know what the voltage of a phone battery is when the OS says it's 0%? I have other devices powered by larger lithium batteries that show 100% at 4.2 and 0% at 2.9.

    • @4rzaluz
      @4rzaluz 6 лет назад

      Nice that way by the moment there are 5billion phones in the world we would be all out of lithium mines..

  • @sarrum7696
    @sarrum7696 5 лет назад

    *gathers everything he thought he knew about battery charging*....*Throws it all away*...*walks away*

  • @ShaferHart
    @ShaferHart 4 года назад +1

    After two years you can get an aftermarket battery for real cheap. Often times with greater capacity than stock. I still don't charge my phone overnight but getting a new battery is not that big a deal. Installing it can be very cheap depending on where you live 🙂

  • @GamingCulture1
    @GamingCulture1 6 лет назад +15

    We are not in 2001, this is old news and newer tech has software to prevent this. I have had my Note 3 since 2013 when it came out. Original battery, charged to full every other night with fast charger and honestly there is not even a noticable difference in battery life.

    • @jacobmccloskey171
      @jacobmccloskey171 6 лет назад +1

      Slugontharug thats bullshit In my opinion, I have a note 3 and its battery sucks

    • @ghbytdsrfhb
      @ghbytdsrfhb 6 лет назад

      my notes battery sucks lol

    • @gopro2027
      @gopro2027 6 лет назад

      My note 4 battery noticibly dropped in how long a full charge lasted.

    • @rfldss89
      @rfldss89 6 лет назад

      no matter how well you treated your phone, there is no way it's battery life didn't decrease over the course of the last 5 years.

    • @GamingCulture1
      @GamingCulture1 6 лет назад

      @Jacob I am being honest, it is still my daily driver , only problem with it is charging port is a tad wiggly so sometimes I have to put something small under the cord to hold it up while it charges and doesn't disconnect.
      @gopro_2027 there was a recall on Note 4 batteries, due to over heating. I don't know if you ever got the battery exchanged.
      One thing I wanna add is that you do not charge to 100% drain to 80 then fill, or drain to 50 and fill. You charge it to 100% use the entire charge til the phone says it is low, (1-15%) then fill it right back up to 100%

  • @champ5887
    @champ5887 6 лет назад +309

    Daki in bed - check
    Watch that says loli @ 1:53 - check
    Hey Linus, whats going on buddy?

    • @NoorquackerInd
      @NoorquackerInd 6 лет назад +15

      I see you are new to this channel
      Look up the NSFW Cuddle Challenge on ChannelSuperFun
      It's also how Dennis became great

    • @logonontrily4161
      @logonontrily4161 6 лет назад +34

      17:07 is the modern man's 5318008

    • @jadoogar4582
      @jadoogar4582 6 лет назад +1

      palace what i dont understand?

    • @TsunTzu
      @TsunTzu 6 лет назад +19

      Oh, hey. Yoko.
      Good taste.

    • @moniiiiiiiiii
      @moniiiiiiiiii 6 лет назад

      Noorquacker shes feeling me!

  • @Ryan_Carder
    @Ryan_Carder 5 лет назад +5

    I wish he had gone into more detail about the rooted apps.

  • @suklay2001
    @suklay2001 4 года назад +1

    I'd like to see a study which one is actually more damaging to the battery: a) charging to 100% OR b) frequent under capacity charging due to 100% dilemma, this would result on the current to flow on the middle parts of the battery much more frequently than it should have if all 100% is being used. Imagine a wood planer is being run on just a particular portion of a wood instead of the whole board, this will make the frequently run portion much deeper than the other parts and will bore a hole soon.

  • @m-copyright
    @m-copyright 6 лет назад +14

    Thanks for the information, but I'm gonna do what I do. Charge it the way I want to when I need to.
    As someone already said my phone is meant to make my life comfortable.
    I shouldn't even have to worry about when and how I should charge the battery.

  • @TheMotherShip
    @TheMotherShip 6 лет назад +31

    1:08 I'm packing up my things and leaving, Linus.

    • @derhunburhas
      @derhunburhas 6 лет назад +3

      wtf are you doing here ??! lets play some rotmg :D

    • @TheMotherShip
      @TheMotherShip 6 лет назад +2

      lmao I can't believe you found me here

    • @derhunburhas
      @derhunburhas 6 лет назад +3

      hahahah I was very surprised and happy when I saw you here. I love your videos, keep it up.

    • @user-vv5en9mg6v
      @user-vv5en9mg6v 6 лет назад +1

      SAME WTF LOL I quit rotmg tho so yea

    • @dokod
      @dokod 6 лет назад +1

      Go play realm >:(

  • @MTGeomancer
    @MTGeomancer 5 лет назад +1

    Old video, but man did this ruffle my feathers as an Electrical Engineer. Not going to waste bits typing out some big old long explanation, so just going to say you can charge your phone up to 100% and leave it there most of the day all the time and your battery will still work just fine 3 years later. My personal phone spends about 23 hours a day plugged in, it's only unplugged to/from work or when running errands on the weekends or occasional days out. Even my 6 year old Nexus 4 still works perfectly after all that time, sitting at 100% charge most of its life. If I'd allowed it to discharge and recharge every day it would be a different story.

  • @KYSMO
    @KYSMO 4 года назад +9

    "Stop Charging your Phone Overnight!
    "
    No, I don't think I will.

  • @NaturalViolence2
    @NaturalViolence2 6 лет назад +15

    I have always let my phones fully charge overnight and generally keep them for 5+ years without any battery capacity issues. I'm sorry but I am really skeptical that constantly connecting and disconnecting a charger to keep the battery in its optimal range makes all that much difference long term. And it's an enormous hassle that nobody will be able to keep up with for very long.

    • @ghost2coast296
      @ghost2coast296 6 лет назад +1

      every 500 charges your battery's total capacity gets cut in half is the pretty standard rule. I doubt you had no issues after 5 years of nightly charging, or you use your phone less than 30 mins a day so you wouldn't notice.

    • @NaturalViolence2
      @NaturalViolence2 6 лет назад +3

      I work in IT so I have to use my phone constantly. I usually go to bed with about 50% battery since I use extended batteries on my phone. After 3 years on my current phone that has dropped to about 40% charge left at bedtime. Buy a several year old used phone and test it if you don't believe me. There is no way they drop that fast. If they did all phones would be borderline unusable after 2 years. Can I have a source on that figure? Because every single source I can find says 80%, not 50%. Which is pretty consistent with my personal findings.

  • @namelmao4231
    @namelmao4231 6 лет назад +89

    Watches video
    Charges over night

    • @burningglory2373
      @burningglory2373 6 лет назад +1

      Then those people,
      Watches video
      Root's Phone because of this video
      Charges over night

    • @Ghostnumba11
      @Ghostnumba11 6 лет назад +2

      Watches video
      Types this comment
      Charges overnight

  • @gimoon0125
    @gimoon0125 5 лет назад +6

    iOS13 has new optimized 80% charge until use feature

  • @joshbuilds
    @joshbuilds 4 года назад +3

    Him: * shows repair kit *
    Me: I don't think that's gonna help me fix my exploded mac (my battery blew up about a year ago)
    Him: but it's the only 60usd
    Me: ill keep it in mind

  • @masterchef7652
    @masterchef7652 6 лет назад +9

    I'd love to see an exposé on batteries. There is so much misinformation about batteries from discharge ratings, capacity and other things. Especially with the direction our society is going, there really is only going to be more batteries in devices, and relative rating terms like "1C or 2C" just don't makes sense. I appreciate what you guys did in this video. I think, your channels have enough exposure to actually make a difference, and who knows maybe even offered a tour by someone like Panasonic or Sony at one of their manufacturing facilities.

  • @Smash_ter
    @Smash_ter 6 лет назад +71

    Let's wait for the graphene batteries to launch

    • @Stratos1988
      @Stratos1988 6 лет назад +17

      Oh, and what do you plan on doing in the meantime ? Light up your screen with a candle ?

    • @hadykobrossy
      @hadykobrossy 6 лет назад +1

      It's like 3 years at least.

    • @semahj
      @semahj 6 лет назад

      way more than that for mobile pones

  • @scottanderson691
    @scottanderson691 4 года назад +4

    You know, this is really interesting to me. I know (and have known since my Galaxy S4 days) that I shouldn't be charging my phone overnight. However, since I got my current S7 (yes, I'm stubborn and cheap), and they took away my ability to easily swap my battery, I just adopted the practice of leaving it plugged in at night out of convenience. Yes, I've suffered some degradation, but given the amount of updates and abuse I've given it over the past 3 years, no more than I would expect with the usual planned obsole... , excuse me, normal upgrade cycle. I've done this pretty much every single night for all but the first 6 months of my S7's life and it still just chugs along.
    Maybe my phone is just sadomasochistic?

  • @canichols2
    @canichols2 5 лет назад

    Thank you. Finally someone took the time to explain new phone batteries and charging. I've been so confused for SOOOO long and couldn't find anything to help bridge the gap from the 90's

  • @Caribano
    @Caribano 6 лет назад +259

    I believe the electrical engineers of these companies have already designed these mobile devices to safely charge and discharge your phone batteries. The end user should not be worried about having to do all of these things shown in the video.

    • @iluzky2009
      @iluzky2009 6 лет назад +43

      Orr, they might want the end user to not worry about having to do all of these things shown in the video, so that they will pay them money to replace batteries (which the user can't do because ???) or replacing the phone completely (ahem ahem Apple)

    • @phenomanII
      @phenomanII 6 лет назад +36

      Yeah. Those devices totally aren't engineered to fail as soon as the warranty runs out while being good enough to get certified as safe. I mean, why would they do that? To get you to buy another one? That's not what they want!

    • @TheNiteNinja19
      @TheNiteNinja19 6 лет назад +12

      There is already a "reserve" on both ends of a battery anyway. Sure they may be rated at 3,000mAh on the sticker but they may actually be 3,800mAh with the 3k usable. Kinda like formatting a hard drive.

    • @Seth22087
      @Seth22087 6 лет назад +8

      Yes and no. Basically they made it as safe as possible within certain costs, so you are safe enough to not be able to sue them. While in most cases, charging is safe and if anything goes wrong, failsafes will kick in. But they won't prevent whole "degrade" effect. Meaning after two to three years of charging like that, battery life will definitely be effected and charge will not last as long. Failsafes will just prevent it from blowing up, as batteries are explosive and combustive. And yes, if it swallows and you get tiny hole in that battery, so oxygen gets in.... well you either better be fireproof or not have phone in your pocket. Still, as I said, there are failsafes, which make it safer and also some of them will simply prevent you from charging or even using battery in certain conditions where it is in danger of exploding or combusting, however critical failures like that will also make it useless. But if you really want to keep your phone long term, like 5 years, you will have to make sure battery also survives the way to that end, with ability to hold decent charge. Or get a phone with replaceable battery. If you will be replacing it every 1-3 years, you are mostly fine.

    • @markothevrba
      @markothevrba 6 лет назад +2

      Oooor they didn't, so the phone breaks, you can't easily replace the battery and you buy a new one...
      Not that I have to worry with my Note 4.

  • @foop8964
    @foop8964 6 лет назад +12

    Honestly I would happily pay $30 two years from now to change my battery than to never go above 65%

    • @kingzach74
      @kingzach74 6 лет назад

      Except they are more like $100 for a battery.

    • @MrMagnaFarce
      @MrMagnaFarce 6 лет назад

      Batteries for a two year old phone are like $10-15. To pay someone else to install one might be more, sure, but if you install your own it's not expensive at all.

    • @foop8964
      @foop8964 6 лет назад

      Kris Bright two years from now?? I don’t think so

    • @foop8964
      @foop8964 6 лет назад

      MrMagnaFarce even if you let apple install it it wouldn’t be more than $50 for a two year old phone

  • @mxm7946
    @mxm7946 4 года назад +1

    0:53 as long as u have enough juice.
    Me and my PC: UNLIMITED POWER

  • @TheFourthWinchester
    @TheFourthWinchester 4 года назад +1

    Replacing a user non-replaceable battery is cheap af. But people replace the phone instead not knowing this.

  • @bluspectre2042
    @bluspectre2042 6 лет назад +188

    1:44 nice anime pillow. LOL

    • @deltanedas
      @deltanedas 6 лет назад +49

      CraftMinerKyle it's his wife you bigot! Wheref you think he got his kids from?

    • @itsTyrion
      @itsTyrion 6 лет назад +16

      Bought them

    • @jackw8338
      @jackw8338 6 лет назад +6

      Damn, nice catch. I would have never known.

    • @jackw8338
      @jackw8338 6 лет назад +28

      If anyone wants to know, it’s Yoko from Gurren Lagann

    • @subhasshmahenthren1264
      @subhasshmahenthren1264 6 лет назад +1

      totally missed it while watching... cool bro!

  • @InimicusSolitus
    @InimicusSolitus 6 лет назад +24

    I still charge my Note 3 over night, It's 5 years old and yes on it's 2nd Removable battery :) Not upgrading till it dies.

    • @hungrynapps
      @hungrynapps 6 лет назад

      while the ad playing. i be reading comments. lol

    • @Mewzyc
      @Mewzyc 6 лет назад +1

      note 4 here.

    • @Shadman261
      @Shadman261 6 лет назад

      Note 4 here charging it only to 80% my battery is ass good as new. And i use my mobile allot.

    • @InimicusSolitus
      @InimicusSolitus 6 лет назад

      Deep Fried Porg Yeah, I was running into low battery issues so I got a new battery. Good as new.

  • @eug3nius
    @eug3nius 5 лет назад +1

    this video is 5 minutes longer than it needed to be

  • @randomrimrock
    @randomrimrock 5 лет назад

    Why is everyone complaining about this video being unncessary? It's a really good tip and at least you can know how to sustain your battery health when you needed to.

  • @TheReichGamers
    @TheReichGamers 6 лет назад +16

    1:52 his watch says loli with his pillow mistress nest to him lol.

    • @greasemonkeymc
      @greasemonkeymc 6 лет назад

      If you really look at his watch it says 17:07 military times

    • @ElainaMaruyama
      @ElainaMaruyama 5 лет назад

      @@greasemonkeymc Yeah sure. If there wasn't a waifu pillow of Yoko Littner next to him, I'd believe you that it wasn't related.

  • @you1ubeify
    @you1ubeify 6 лет назад +32

    I like to live dangerously. 😏

  • @jp-ym4wc
    @jp-ym4wc 4 года назад +2

    When the iPhone 11 pro knows how to stop the charge for you

  • @LincolnGTX
    @LincolnGTX 5 лет назад +3

    On my previous phone it was charged EVERY night for almost 4 years and I had no problems whatsoever, even sold that phone and it is still working normally. I used normal chargers, so I think this is not entirely accurate.

  • @sabayonz
    @sabayonz 6 лет назад +168

    for android rooted user , you can search for app caled "Battery Charge Limit"

    • @DrewLakebrink
      @DrewLakebrink 6 лет назад +32

      SabayZone Or don't believe this garbage video

    • @marcocorradini29
      @marcocorradini29 6 лет назад +101

      Drew Lakebrink there are plenty of studies saying that you should stay between 20 and 80 percent. Don't call for bullshits if you don't know anything.

    • @weberito
      @weberito 6 лет назад +49

      Drew is special

    • @crispychickennuggets9092
      @crispychickennuggets9092 6 лет назад +3

      Łukasz L you are also special. In a diffrent way

    • @x_isaka
      @x_isaka 6 лет назад

      SabayZone or cpu limiter

  • @alexstava
    @alexstava 6 лет назад +16

    I always charge my phone over night and never had a problem. My S7 still holds over 5 hours screen on time. I don't think it's still such a big deal with today's tech

    • @tidakadaide
      @tidakadaide 6 лет назад

      Alex Stava not bad..my s7 is lucky to do 1-2hrs... even from new lol.

    • @MHWGamer
      @MHWGamer 6 лет назад +5

      wtf only 1-2 hrs?? my old old samsung galaxy note 1 (!) can even do this and the battery is a) old as fck and b) has 6,5 years * 365 days of dis- and recharging = 2.4k cycles which is very very much haha
      I am actually surprised that the battery isn't dead already haha

    • @tidakadaide
      @tidakadaide 6 лет назад

      MHWGamer yeh it is not good....i can extend it slightly by putting it in power saving mode lol... my s6 edge goes all day and the last s5 i had used to go more than a day haha...

  • @carlwilliams6977
    @carlwilliams6977 3 года назад

    Other info I've seen says charge between 30 and 90%, which seems a little more practical.
    Don't want to be mean, but this guy has a voice only a mother could love! Like nails on a chalkboard!

  • @Mario583a
    @Mario583a 4 года назад +1

    Title: Stop Charging your Phone Overnight!
    People: How Bout I Do Anyway?

  • @xMyInnerFredx
    @xMyInnerFredx 6 лет назад +80

    Lmao that body pillow in the back

  • @rj9959
    @rj9959 6 лет назад +14

    I think a video on different battery types and how their chemistry affects the way you should treat them would be nice.

  • @AtotehZ
    @AtotehZ 6 лет назад +10

    What I've read about lithium-ion batteries is that keeping them between 40% and 70% is best for the battery's lifetime. This is especially relevant for a laptop you keep in its docking station all the time. Making it seize its charging at 70% and keep it there can extend the lifetime a lot.

    • @stephensnell5707
      @stephensnell5707 Год назад +1

      70% is not even enough for a whole 24 hours of use
      Charging to 100% is what Smartphone batteries are designed for and wasting 30% of the maximum capacity is stupid

    • @Matoro2002
      @Matoro2002 Год назад +2

      that's like saying if you're not regularly maxing out the rpm on your car you're wasting its potential
      or pegging your CPU at 100% while overclocked
      or keeping an OLED screen on 24/7
      or any other number of things that are engineered to be capable of hitting a threshold, but aren't realistically built to be kept there all the time due to any number of physical or chemical limitations

  • @seanwatts392
    @seanwatts392 4 года назад +1

    When my battery health is bad. I just buy a new battery and put it in