I'll just copy paste my reddit comment on this: " Unfortunately that won't do much if your battery "health" dropped too low. It can be verified in Samsung members diagnostics app. The battery charge cycles and health is stored in the protected EFS partition and these values DO NOT reset after battery replacement. Unfortunately that's a shitty design from Samsung. In the case of s8/s9 phones the new battery worked just as bad as the old one because of software protection to increase the lifespan of "old used" battery, they limited the capacity to avoid random shutdown problems. Basically, the phone "remembers" that it had a heavily used battery, and limits its peak performance, to avoid random shutdowns or further rapid battery degradation, not really using 100% of the new replaced battery capacity. If you are rooted you can easily reset those values to factory defaults, which is 1 cycle and 100% health. The values are "asoc_battery_accumulated", and "asoc_life" or something along those lines. On newer Samsung phones (S20 and up, excluding S20 FE) you can use Self Repair Assistant to calibrate the newly installed part. On older devices, that won't work. "
Pięknie napisane. Cieszę się, że ktoś informuje o tym. Dla zainteresowanych resetem cykli ładowania w każdym modelu Galaxy seria A/M/S zapraszam do kontaktu.
Keep going, never stop. I learned a lot from you, my master. Hope you are doing well always
Well, you can only dream of such great removable frame adhesive at Apple. 😂
I'll just copy paste my reddit comment on this:
"
Unfortunately that won't do much if your battery "health" dropped too low. It can be verified in Samsung members diagnostics app.
The battery charge cycles and health is stored in the protected EFS partition and these values DO NOT reset after battery replacement. Unfortunately that's a shitty design from Samsung.
In the case of s8/s9 phones the new battery worked just as bad as the old one because of software protection to increase the lifespan of "old used" battery, they limited the capacity to avoid random shutdown problems.
Basically, the phone "remembers" that it had a heavily used battery, and limits its peak performance, to avoid random shutdowns or further rapid battery degradation, not really using 100% of the new replaced battery capacity.
If you are rooted you can easily reset those values to factory defaults, which is 1 cycle and 100% health. The values are "asoc_battery_accumulated", and "asoc_life" or something along those lines.
On newer Samsung phones (S20 and up, excluding S20 FE) you can use Self Repair Assistant to calibrate the newly installed part. On older devices, that won't work.
"
Pięknie napisane. Cieszę się, że ktoś informuje o tym.
Dla zainteresowanych resetem cykli ładowania w każdym modelu Galaxy seria A/M/S zapraszam do kontaktu.
Didn't know this
👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️