Anyone have any suggestions on a good way to test my ipod touch battery for longevity, besides taking it to Apple for diagnostics?
Anyone have any suggestions on a good way to test my ipod touch battery for longevity, besides taking it to Apple for diagnostics?
1st gen. iPod Touch 8g
What exactly do you wan't to test? Do you wan't a accurate repeatable test to compare your battery longevity with anonther Touch? Or just some approximated numbers from other Forum members? Or maybe a test to compare it against itself at a later time?
Either way, a laymans test would simply be to switch off everything that could alter the result (ie. wifi, auto light dimming, push, automated email checks, etc.) and then run one task with a full charge and see how long the battery will last.
In order to compare it to other Touchs you should use a task that somebody else can repeat without problems. I would recomment one of the free "Flashlight" apps which simply turn the screen white and disable the auto lock.
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When I visited the Genious Bar they told me they do not have equipment to test batteries. They simply looked at all the things I had on (push, wi-fi, brightness, location) and said something to the effect of 'no wonder your battery doesn't last a day'. I walked away a real satisfied customer that day.
A while back I picked up the "Accura" battery app while it was free. It claims to be able to "check battery health". My 2g iTouch received a rather poor rating (forget the number- mid 20%?). My brand new 3g received a zero! They have not answered my email regarding this....
I basically have to charge mine on a daily basis even though I don't use it as much as would seem necessary for this
shine on you crazy diamond
Basically you need to charge yr battery before it drops to 20% and on a daily basis as advised by apple.
Hi wiredmind-
I'm curious if the 20% is official Apple info. Because I let mine dip below that all the time I checked the Apple website and found no reference .Did I miss it? All the info there makes the battery sound like it's easy to take care of; no first time use rules, no memory, and no possibility of overcharging. Just charge it when needed, use the device to keep the atoms moving (or something like that), with a battery life limit of the total number of recharge cycles.
shine on you crazy diamond
Thanks for the input everyone. Yes, basically a test to compare it against itself at a later time. Just want to see if it's being naturally degraded over time. Wonder how you know if it's time to send it in for a battery replacement? Maybe if it won't keep a charge but just for a couple of hours?
1st gen. iPod Touch 8g
The Apple website contains instructions on how to do this I have found. http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1322?viewlocale=en_US
I did not read the entire article but basically update everything, use the proper/same settings, play the same music and mark the time it takes for the ipod to shut off/die. If you do that now, then also at a later date with everything set up the same, compare time to shut off. Theoretically the second time, months later perhaps, will have less battery health and shorter play time. I don't think it technically applies to iDevices but the procedure should work , no?
shine on you crazy diamond
It is good to let the battery completely drain (until the unit shuts itself down) once every 4-6 weeks. This process re-engerizes the battery so to speak.
iPhone 3Gs JB
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