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How long does the battery last on your DROID after conditioning?

Yeah what is this battery conditioning you speak of?

Battery conditioning is "When you intentionally discharge a battery down to a certain minimum voltage and then recharge it this is known as battery conditioning or reconditioning . It is also sometimes referred to as battery exercise. This is particularly important to reduce what some call the memory effect experienced using NiCD batteries if you habitually do not fully discharge them each time you use them. For NiCD batteries this must be done periodically, approximately every 10 charge/discharge cycles or so, or the batteries will begin to lose capacity. For NiMH batteries conditioning is not really needed to reduce any memory effect because that is negligible in this type of battery. However, reconditioning is very convenient for both NiMH and NiCD batteries because brand new batteries are not charged when you receive them and they must be charged and discharged three to five times before they reach their full capacity. In addition, occasionally conditioning rechargeable batteries helps to ensure that they give you years or service and save you as much money as possible, before you recycle them and get new ones."

Frequently Asked Questions about NiMH Battery Chargers, AA and AAA

This also applies to Lithium Ion batteries such as the BP6X sitting in your Droid.
 
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I know conditioning has been suggested many times in this forum but it just isn't necessary. A quick google search confirms this on just about every site/article...


That's odd, Seidio, an aftermarket extended battery maker, states that "conditioning" is required, as part of the directions included in their packaging. Both of my Droids also had poor life their first few days...after about a week with each one, I was able to get a full 24 hours with normal use.
 
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Frequently Asked Questions about NiMH Battery Chargers, AA and AAA

This also applies to Lithium Ion batteries such as the BP6X sitting in your Droid.

No, it does not apply at all. You should not regularly drain Li-ion batteries like you used to do with older types of batteries. In fact, regularly discharging all the way is more likely to cause harm than good (although it's okay to do it once a month or so to calibrate the battery indicator).

You should charge as often as you can.
 
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All lithium ion batteries need to be calibrated. Notebooks, GPS, phones, etc.

Once every 1-3 months, yes.


to do that do you need to like it discharge completely? b/c I haven't done that yet and I'm worried my indicator isn't accurate.

Yes, you must drain it completely so that the phone won't power on at all.
 
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My droid eris just died after 22 hours from al day of moderate use. Running down the battery once and charging up has already improved my battery life dramatically. I thought the Motorola droid was supposed to have a better battery and battery life than the HTC eris? I was considering switching to the droid because I thought I would get better battery life. After seeing the hours posted here I'm not so sure it lasts longer anymore... so now I'm confused again??
 
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That's odd, Seidio, an aftermarket extended battery maker, states that "conditioning" is required, as part of the directions included in their packaging. Both of my Droids also had poor life their first few days...after about a week with each one, I was able to get a full 24 hours with normal use.


That is something I like to refer to as "newness wearing off". ;) You use it non stop for a week, and then it just becomes a phone again.

Battery conditioning was part of the old Lithium-ion batteries that would develop a "memory" when not fully discharged. It does not hold true to newer generation batteries. The belief that it will help is, at this point, much like the belief that cell phones will crash planes or blow up gas stations.

So in brief, any of you who believe in conditioning were, not too long ago, correct. But the world turns, life changes, technology advances, etc, etc, etc.

;)
 
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