Desire S Extended Battery | The Communication Blog

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Desire S Extended Battery

By Roz Demer


Being used to the relatively endless battery lifetime of a BlackBerry, changing to an Google Android came as a bit of a shock; out of the box I was only getting about 8 hours of usage from a 100 % charge. A familiar tale for a lot of men and women I'm sure... After some (well, a couple of weeks) of fine-tuning I was able to reliably get about 36 hours from the battery but it nonetheless meant I had to charge the phone each and every day to be sure I'd not get a flat battery at an crucial time.

I decided it was time we evaluated 1 of the Mugen extended battery packs I'd read about.

I spoke to our pals at MobileFun and asked for the Mugen Power 1800mAh android battery for the Desire S. The next day it arrived in the post, and it was easily popped out from the packaging. The initial point I noticed was that Mugen recommend the battery be fully charged for no less than 12 hours just before initial use. It is then advised the battery is allowed to drain totally just before recharging again. This really should be repeated for the first few charges. At first we believed this was baloney, but on investigating further it is in fact to permit the handset to reset it's battery level indicator for the greater capacity battery.

On first charge re-charge (soon after the initial 12 hour charge), it seemed to take *ages* for the telephone to tell me the battery was full. Subsequent charges having said that seem to be significantly quicker (about 90 minutes compared to nearly three hours at initial). This really is apparently rather typical and is just the phone performing an overcharge for a brand new battery.

Right after some full cycles, we decided the time had come to test the battery with some times comparing it to a Desire S having a stock battery pack.

Both phones were reset with new email accounts and twitter feeds, each had been set to identical notification update periods. They had been as closely as attainable *identical* to each other with just the batteries becoming different.

Performing identical tasks on them both, the very first thing noticed was with the Mugen powered telephone, the extended batteries remained at 100% for just more than 6 hours where the stock battery had dropped one notch right after just four hours.

Three hours later under very high load (both phones streaming from Spotify over a WiFi connection) The stock telephone had dropped to 50% where the Mugen was still at 80%.

The subsequent test was a couple of hrs of video gaming, eventually leaving the stock battery at 12% even though the Mugen was at a healthy 45%.

Lastly we set up the video cameras to record HD video, and after just 15 extra minutes the stock battery gave up the ghost and the telephone died, The Mugen phone nonetheless had 30% of it's battery left, almost precisely what we would expect considering the extra capacity.

Both phones were then recharged up once more for a stand by test.

Under pretty light use, with no WiFi or GPRS and notifications set to hourly, the stock battery managed a reasonable 38 hours prior to the phone went into emergency mode, the Mugen nevertheless lasted a really usable 52 hours just before emergency mode!

To sum up then, the Mugen is about 30% better under heavy load and about 45% improved below light load; impressive figures indeed, thinking about the low price of the battery I'm surprised HTC don't fit these as default.

I cannot suggest Mugen batteries high enough, specially if like me you are constantly frustrated by the poor battery life of your Android device.

Characteristics: Capacity - 1800 mAh Exceeds all OEM batteries. Lithium Ion technology. 1 year warranty.

Why Acquire? Extended battery to ensure that you need to be concerned about your battery less. Among 30% and 45% More power than the original battery. You'll be able to still maintain the stock battery as a spare for extended trips. Made with Mugen power cells. No battery memory effect.

Why Not Buy? If you're pleased with daily charging. Should you be an extremely low use owner.




About the Author:



The Communication Blog
Bookmark and Share

No comments:

Post a Comment

 

The Communication Blog Copyright © 2009