02-03-2016 05:27 PM - last edited on 02-03-2016 06:00 PM by RogersShakir
I got my LG G4 at the beginning of July and have absolutely love it. It does everything that I need a phone to do and the removeable battery and expandable memory was a big factor in my selection.
The battery life was amazing: I don't play games on my phone, I rarely make an actual phone call, and I use a web/SMS interface (MightyText, if you're interested: quality product if you work at a computer). That being said, I'm far from a light user: I search the web a lot , text with different apps and use social media.
My battery life averaged at least 40-50 hours most of the time (heavy use taking a lot of phots would reduce that to 30-35, very light use would extend it to 60+ hours), and this has been consistent for the last seven months of use. Having a second battery is the plus, because I an allow it to die to 0% and immeditately switch out the battery.
When Android 6.0 was pushed to the phone I was hesitant, but consdiering that it's been deployed to other networks over the last few months, I took a risk and updated. BIG mistake: I've just gotten home from work and the battey is at 2% after about 9 hours. The phone felt physically warm and I checked the temperature (*#*#4636#*#*) and it was in the low 40s.
I'm quite worried that this will be unalterable and that I will have to live with this for the remaining 17 months before I can get an upgrade. I'm going to search the web for any information on things that I can try and possibly even look into if there is a way to downgrade. I would just warn people not to jump on the new update: I had NO complaints with the OS at all, and I feel that I've learned my lesson.
I will update if the situation changes. If anyone has any suggestions, please let me know!
*** Edited Labels ***
Solved! Solved! Go to Solution.
02-10-2016 09:47 PM
Thanks for your replies, @Meowmix and @RogersShakir,
It's been a week and it seems to have equilibriated itself. I'm back up to 30+ hours, although it dropped drastically on Thursday and Sunday. I'm hoping that it eventually regains its old longevity. I do remember a similar situation with a phone from a couple of years ago where an update there was a temporary but considerable reduction in battery power coupled with the phone being uncharacteristicaly and almost alarmingly warm. I'm hopeful now that this too shall pass.
Even during the dip in performance the battery usage profile looked more-or-less normal and with the usual proportions, regardless of the actual life: Cell standby and Phone idle each consuming around 17%; Android System, Android OS, and some background apps like Locale and MightyText around 8%. There really isn't much that I've noticed, but I will be certain to screencap it if it dips again.
A bit of an off-topic question: when performing a factory reset, do you have any suggestions for backing up the phone beforehand? Most of my pictuers are on the SD card, but it would really be nice if I could somehow preserve my SMS/MMS history.
Thanks again, @Meowmix and @RogersShakir
Kurt
02-03-2016 05:36 PM
02-03-2016 06:42 PM
Thanks for the reply and the suggestion.
I've decided to give it a couple of days to settle in before I try that (just put in the second battery and am crossing my fingers). I understand that there might be things going on in the background that might be the cause of this.
Make no mistake: I'm quite happy with my LG G4, and I more intend to have this just as a statement on the web (which I was unable to find during my hasty and cursory search last night) which might guide others who are on the fence. I will be sure to post updates on the performance.
02-03-2016 06:49 PM
02-03-2016 07:04 PM
Thank you so much.
Update: my phone has had its screen off for 90 minutes and is down to 85%.
02-08-2016 06:48 PM
Hey @KurtToronto
While we wait for @Meowmix's friendly contact on LG side, I do want to discuss another theory.
For your battery drainage, under your Settings > General > Battery and power savings > Battery usage
What is showing up as the 1st, 2nd and third highest usage (They are in order normally).
Sometimes, if there are apps, third party or native that are draining the batter more than your screen and android system. You have a malfunction and a simple reboot won't solve it.
@Meowmix among other users here can confirm that. Sometimes a hard-reset is required (making sure back up of all personal/needed files are done first). Hard Reset is last thing we want to do of course.
So for now, can you take a screenshot of that battery usage screen? So the community can better assist you?
Thanks! :]
Cheers,
RogersShakir
02-08-2016 08:27 PM
02-10-2016 09:47 PM
Thanks for your replies, @Meowmix and @RogersShakir,
It's been a week and it seems to have equilibriated itself. I'm back up to 30+ hours, although it dropped drastically on Thursday and Sunday. I'm hoping that it eventually regains its old longevity. I do remember a similar situation with a phone from a couple of years ago where an update there was a temporary but considerable reduction in battery power coupled with the phone being uncharacteristicaly and almost alarmingly warm. I'm hopeful now that this too shall pass.
Even during the dip in performance the battery usage profile looked more-or-less normal and with the usual proportions, regardless of the actual life: Cell standby and Phone idle each consuming around 17%; Android System, Android OS, and some background apps like Locale and MightyText around 8%. There really isn't much that I've noticed, but I will be certain to screencap it if it dips again.
A bit of an off-topic question: when performing a factory reset, do you have any suggestions for backing up the phone beforehand? Most of my pictuers are on the SD card, but it would really be nice if I could somehow preserve my SMS/MMS history.
Thanks again, @Meowmix and @RogersShakir
Kurt
02-11-2016 09:24 AM
02-14-2016 04:18 PM
02-19-2016 02:52 PM
Same thing is happening to me. I use to get through the day no problem. Now I cant even keep the phone alive for more than 3 hours!
Called rogers twice and they wont do anything unless the phone is within 15 days of purchase. Nevermind that their update brooke the phone and it is not reversable.
Under settings -> battery -> Android System is the biggest culprit so not much I can do there.
Please post if also happening to you and what you did to fix it.
02-20-2016 09:52 AM
02-20-2016 10:03 AM - last edited on 02-20-2016 10:05 AM by RogersCilio
actually, google makes the OS and then LG followed by Rogers modifies it. This is typically where bugs/slowdowns occour and why people prefer a pure google OS and not one that forces you to install rogers apps.
Rogers sells a phone that is adveristed as being able to last X about of hours. Phone no longer does this after Rogers pushs out the update. Phone is sold by rogers and less than a year old therefore rogers should replace the phone with one that works such as a refurb running the previous OS.
02-20-2016 10:08 AM - edited 02-20-2016 10:13 AM
Hello @ov
They only add their bloatware to make the device work on Rogers. They do not touch anything else. If the update does not work before pushing out, they send it back & have LG & google look into it. Then gets sent back to Rogers. Thats how it works. Rogers is not allowed to touch anything else in the OS other then adding their own bloatware & testing the OS out before releasing. If bugs come out, they do. See IOS. Apple controls the OS but still has issues. No one can blame the carriers. Same goes with the Nexus devices. Every OS has bugs & issues no matter who controls it or not.
Sadly it does not work that way with Rogers or any carrier. If you have a issue with the device, send it out for repair & see if it gets fixed. They do not give you a new one or refurb unless you pay for the Insurance plan which then you need to contact Asurion & they will take care of it.
Also as specified on their agreements no carrier can send out a device with the older update on them unless no new update has come out.
03-18-2016 05:58 AM
03-18-2016 06:04 AM
03-18-2016 06:28 AM
03-18-2016 07:59 AM
03-18-2016 08:40 AM
FINAL UPDATE
Should have put this up earlier, but in addition to the initial equilibriation after about a week that brought me up to 75% of the battery life, a week or so later the regular battery life has returned: I regularly get 48+ hours on a charge with each battery, so it seems to have "figured itself out". Perhaps there were other update-related things going on in the background, I don't know. I have not done a factory reset, and the only app that I uninstalled was Accuweather (I've since reinstalled it), as the battery monitor suggested that at one point it was using a large percentage of the battery.
03-18-2016 08:44 AM
03-18-2016 08:54 AM