Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

AutoModerator t1_j4e5kj4 wrote

Your post has been automatically filtered for manual review as it looks like you might be posting about battery issues. If this is the case, your post will be removed.

I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please contact the moderators of this subreddit if you have any questions or concerns.

1

Dombfrsh t1_j4ehte6 wrote

No

1

ItzMeShadow69 OP t1_j4eiemh wrote

If no what should i do? is it because of ios 16.2 because I have heard many are facing battery issue after this update.

0

carlostsang t1_j4fts1n wrote

Depends on what phone you got

1

ItzMeShadow69 OP t1_j4fu73z wrote

I have iPhone 14 pro max

1

carlostsang t1_j4fuj3g wrote

In that case if your always on display is set to on then it’s normal

1

ItzMeShadow69 OP t1_j4fyn2u wrote

Do you face battery drain over night and if yes how much

1

carlostsang t1_j4g6fwc wrote

I don’t keep track of it it’s just another thing to occupy your mind. Just charge when below 30 and unplug above 80. The always on display only gonna drain 1% battery per hour ( similar battery drain amount on android) if you want to save more just turn on battery saving mode, turn off always on display, turn on airplane mode, turn brightness to minimum, deny every optional privacy settings, turn location services off and turn off background activity

1

TWYFAN97 t1_j4ejik7 wrote

Yes very normal most people drain say 5-10% on average each night if not on a charger. The radios in the phone and apps/notifications will still have some impact on idle battery drain that’s to be expected.

What’s not normal is say draining 20% overnight maybe on an android device that’s normal but iOS is efficient enough that’s not an issue.

0

Chronixx t1_j4g5kzc wrote

That’s not normal. My 12 Pro Max might lose a % overnight, it sips nothing at all. Always been like this as far back as I can remember with all of my iPhones, iOS has always been legendary for its standby time.

Last time they actually tested standby time (iPhone 7 Plus), they claim 15 days of it. Have to assume it’s at least that if not significantly greater with the advances of battery size and their SoCs in the 7 years since that phone’s release

1

ARandomPerson209834 t1_j4ok3p9 wrote

My iPhone SE 2020 (81% battery health, or max capacity at 1475 mAh out of 1821 mAh) drained 25% in 19 hours. That's 1.3% per hour. Theoretically it could last about 4 days of standby time.

Meanwhile the newer iPhone 13 Pro Max could last a couple weeks of standby time, and the older 5s will gulp down battery quicker.

It all depends on the model of your phone. Losing a percentage overnight is undoubtedly legitimate given the plus size of that phone and the battery health, however a 5~15% overnight drain is typical and completely acceptable. That said, leaving your phone to charge overnight is the best approach and saves you from unnecessary worries.

1

Chronixx t1_j4u5g3h wrote

It’s not normal. That same support article states a fresh iPhone 7 would last 9 days. That’s less than half a percent every hour. 3-4% over an 8 hour period but I’d expect much less than that. Batteries and the way iPhones consume their power have been become more efficient since 2016.

I can also confidently say I’ve never seen what I would consider to be excessive battery drain on any iPhone I’ve ever had without some sort of software issue behind it.

Found an article of someone who made their iPhone 5 survive nearly a week between charges (with some pretty unrealistic usage) which has to suggest the battery was using pretty much nothing in standby time. iPhones have always been legendary for standby time, like I said above

1