Statement regarding battery usage
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Hi all!
Quick update about the battery usage of the app.
I am working with HERE quite a lot to resolve the issues. This has for now resulted in an upcoming update 4.3.3 in which some critical issues have been resolved.The excessive temperature has been resolved for all devices we tested on Having less heat being generated has a lot of positive side effects for the phone in general. Especially stuff like charging (which generates heat) will be easier for the phone.
Unfortunately, the battery drain itself hasn't yet improved on all devices. We are working together to investigate why this is the case. Therefore we expect that quite some users will be very happy with the 4.3.3 update but definitely not all just yet!
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@Corjan-Meijerink Would it be useful to compile a list of phones that are and are not affected by excessive battery drain?
My iPhone 11 mounted on a QuadLock wireless charger does not suffer from excessive battery drain, in fact it always shows a positive charge after navigating. -
@Nick-Carthew my Samsung S20 5G has suffered overheating but charging from the Quadlock wireless charger has generally not been an issue.
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@RetiredWingMan my Samsung S20FE mounted on a wireless charging quadlock dus not have the overheating problem but charging wireless resulted in a big battery drain. So much that it couldn't keep up with an all day drive
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Nah, we do not need to keep a list of devices here
Just released the statement about the work we are doing! -
I’m not even sure it’s device specific.
As an example, this weekend my wife and I both used MRA via our Chigees on our iPhone 15 Pro Max phones. Both using same iOS and MRA version, and version of offline maps. Obviously both using the same route. Both set off with 100% battery and not connected to chargers. On arrival after 3.5 hours she had 20% remaining, I had 50%. We both charged to 100% during lunch. After the return journey, not identical route to the outbound but similar in mileage and time, we were both only down to 80%.
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@Marinus-van-Deudekom out of interest, do you use the direct wired charger or the one that plugs into a USB port? The direct wired charger is supposed to put out a much higher charging current.
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@RetiredWingMan I recently changed it to a usb Port with quick charging. Tomorrow I'll find out if that will be a difference
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@Nick-Carthew said in Statement regarding battery usage:
@Corjan-Meijerink Would it be useful to compile a list of phones that are and are not affected by excessive battery drain?
It would be good, but I can see why Corjan says 'Nah!'. There are so many variables at play that it may be quite difficult to pin it down. Some factors:
- the device
- the OS version
- the battery (is it new, is it 5 years old?)
- the charger (low power, high power, wireless, closeness to wireless charger)
- the charging cable
- the actual route
- the route options (traffic updates, offline, etc)
- the display intensity (often driven by the strength of sunlight hitting it)
- light/dark display mode
- other apps running
That's just the ones I can think of in 3 minutes. There will be others.
To pin it down, you need to restrict all but one of the variables, and then run a lot of live tests. And repeat. On several devices.
I've done such testing, and if you can test on a bench then you can pin it down a bit better. You need something called a 'dummy battery' which allows you to dynamically measure the current being taken from the battery (now a measurable power source inserted instead of the battery). But this is an app to be used on the road too, for confirmation of test results. Nightmare.
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@Marinus-van-Deudekom did a test today result
2 times 105 km drive starting with 100% battery after the trip it took 20% battery and 25% battery on the trip home so its better but still need improvement. Since 355 is not yet out for Android it was version 348 -
@Marinus-van-Deudekom 4.3.3 (355) is available for Android beta testers.
Version 348 is 4.3.2 and has no changes at all regarding battery usage (this is the current public release) -
@Corjan-Meijerink hi Corjan. Yesterday when I left home in the morning I looked for the 355 update and at that time it was not available. Somewhere Yesterday my phone did an auto update so I don't when that happened. So maybe in the way back home it was already updated to 355. Is there a possibility to check when the update was installed
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@Marinus-van-Deudekom in Android, go to the play store, account, manage apps & device, manage and it will, display the last time it was updated.
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@RetiredWingMan Sorry my friend that will only tell you when the app was last created. In this case october 28th. Since it was installed somewhere yesterday during the afternoon this will only say when the Devs created it.
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@Marinus-van-Deudekom said in Statement regarding battery usage:
@RetiredWingMan Sorry my friend that will only tell you when the app was last created. In this case october 28th. Since it was installed somewhere yesterday during the afternoon this will only say when the Devs created it.
This app will tell you when an app was last updated:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.bluckapps.appinfomanagerI'm sure there are others, but this one has minimal permissions & can be used offline if you're worried about nefarious data collection.
The only permission it requires is to read info about other apps on your device. -
@Marinus-van-Deudekom it works on my tablet and phone ....