• After 15+ years, we've made a big change: Android Forums is now Early Bird Club. Learn more here.

Galaxy Note 3 - battery life

I am looking for any information on the current status of the Note 3s battery life. Mine seems to drain after 6-7 hours. I've reset the phone and the SD card. Any links or info. I was going to buy an extended battery. I got the phone at the end of Febuary. I don't use many apps.
 
Battery on mine is around a day and a half standby. or a day tops with 3 hours of screen-on time. remove Google Play or 'turn off' Google apps and use Samsung's apps and you'd be amazed at the performance and battery. Google apps are battery and data-draining vampires. especially on a device meant to run Samsung software. the two app stores (Samsung Apps vs. Google Play) seem to fight for memory and sync causing lag and the usual issues that make people hate TouchWiz so much, but if you remove one of the two offenders, your choice, TouchWiz is actually pretty nice.

Larger batteries (ZeroLemon) make it impossible to use a nice case for the Note 3 and also add so much bulk to turn an already large phone into the proverbial Motorola DynaTAC 800TX of the 21st century. and that only to treat the symptom instead of the larger problem, that being Google's incessant nature to phone home and chew through data plans and consume battery like the energy vampire of Buzz Lightyear cartoons.

Check the battery stats at the time you get the low battery alert (Settings-->general tab-->battery) and i will bet that either 'Google Services' or 'Google Play Services' is at the top.
 
I am looking for any information on the current status of the Note 3s battery life. Mine seems to drain after 6-7 hours. I've reset the phone and the SD card. Any links or info. I was going to buy an extended battery. I got the phone at the end of Febuary. I don't use many apps.

Indeed. Once a battery is experiencing a great reduction of battery on time after some months or a year, it would be quite sad if someone had to travel a long way just to get their battery replaced, instead of simply replacing it yourself in under 30 seconds. Just hope & pray that nothing urgent needs your attention via the phone at that time if you only have one phone.

Or you could just ignore the severely injured battery and witness the horror unfold right under your eyes (try to hold a smile while the horror is occurring)

Heres a video of an iPhone losing 30% in an hour without doing anything. You can see the battery status & the accompanying time on the screen.

1:48 PM 84%
1:54 PM 79%
2:17 PM 72%
2:18 PM 70%
2:24 PM 65%
2:31 PM 63%
2:38 PM 59%
2:40 PM 58%
2:48 PM 52%

What's on my iPhone
 
Ironically despite me being against the sealed battery idea, i was once a proud user of both an iPhone 3GS that was two years old, and later two iPhone 4's. neither had issues with battery regardless of their age. since the iPhone 3GS is the most often seen here in town, i'm surprised they're holding charge at all. they're pretty ancient these days.

My father uses an even older iPhone 3. not the GS. just the iPhone 3. he uses it tons to email and uses Safari. unless the person who gave it to him had the battery replaced by Apple, it's holding a great charge even as old as it is. my Nokia 5185's battery was too far gone in 2009, but not bad for a phone made in 1998 with its OEM battery.

Funny thing is, Android matures at a much faster rate than Apple or anyone else, so most of us wouldn't even hold onto our phones for more than one year before buying the 'Next Big Thing' and therefore would never go outside the specified lifetime of the stock battery.

So let's see...i signed up for VZW which got me the Samsung Galaxy S3, and i upgraded to the S4 (which i bought outright) 6 months later, then a month after that, the Note 3 became a 'free' upgrade via Verizon EDGE. i might get either the S5 (for the waterproofing, my Note 3 has already had the water sensors tripped by sweat in my pocket and once shorted out and rebooted itself at work) or the Note 4 depending on how much i save and how long it takes for the Note 4 to launch. not a big fan of the charger port 'flap' that you have to pull out on the S5.
 
Ironically despite me being against the sealed battery idea, i was once a proud user of both an iPhone 3GS that was two years old, and later two iPhone 4's. neither had issues with battery regardless of their age. since the iPhone 3GS is the most often seen here in town, i'm surprised they're holding charge at all. they're pretty ancient these days.

My father uses an even older iPhone 3. not the GS. just the iPhone 3. he uses it tons to email

all can be summed up quite easily as you mentioned "iPhone 3". It's quite alarming to see a phones battery get killed so quickly as in the video which I presume is an iPhone or iPhone 5s. All have examples which lag hard and can & will freeze. Unless people are admitting that the battery usage and lag are caused by how the people are using them?

Indeed. Once a battery is experiencing a great reduction of battery on time after some months or a year, it would be quite sad if someone had to travel a long way just to get their battery replaced, instead of simply replacing it yourself in under 30 seconds. Just hope & pray that nothing urgent needs your attention via the phone at that time if you only have one phone.

Or you could just ignore the severely injured battery and witness the horror unfold right under your eyes (try to hold a smile while the horror is occurring)

1:48 PM 84%
1:54 PM 79%
2:17 PM 72%
2:18 PM 70%
2:24 PM 65%
2:31 PM 63%
2:38 PM 59%
2:40 PM 58%
2:48 PM 52%

What's on my iPhone
 
i think the problem with the 5 and 5S are due to iOS 7's background stuff. it adds in a kind of background sync and auto-update similar to the same feature in Google Play Store on Android. previous versions of iOS were immune and of course, the 3 and 3GS don't support iOS 7. there's plenty of battery life concerns on iOS 7 despite the fact that during the time i used iOS 7 (which was automatically put onto my iPad 3 and iPhone 4 without my permission) it seemed to charge faster and even last longer. but i never had a 5 or 5S which is where most of the complaints are coming from.
 
I am looking for any information on the current status of the Note 3s battery life. Mine seems to drain after 6-7 hours. I've reset the phone and the SD card. Any links or info. I was going to buy an extended battery. I got the phone at the end of Febuary. I don't use many apps.

To stay on topic, it depends how you use it. You don't need to be using any applications but just be looking at the screen on full brightness and Web Browsing full time or watching youtube full time with the screen on full brightness to get you to 0% in no time.

Gaming will definitely finish your battery in that time when it's not plugged into the charger.

If you're working or doing something which doesn't require you to have the screen on all the time then you'll be amazed at how long one charge lasts.
 
Back
Top Bottom