Yep. Sounds like you case maybe defective.Normal usage of the pods there's no problem at all...great Battery life no worries. It's battery life of the case in standby mode that seems crap. But like I said...will have to test further. Tbc...
Yep. Sounds like you case maybe defective.Normal usage of the pods there's no problem at all...great Battery life no worries. It's battery life of the case in standby mode that seems crap. But like I said...will have to test further. Tbc...
Your unit is defective. I was fully charged. Last night and have been using the AirPods since 7:00am today non stop. I currently have 65 percent left on my case. I'm in logistics. So I've used many brands and types of Bluetooth. Over the last 10 or more years.
These AirPods are the first that will last all day. You must have a bad set. Sorry.
I'm not the one with AirPod trouble. I'm enjoying my new toy.Have you contacted Apple to express your concerns?
Well did a test with the airpods and case. First charging both to 100%, then switching Bluetooth off on my iPhone and not using the airpods for 24 hours.
The case lost only 2% ! (airpods still at 100%)
That seems to strongly suggest the standby connection between iPhone and case (through the W1 chip) is the culprit for the high standby drain.
Not sure what to think of this as I really do not want to have to switch off Bluetooth when not in use (I also use Bluetooth connection with my car radio).
Probably will be reason enough for me to return the airpods. That or wait for firmware or ios update of some sort to sort out the standby drain...
You should run the batteries down in the case and the pods until depleted. That way the case and pods will be calibrated and your results should improve.Well...after just about 24 hours the case battery level is now at 66% ! To reiterate that's without any use nor taking the pods out of the case. Purely standby...both the pods and case.
That just won't do. I need the pods to be ready to go and having enough juice in the case for multiple charges for extended use. Not a case battery which depletes within 3 days
I will test further by recharging the case and then switching off Bluetooth on the iPhone to see if this will have any influence.
Tbc...
Is charging the case at night when you charge your phone really such an inconvienence???
I was at 100% yesterday morning... used the Airpods on and off the last 2 days... I'd say maybe put in about 4 hours total... case is down to 57% right now at noon PST. Not great... at this rate I need to charge the case every 2 days
I've always heard that this is bad for new lithium ion batteries.You should run the batteries down in the case and the pods until depleted. That way the case and pods will be calibrated and your results should improve.
Most Apple devices are setup to stop working before the batteries get dangerously low. For example the AirPod case stops at approx 5%.My AirPods shipped early! WOO!
This doesn't sound too bad to me. I keep an apple lightning dock at my desk as an accessory charger and manual device sync base so I'll just pop the AirPods in that after work after my pencil charges.
Never thought almost every item in my life would need to be charged!
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I've always heard that this is bad for new lithium ion batteries.
Li-Ion batteries don't care about age nor do they have any kind of "memory effect" (like NiMH batteries have). But in general it's bad to use Li-Ion batteries empty as well as to charge them full because both will slightly damage them (= shortens the battery's lifetime). But Li-Ion batteries have a piece of technology that informs the host machine about the battery's charge level. It's accuracy gets worse over time and new batteries rarely are properly calibrated. Common method to calibrate that piece of fancy technology is to discharge the battery and then fully charge it. One shouldn't do that more often than once a month or few due to above mentioned reason. Also using an uncalibrated battery doesn't in any way affect the battery's lifetime or the amount of electricity it can give. The host machine just will give slightly wrong estimation of the battery's current charge level (for example the host might think that the battery has 5% left while in reality it has 15% or 0.5% or something).I've always heard that this is bad for new lithium ion batteries.
Every Li-Ion battery must have certain safety measures built-in to prevent it from exploding or otherwise falling apart. If Li-Ion battery's charge level drops low enough, it will refuse to draw energy from normal charger. But it can still be charged with special chargers (also the battery is damaged at this point but will likely continue to work, just not able hold as much charge). If the charge level drops even lower, the battery will disable itself or otherwise refuse to draw energy from any charger because the battery would burst open or explode during the charging process. Also over-charging Li-Ion battery will cause it to burst open or explode so Li-Ion batteries must have safety measures against over-charging too.Most Apple devices are setup to stop working before the batteries get dangerously low. For example the AirPod case stops at approx 5%.
Well did a test with the airpods and case. First charging both to 100%, then switching Bluetooth off on my iPhone and not using the airpods for 24 hours.
The case lost only 2% ! (airpods still at 100%)
That seems to strongly suggest the standby connection between iPhone and case (through the W1 chip) is the culprit for the high standby drain.
Try doing a total reset of the case with the Airpods inside them. Hold the button on the back for about 20 seconds, let the flight flash a few times until it stops flashing and goes white I think.
It has improved my battery I think.
Charged AirPods sitting in their case will slowly drain the case battery over time. Completely unattended, the case discharges at the rate of 10-or-so percent a day. You won’t need to charge daily, but once every two or three days is a reasonable estimate.