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appleguy123

macrumors 604
Original poster
Apr 1, 2009
6,867
2,555
15 minutes in the future
My iPad Pro 12.9 inch's battery is draining while connected to the 29 USBC charger. This never happened to me on iOS 9. I know it's an early beta, but I was wondering if fast charging isn't supported in this beta, or if it's all the work that iOS 10 is doing in the background on my photos that's taking up a lot power.
 

ashindnile

macrumors 6502
Jul 16, 2015
385
156
That can only happen if the cable is faulty, or if you're trying to charge using a laptop, or a lower Amp charge source..
 

rigormortis

macrumors 68000
Jun 11, 2009
1,813
229
Connect it to a Mac, and run system report, and check usb / usb current to find out how much power its asking for.
It should say 500+1600=2100 ma
 

ashindnile

macrumors 6502
Jul 16, 2015
385
156
It's definitely connected to the real (and 2 week old) Apple 29W USB C charger with the official Apple cable. It never drained while in use before iOS 10.
I didn't suggest you had fake accessories, just that they might be faulty ;)
 

virusman

macrumors newbie
Jun 20, 2016
1
2
My iPhone is also charging slowly and overheating in the process. I've used Instruments to see what's going on and it turns out it's running photoanalysisd at 100% CPU for hours when connected to external power. If you have a large photo gallery, it's most likely the same in your case. Also, it seems like it's doing that indefinitely due to a bug that doesn't let it actually finish analyzing the photo gallery.
 

alecgold

macrumors 65816
Oct 11, 2007
1,490
1,044
NLD
I didn't suggest you had fake accessories, just that they might be faulty ;)
Nah, don't think it is faulty. I've got two USB-c-->lightning cables and two 29W chargers. Both do work perfectly with my wife iPP 12.9 and not with mine. Seems like there is a bug at iOS10 for fast charging the 12.9".
 

jclardy

macrumors 601
Oct 6, 2008
4,233
4,577
That can only happen if the cable is faulty, or if you're trying to charge using a laptop, or a lower Amp charge source..
Or if there is a bug in the software - the lightning port negotiates the charging speed with the power brick, if iOS 10 has a bug it will just default to the safer amperage. Given the lack of QA on iPad stuff in the iOS 10 beta I would guess they missed this.
 
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