I bought new Nokia phone and they told me to charge it 8 hours because it is the first time I charge, but in the phone%26#39;s manual there is no such thing... So who is wrong?
Answers:
The rep is still thinking of the older Ni-MH batteries. Those batteries had to be charged a certain amount of time before the first use in order to prevent a "memory" effect. With the newer Li-Ion and Li-Polymer, you no longer have to charge them for a certain amount of time. They so not have the "memory" effect that the older batteries did. Charge the battery until it is full, but let the battery run down until it dies on its own before charging it again. Do this twice to condition the battery. After that, you can charge it at any time you wish. there is no such thing as this, just charge the phone until it says fully charged. older batteries, you would have to, but now, the batteries used advanced tech so you dont have to. just dont use a car charger for the first 24 hours and never keep it on for more than 30 40 minutes. Neither is wrong. Does your manual tell you not to charge your phone?
Most phones come with a nominal charge on the battery right from the box. It%26#39;s adviseable to plug it in and fully charge it before normal use.
If you have a lithium-ion battery, the reason for this suggestion is that these kinds of batteries can go into what is called a deep-discharge, where the battery will require more time to fully recharge.
Check out this link for more information on lithium batteries:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/lithium-ion... No one is necessarily wrong. The clerks/salespeople usually, from their own experiences will recommend this.
My manual for my Nokia 6130 tells me to use up the remaining battery power (usually it already low in a new phone), then to fully recharge the battery for about 6-8 hours.
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