On Fri, Jun 04, 2021 at 04:07:20AM -0700, 'P Wat' via OsmAnd wrote:
[image: OsmAndPowerDrainScreenshot_20210530-184241.png]Has OsmAnd power consumption been creeping up? I first noticed the problem several months ago, but have only recently had the opportunity to analyse it. Just normal daily use receiving mail, texts, making the odd phone call, running Osmand as a map, the consumption is OK. Battery lasts all day, and more. Running OsmAnd for navigation (route instructions, etc) it eats my battery in an unacceptable time, eg 45 minutes. A coupe of years ago I was able to navigate for 8 or 10 hours without problems See pic attached. Technical info:- Phone Motorola Moto X Force Android 7.0 Osmand+ 3.9.10 Osmand Nautical 1.0 Osmand contour lines 1.0
First question: Is the phone today the same phone from "a couple of years ago"?
Second question: If it is the same phone, is it *also* the same battery from "a couple of years ago"?
These are important facts to know, because if it is a different phone today than "a couple of years ago" you can't reliably compare "runtime a couple years ago" to "runtime today".
Also, if it is the same battery (which would also mean same phone) then the batterie's capacity will have dropped in the interveaning years, so the battery will be less able to stand up to heavy current usage now as compared to a couple years ago. Also, I have seen it mentioned before in various places on the internet that the GPS receivers in most phones are fairly power hungry, and if the battery is not as strong today as it was a couple years ago (I am assuming same battery here) then it might very well be able to support the low current drain of "normal daily use" but no longer have the capacity to handle the high current drain of also running the GPS receiver. Android normally keeps the GPS receivers powered down (even if you don't explicity 'turn off GPS') until some app. requests a location fix. But in the case of Osmand, when navigating, it will need to be requesting constant location fixes, which will directly equate to higher current needs out of the battery (because Android can't keep the GPS receiver turned off for as long). So, if your battery is several years old, then what you see on the graph you attached could simply indicate an old, and thereby a significantly smaller capacity than when new, battery. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "OsmAnd" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/osmand/20210604171940.GT16793%40d820.dp100.com.
