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iPhone 5 v. iPhone 6 Battery Cycle Count - Questions

I am using two apps from the app store called "Battery Percentage - Your Device Doctor" and "Battery Life: Check Internal Battery...." on an iPhone 5 and iPhone 6. The iPhone 5 (called just "5" from now on) is 3 years old now and the iPhone 6 (called just "6" from now on) is 1 year old now. Both 5 and 6 are updated to the latest iOS updates. 5 has mostly been plugged in throughout the day - which I admit could have contributed to it's poor battery health as of now. Meanwhile, 6 has been charged, on average, 1.5 times a day and has remained off the charger for the majority of the day.


Anyway, back to those apps I was testing: according to both of these apps (which give the same information):


5:

Battery Cycle Count: 427

Battery Health: BAD-VERY BAD.


6:

Battery Cycle Count: 258

Battery Health: GOOD-PERFECT.


Here are my questions:

1. I have received contradictory information on the maximum battery cycle count for the 5 and 6. I have heard that the 5 has a maximum of 500 cycles before it experiences a 20% degradation and the 6 has a maximum of 1000 cycles. Other websites have stated that all iPhones have a maximum of 500 cycles and only the macbooks have a 1000 cycle maximum. Which is true?


2. If the cycle count is 500 cycles max, why is the 5's battery health rated as BAD to VERY BAD? It's still below the 500 maximum so in theory it should not have experienced any degradation before it hits 500 right?


3. Also, I am now worried about 6. It is currently at 258 cycles and is rated as GOOD to PERFECT. Will it suffer the same fate as the 5? So, in other words, can I expect only another 200 cycles before the battery goes bad? Or does the 6 have a stronger battery than the 5? If so, how much stronger?


4. Recently, due to my (sad) hobby of Pokemon Go, I have now begun charging my 6 about twice a day. Should I slow down a bit? I should mention that I'm getting rid of the 6 in about 7 months and moving onto the iPhone 7 (in late March-early April) so do you think I can charge my phone twice a day until April 2017 without battery failure?



If you need any more hardware info from me let me know.

iPhone 6, iOS 9.3.5, null

Posted on Sep 5, 2016 10:01 PM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Sep 6, 2016 6:21 AM

Hi


Apple states that the battery in iPhone is designed to retain up to 80% of its original capacity at 500 complete charge cycles.


(Note that this appears to be at odds with another statement that "Apple lithium-ion batteries are designed to hold at least 80% of their original capacity for a high number of charge cycles, which varies depending on the product").


It is not necessarily the case that any given battery will need to be replaced after 500 charge cycles.


Equally, an iPhone may benefit from battery service after far fewer than 500 charge cycles (for example, if capacity has been affected by use, charging or storage under extreme ambient temperatures).


If and when you become concerned about reduced performance, arrange for Apple to inspect your iPhone (perhaps via a Genius Bar appointment).


Depending on timing and usage, iPhone battery service might be covered under warranty, an AppleCare / AppleCare+ plan or consumer law.


Otherwise, Apple (either directly or via Apple Authorised Service Providers) offers a chargeable battery service.


More information:

http://www.apple.com/batteries/why-lithium-ion/

http://www.apple.com/batteries/maximizing-performance/

http://www.apple.com/batteries/service-and-recycling/

iPhone Service Pricing - Apple Support

18 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Sep 6, 2016 6:21 AM in response to Need_Answers_plz

Hi


Apple states that the battery in iPhone is designed to retain up to 80% of its original capacity at 500 complete charge cycles.


(Note that this appears to be at odds with another statement that "Apple lithium-ion batteries are designed to hold at least 80% of their original capacity for a high number of charge cycles, which varies depending on the product").


It is not necessarily the case that any given battery will need to be replaced after 500 charge cycles.


Equally, an iPhone may benefit from battery service after far fewer than 500 charge cycles (for example, if capacity has been affected by use, charging or storage under extreme ambient temperatures).


If and when you become concerned about reduced performance, arrange for Apple to inspect your iPhone (perhaps via a Genius Bar appointment).


Depending on timing and usage, iPhone battery service might be covered under warranty, an AppleCare / AppleCare+ plan or consumer law.


Otherwise, Apple (either directly or via Apple Authorised Service Providers) offers a chargeable battery service.


More information:

http://www.apple.com/batteries/why-lithium-ion/

http://www.apple.com/batteries/maximizing-performance/

http://www.apple.com/batteries/service-and-recycling/

iPhone Service Pricing - Apple Support

Sep 6, 2016 5:22 AM in response to Need_Answers_plz

1) I thought it was 400 cycles for an iPhone battery but it could be 500. It's certainly not 1000.


2) The battery starts to degrade from the very first time you charge it. It is supposed to maintain 80% charge for the 500 cycles. After that, it should be replaced. Individual batteries may vary. Three years for an iPhone battery is pretty good, in my opinion.


3) Yes.


4) No one knows precisely how long your battery will last. If it fails within a year, it's covered by warranty. If it fails after that, you pay to have it replaced. Just because an app says that your battery is BAD doesn't mean that you have to replace it instantly. Do keep in mind that older lithium ion batteries can start to swell, though.

Sep 6, 2016 7:01 AM in response to Need_Answers_plz

There's a factor that hasn't been mentioned. Batteries also degrade over time, independently of the number of charge cycles. My wife's 4S is over 4 years old, only has 170 full charge cycles (she doesn't use it much) and the battery capacity is 78%.


My iPhone 6, 2 years old, shows 468 cycles, capacity 95%.


On a totally different plane, my 2003 Prius, now 13 years old with 100,000 miles still shows battery capacity near its new value. Its traction battery is NiMH, not Lithium. That probably makes a difference.

Nov 20, 2016 1:34 PM in response to Need_Answers_plz

My iPhone 5S which is 3 years and 2 months old was measured at the Genius bar with 81% capacity and 1051 cycles.


Pretty good I think, but the battery occasionally suddenly died, or experienced large voltage drops when the battery indicator was displaying 15% and sometimes 20%, just after 3 years. It would shut down and go to blank black screen with central spinner (at 10-20% indicated on battery level), as it powered down to request a recharge.


Needless to say this unpredictability when the battery would die, necessitated a new change in battery.

Nov 23, 2016 2:08 AM in response to Jonathan UK

Perhaps the battery is the issue with my iPhone 5 which requires a hard reset fairly frequently when left in sleep generally - it doesn't wake up.


I have the following from iBackupbot:

Cycle count: 953

Design capacity:1430

Full charge capacity:1300

Battery Life App on the phone says 'Good' just 9.7% wear level


However, the phone did get wet once, did the whole rice in a zip-loc bag, and I hard to replace the camera which I did myself, which did require the battery to be removed to install the camera. For quite a while after that it was working fine, but these crashes are happening more regularly. Despite the above results, my suspicion is the battery needs replacing.

Nov 23, 2016 5:48 AM in response to bold_seagull

bold_seagull wrote:


However, the phone did get wet once, did the whole rice in a zip-loc bag, and I hard to replace the camera which I did myself, which did require the battery to be removed to install the camera. For quite a while after that it was working fine, but these crashes are happening more regularly. Despite the above results, my suspicion is the battery needs replacing.

My suspicion is that it is delayed damage from the wetting it got. There's also a chance it is corrupted software. Try backing it up, then restore it and set it up as New. Don't install anything, and see if the symptoms go away. If they don't it's some sort of hardware problem. If they do, restore the backup and see if they come back. They may not.

Dec 20, 2016 1:27 AM in response to Lawrence Finch

I've just bought a used, gradeC iPhone 6 that is in excellent condition and has a free send back service if I'm not entirely happy. Battery Health App has the battery at GOOD, 6.1% wear level. The battery data is:

Battery health GOOD, 94% (1700/1810mAh)

Cycle count: 473


Other than the cycle count, everything is okay for 2 year old phone? I shouldn't be worried should I, or necessarily expecting a low count on a used phone?


Thanks

Dec 20, 2016 6:16 AM in response to Lawrence Finch

Thanks Lawrence. It was completely activation unlocked and sim free. I've set the phone up and enabled my own Find My iPhone so it all looks okay. I've tested many of the features, and other than the crescent moon on the front camera which isn't impacting on the images, I'm pretty pleased. Battery seems to be fine, so I'll stick with this one I think.

Dec 20, 2016 10:01 AM in response to Lawrence Finch

My daughter's phone is showing an activation lock - she's been using it for a year and a half (it was a warranty replacement direct from AT&T). She was on the phone with apple support for TWO hours last night and did everything they told her. It hasn't been jailbroken and my laptop has never been used to jailbreak anything. She suspended some security things on my laptop. Finally did a hard reset and the phone still isn't working. Apple says they can't help anymore and AT&T won't help. Any advice?

Dec 20, 2016 10:08 AM in response to sohollydolly

Activation Lock and inability to activate are not the same thing. Activation Lock appears as a dialog that asks you to enter an Apple ID and password. If you don't recognized the partly redacted Apple ID email address you have encountered Activation Lock. You can also check if it is activation locked here: Activation Lock Status Check


If the error is unable to connect to the activation server that is not activation lock.


To better help troubleshoot, which problem is it?

iPhone 5 v. iPhone 6 Battery Cycle Count - Questions

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