While many of us now use mobile phones in place of land-line phones in
our homes, these mobile phones come with Lithium Batteries which require
some maintenance as long as they are used.
STEP 1: Increase Time between Charges
Turn the phone off. This will probably be the most
effective and simple way of conserving your battery’s power. Why? This
will help conserve energy and also charge your phone. If you don't plan
on answering the phone while you're sleeping or after business hours,
just turn it off. Do the same if you are in an area with no reception
(such as a subway or remote area, since constantly searching for service
depletes the battery fairly quickly.) Some phones have an
automatic
power save feature, but it takes about 30 minutes with no service to
kick in. By then, much battery power has been used. If you don't need to
receive or make calls but are using a smartphone as a PDA, disable the
phone functionality (flight mode).
Stop searching for a signal. When you are in an area
with poor or no signal, your phone will constantly look for a better
connection, and will use up all your power doing so. This is easily
understood if you have ever forgotten to turn off your phone on a
flight. The best way to ensure longer battery life is to make sure you
have a great signal where you use your phone. If you don't have a
perfect signal, get a cell phone repeater which will amplify the signal
to provide near perfect reception anywhere.
Switch the vibrate function off on your phone, using just the ring tone. The vibrate function uses additional battery power. Keep the ring tone volume as low as possible.
Turn off your phone's back light. The back light is
what makes the phone easier to read in bright light or outside. However,
the light also uses battery power. If you can get by without it, your
battery will last longer. If you have to use the back light, many phones
will let you set the amount of time to leave the back light on. Shorten
that amount of time. Usually, one or two seconds will be sufficient.
Some phones have an ambient light sensor, which can turn off the back
light in bright conditions and enable it in darker ones.
Avoid using unnecessary features. If you know it will
be a while before your phone’s next charge, don’t use the camera or
connect to the Internet. Flash photography can drain your battery
especially quickly.
Keep calls short. This is obvious, but how many times
have you heard someone on their mobile phone say, "I think my battery’s
dying," and then continue their conversation for several minutes?
Sometimes, the dying battery is just an excuse to get off the phone (and
a good one, at that), but if you really need to conserve the battery,
limit your talk time.
Turn off Bluetooth. It will drain your battery very quickly.
Same goes for WIFI, GPS, and infrared capabilities, if your phone has these features built in. Keep them off except when you need them to save power.
Turn the brightness of the display to the lowest setting possible.
Use GSM rather than 3G - Using your phone in 3G / Dual
Mode will drain the battery quicker than if you just use GSM mode - have
a look at your phones spec and you'll see it will quote two different
battery life times - normally 50% more for pure GSM use.
With a smartphone, avoid using moving or animated pictures or videos for your background. Animated backgrounds will drain the battery faster.
Use a black background whenever possible. AMOLED screens use a lot less power displaying black instead of white. When web browsing use sites like Blackl that display a black Google background instead of white.