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I am a nexus 7 owner since September and today I had a misbehavior. I plugged it, as usual, to recharge the battery. It charged up to 36% and now it still says it's charging but it never moves from that percentage.

How can I fix my device?

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Could try turning it off and on again? Charging whilst off? Charging via PC using USB? – Peanut Dec 30 '12 at 17:29
I was originally charging it via USB. Then I tried to use the wall plug. I still have to try with the device powered off. – mariosangiorgio Dec 30 '12 at 17:54
If that doesn't work out, it might help to remove the battery for a few minutes, then put it back in. – Izzy Dec 30 '12 at 18:43
It doesn't work. How can I remove the battery from a nexus 7? – mariosangiorgio Dec 30 '12 at 19:09
You can't remove the battery that easy. I guess there is some app that's consuming too much power, and with normal usb charging it pulls only 500 mA. Reboot the device and try again. – ott-- Dec 30 '12 at 20:41
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2 Answers

up vote 0 down vote accepted

I solved my issue using a 2A charger instead of my phone 1A charger or the USB port that provides only 0.5A.

I am sure I have been able to charge my nexus with all the power sources, but maybe I left it on charge all night long.

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As you have found, a bigger charger helps. Also check to see what is running. One graphics intensive game I play tends to consume 25% of the battery / hour when I have everything turned up. Even the stock charger barely keeps up with it. – jwernerny Jan 4 at 18:43
I wasn't paying. I was just surfing the web, reading the news and interacting on social networks – mariosangiorgio Jan 4 at 19:55

Try calibrating (Completely Discharge battery), by playing games or watching videos. Once battery dries try switching your nexus on untill your device refuses to do so. The charge it from a wall charger. See if it works. I have a motorola MB855 , i generally claibrate 5-10 times in a month. That keeps its backup and life healthy.

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"Calibrating" a Li-ion battery the way you do will cause the battery life to be reduced drastically. Don't do this. – Chinmay Kanchi Dec 31 '12 at 11:50
I hav'nt faced any single problems past 6 years, either with laptop or mobile phones. I am using mobiles since 11 years when we have NiCd batteries, claibrating batteries will help you in taking full advantage of your battery. – See-Sharp Dec 31 '12 at 17:07
Well, if you want to go against everything the mobile manufacturers say, more power to you! Enjoy your amazing battery life! – Chinmay Kanchi Dec 31 '12 at 23:19
@ChinmayKanchi : Kid ... Read this support.apple.com/kb/HT1490. Calibration is Highly Recommended by HP and Apple for their devices. Even HP laptop box comes with instruction to calibrate battery on regular intervals. And these days Mobile and Laptop batteries are both Li-On battery. Only sizes and mAH are different. If calibrating is considered as bad idea , then the laptop or tab manufacturer will suggest you to operate the device while charging. Instead they suggest to use it on battery as max as possible. Over charging or online usage is always said to be avoided – See-Sharp Jan 1 at 19:25

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