keithr0 <me@bugger.off.com.au> wrote:
On 21/10/2025 2:59 pm, Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
keithr0 <me@bugger.off.com.au> wrote:
So I have a new up to date phone, the old phone, and $70 cash in the
pocket, good result.
I might have thought the good result was not dying in a house fire
started by a dodgy phone battery exploding.
AFAIK, there have been 2 cases of them burning, not exploding, and not
fast charging them to 100% fixes the problem.
Yeah fixes the problem so well that Google are paying people to buy
another phone. Anyway, just stating my view, you can choose your
own risks to take.
I'm increasingly waryThe vast majority of fires have come from cheap dodgy Chinese e-bikes
of charging anything with Li-Ion batteries. There's a lot of this
happening, and it just shows you still can't even trust the big
brands.
and scooters, or incorrect chargers.
Yeah I'd be wary of those to, especially any charging set-up where
the batteries have so little protection you have to connect the
correct charger to avoid over-charging them. Consumer equipment
should have battery management in the device to avoid that with any
Li-Ion device.
But there are still too many phones starting fires as well. In NSW
alone 10 recorded in 2022 and 13 in 2023, plus probably plenty of
unrecorded cases. Apparantly numbers of fires have kept going up
since then, and I've personally heard accounts of two fires that
burnt a house to the ground - one cordless drill battery that the
owner couldn't get out of the house quickly enough after it started
go, and an unattended laptop.
https://www.fire.nsw.gov.au/gallery/resources/SARET/FRNSW%20LiB%20fire%20data%202022-23.pdf
pg. 13
Phones are especially risky since many will have them charging
in their bedroom, increasing the risk of being unable to escape
the fire that they start.
When I was into RC model cars,
there were plenty of reports of NiCads exploding when charged too far
and too fast.
Did the NiCds shoot out flames that set fire to the house like
Li-Ion, or just go pop?
keithr0 <me@bugger.off.com.au> wrote
Rod Speed wrote
keithr0 <me@bugger.off.com.au> wrote
I have a Pixel 6a, I've had it for nearly 4 years, I paid $425 for
it at JB, but it came with a free ChromeCast which I sold for $50 on
eBay so the phone cost just $375. Recently, I got an email from
Google saying that it had battery problems and would be limited to
80% charge, but, in recompense, I could either have a payment of
USD100, or USD150 off a new phone.
I chose to buy a Pixel 9a, which, with the discount, cost $575, with
the idea of flogging the old phone on eBay for maybe $250-300. Two
things became a problem with that, Google put a message on the lock
screen saying "Battery replacement required", and the TV news
carried a scare story that all Pixel 6as were little hand grenades
about to explode into flames in your pocket. That put it's value
down to $100 or less. But then another email from Google said that a
mistake had been made and I was due for some more money, then they
sent me $645.
So I have a new up to date phone, the old phone, and $70 cash in the
pocket, good result.
-aMate of mine got one of those, and the steaming turd kept shutting
down, claiming it had overheated even in the winter when it wasnt
in the sun or car and that choice review finds its a steaming turd
I've owned 3 Pixels, and a Nexus, never had a problem with any of them.
You just listed the problem you had with the 3a and you gave only just
got the 9a which has that problem.
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