Back in November, I got a used iPhone 3GS.
It had been jailbroken through a number of versions of iOS.
So, Cydia had SHSH blobs on file back to 4.1.
At the time, it had iOS 5.0.1 and was running iPad baseband 6.15
This was all so it could operate on T-mobile.
I noticed that it had terrible standby time, so I came up with a repeatable test.
- Charge the battery to 100%
- Turn off all the radios: GPS, bluetooth, wifi, 3G, etc. and put it into Airplane mode.
- Now, let the phone blank its screen, but wake it up every few hours an check battery level.
- Terminate the test when you get to 20%.
I'd heard that the percent indicator on battery charge might be at fault.
So, I turned it off , and it had no effect.
I heard it might be the 6.15 baseband rom, but as I was stuck there, I hoped not.
AND, iOS 5 had a bad reputation, but the previous owner swore it ran fine for him.
I ran six tests and let's say it lasted around 13 hours.
Shut down, and doing nothing.!.!, just thirteen hours!
Clearly, this is not a good sign.
How much more badly would it do in regular service?
... to be continued ...
It had been jailbroken through a number of versions of iOS.
So, Cydia had SHSH blobs on file back to 4.1.
At the time, it had iOS 5.0.1 and was running iPad baseband 6.15
This was all so it could operate on T-mobile.
I noticed that it had terrible standby time, so I came up with a repeatable test.
- Charge the battery to 100%
- Turn off all the radios: GPS, bluetooth, wifi, 3G, etc. and put it into Airplane mode.
- Now, let the phone blank its screen, but wake it up every few hours an check battery level.
- Terminate the test when you get to 20%.
I'd heard that the percent indicator on battery charge might be at fault.
So, I turned it off , and it had no effect.
I heard it might be the 6.15 baseband rom, but as I was stuck there, I hoped not.
AND, iOS 5 had a bad reputation, but the previous owner swore it ran fine for him.
I ran six tests and let's say it lasted around 13 hours.
Shut down, and doing nothing.!.!, just thirteen hours!
Clearly, this is not a good sign.
How much more badly would it do in regular service?
... to be continued ...
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