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My battery isn't lasting like it used to...
iPods use Lithium Ion batteries. The Video iPod uses an enhanced variant of the Lithium Ion known as Lithium Polymer.
The reason Lithium Ion batteries are used is they have a great energy-to-weight ratio,
and they create no direct memory effect (like nickel cadmium batteries
have a tendency to). Beyond that, if
they remain unused for a period of time they have a slow native drain rate also called "self-discharge" (5% per month) and will still have a charge left unused, over an extended period of time.
The draw back to using this battery type is that it is subject permanent
capacity loss due to nothing but ageing. Just left on a shelf unused a
lithium ion battery will lose 6% of capacity to store electricity each
year since it was manufactured. This capacity loss will occur even if the
batttery is unused. That type of loss is actually much worse in an iPod
because the battery is held inside a small, packed, heat bound compartment.
At 77° fahrenhiet a Lithium Ion battery will lose between 20% and 25% of its ability to store electricity each year whether you use it or not.
However if you leave the battery a little under half charged when not in
use it will cut that permanent capacity loss by 60% to 8%, maybe 9%.
The best thing you can do to extend the life of your battery is to not
fully charge it.
The worst thing you can do to a lithium ion battery is leave it connected to a charger, or connected to your computer charging in
the iPod's case.
If you are a laptop owner don't leave it connected to the wall charger, that shortens the battery life by at least 40% a year. You are basically cooking the chemistry
out of the battery.
Your cell phone and home cordless phone also rely on Lithium Ion batteries. Don't over charge them also.
READ the Red and Blue lines above again.
Lithium ion batteries can go into a state known as "deep discharge" when left unused for 2 or more years *OR* when they are recharged so often that
they can no longer hold a charge. Actually they seem not to hold a
charge. In fact when in 'deep discharge' through rapid cycling of
charge/discharge, the battery can or will take 10 times as long to reach a full charge state.
What would be a 'normal' 20 minute charge can take five hours.
Your cell phone, iPod, home cordless phone, and Laptop all use Li-ion batteries. Do not fully charge them all the time and don't leave them on the charger all the time - it's a battery killer.
But let's say you didn't know this before now..... and you've found your iPod battery not working like it used to.
We sell and install replacements cheaply... and we dispose of the old
Lithium Ion battery environmentally responsibly through a recycling program.
These batteries are all factory new, recently manufactured and kept in a cool environment while here.
Pricing to replace a failing battery
The labor charge includes several things. It includes:
- Data Recovery - backing up all your data, music and video files in case you don't still have them and placing in safe for access back on the iPod when finished
- opening up your ipod, replacing your battery with a new one, putting
your iPod back together - partial charging and then discharging the battery in place, then charging it again to near capacity.
- moving your files back to the iPod if needed
- Shipping your finished iPod back to you.
|
Model | Part cost | Labor |
Total price includes shipping back to you |
| iPhone 1st Generation 4 or 8 GB | $18 | $55 - This is a HUGE desolder and re-solder job with small fine wires. Apple used a near poured in place battery with very fine
and short wires. | $73 |
| 6th Gen "Classic" Video iPod 80 GB | $28 | $40 | $68 |
| 6th Gen "Classic" Video iPod 160 GB | $31 | $40 | $71 |
| iPod Video iPod 30 GB | $23 | $40 | $63 |
| iPod Video iPod 60 or 80 GB | $26 | $40 | $66 |
| Nano iPod 2nd Generation | $15 | $55 - This is a HUGE desolder and re-solder job with small fine wires. Apple for this model iPod also epoxied the battery in place. | $70 |
| Nano iPod 1st Generation | $10 | $40 | $50 |
| iPod 4th Gen with Black and White screen | $15 | $40 | $55 |
| Photo iPod 4th Gen with color screen | $16 | $40 | $56 |
| Mini iPod 1st Generation | $10 | $40 | $50 |
| Mini iPod 2nd Generation | $10 | $40 | $50 |
| 3rd Generation iPod (4 buttons at top) | $17 | $40 | $57 |
I'm in Sonoma County... Northern California wine country.
If you live nearby, are traveling through or live in the San Francisco Bay Area bring your iPod to me and I can do the work while you wait or go wine tasting for a while. Send me an
email just to make sure I have on hand whatever parts your repair will require.
Call or email me
with questions or to set up a repair. You can also call, I am here most days from 8am to 8pm
Toll Free 1-877-iPod-Pro (1 - 877 - 476-3776)
Send the device to:
Frank Walburg
2145 Service Court
Santa Rosa, Ca 95403-3139
Methods of payment
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