What you need to know
- An update of the User Interface 7 causes a significant drain of battery for users of Samsung Galaxy S24 and Z Fold 6.
- Users are experiencing rapid battery discharge even during periods when the phone is not used, requiring frequent load.
- Certain bypass solutions include cleaning the cache or waiting for a week for learning the model of use.
Several people took to Samsung forums And Reddit to report important battery emptying problems which are supposed to trigger by the new UI 7 update. This has been seen specifically by the owners of the Samsung Galaxy S24 series as well as some with the Galaxy Z Fold 6 (first identified by Android police).
A IU 7 has started to deploy more widely in the past two days after several delays and even a brief break of the deployment by the company due to a “serious bug”. However, problems do not seem to end with this user interface.
A Galaxy 6 folding user on Reddit Said that their battery capacity was essentially reduced by half after the ONE UI 7 update: “I now end the day with only 20% to 25% battery, from 45 to 50% before upgrading,” they said.
The story remains the same with certain users of Galaxy S24 Ultra. They saw a huge drop in battery life since the installation of a user interface 7. They said they had lost almost 20% battery when the phone was not used in less than three hours. In addition, they have to connect their phones to load most often.
Although Samsung has not mentioned such problems with the operating system, some users suggest that cleaning the cache could help the situation, while others say that it is common for phones to occur during the first days of update. This may be due to the fact that the device is on the slope of the user user model after upgrading to a user interface 7.
The suggestion is therefore to give your phone at least a week to settle, before seeking ways to solve the problem of the battery. That said, if everything else fails and you have succeeded in the seven -day brand, other users suggest that the factory resets the device. Although it looks like a hard bypass solution, it seems to have done the trick for many.
Android Central contacted Samsung on this subject and will update the article once we have more information.