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Galaxy S26 Ultra tipped to arrive with much-needed battery upgrade

Started by Redaktion, July 23, 2025, 17:13:30

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Redaktion

A new leak suggests that the Galaxy S26 Ultra may be the first Samsung smartphone in recent history to support fast charging at over 45 Watts. While the exact figure wasn't specified, 65 Watts seems like a plausible figure.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/Galaxy-S26-Ultra-tipped-to-arrive-with-much-needed-battery-upgrade.1065764.0.html

Typos1

The s25 ultra does not have a 5000nah battery - it's 4855nah the same size as the last 4 ultras. Everyone else quotes the exact capacity of their batteries but samsung lies and makes out it's bigger and what does the tech press do ? It doesn't call them out it just repeats the bs marketing. Why ?????

Bobbb

I'm getting tired of waiting for Samsung to finally make a worthy upgrade to their smartphones. They have fallen behind in battery life and camera quality to the Chinese phones. They even regressed on their own ultra line with the S Pen. The only thing they have going for them is they have a great UI. With some of the Chinese brands switching to Sony sensors they should no longer have a reason to stay out of USA to appease Samsung for their sensors. They just need to get their UI together for USA and we can finally have some good upgrades in USA.

Jaycee

Quote from: Typos1 on July 24, 2025, 12:10:17The s25 ultra does not have a 5000nah battery - it's 4855nah the same size as the last 4 ultras. Everyone else quotes the exact capacity of their batteries but samsung lies and makes out it's bigger and what does the tech press do ? It doesn't call them out it just repeats the bs marketing. Why ?????
All electronics manufacturers from EV's to Smartphones using Lithium Ion batteries use the same measurement formula.
Typical capacity is what a battery manufacturer records across batteries in a production batch.
Rated Capacity is usually lower and is recorded under specific test conditions, and then varies depending on actual use.
There is no subterfuge here.. it's how batteries are measured and marketed by the entire electronics industry..Nothing to do with Samsung at all..

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