![]() ![]() The status of work towards a replacement. I ended up finding out that my Pebble Time’s battery was draining due to the watch face I was using – I’ve been using it for a long time, but some update or setting configuration must have caused it to drink my battery down :’-( I never tried out the 3rd option/step but that’s what I was going to try next.ĭisclaimer: I’m not certain how activity trackers work on Pebble devices and what information they can collect exactly, but I assume they could cause the same issues as a watch face.This page contains a list of Pebble’s backend services, their status, and If this fixes your problem: either keep the activity tracker off or try out a new one.Why: I’m not certain how activity trackers work on Pebble devices and what information they can collect exactly, but I assume they could cause the same issues as a watch face. ![]() Disable activity tracker(s) (I never got to this step but it was the next step of my plan).If this fixes your problem: try out other watch faces, if you have been using the same watchface and it started acting up it may have been an update from the developer, if you’re attached to the watch face enough try reaching out the developer – they’ll want to know of the issue and keep their user base active and happy.Why: Some watch faces require a lot of screen updates or may have other background tasks that will drain your Pebble’s battery.Change your watch face to something simplistic – Pebble’s “Simplicity” watchface will do just fine or any of their watch faces should be fine.If this fixes your problem: then your phone or watch may have issues keeping a bluetooth connection up – this often results in the same effect as keep your cell phone on with no coverage – it will continue to keep looking to get a connection back which will cause extra battery drain.Why: This removes any doubt that there might be an issue with the bluetooth connection between your phone and watch.Select the “Connection” item, it should be the first item, it should then say “Airplane Mode” and display an airplane icon instead of the bluetooth logo.After charging back up to 100% I turned my Pebble Time to airplane mode.You should be able to do these in any order and it’s most likely that #2 will be the most recent change if this problem pops up out of nowhere. Here’s the steps I took to troubleshoot my battery drain:įor each step if you continue to have bad battery drain charge your Pebble back up and try the next step until you find the culprit. I was getting what seemed like 3-5 days out of my Pebble Time vs my Pebble classic at 5-7 days – it’s nice to have a schedule where you charge your Pebble once a week while at work, although I couldn’t seem to make it a week it wasn’t too bad.Ī little while after they released the Pebble Health update and the time software to the classic my watch couldn’t even last a day! This was very upsetting as I would spend half of my work day charging my watch and then be back at 60% by the time I got back home – I felt like I wasn’t even getting to use my watch throughout the day at that point. I recently got a Pebble Time, I didn’t expect it to last as long as my Pebble Classic even though they say that they should have about the same battery life time even with the colored display – I’ve noticed that the time software has more animations – or at least so it seems – maybe they’re just fancier but still have the same amount of pixel updates as the old swipe/slide animations. ![]()
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