Pale Rider
Legendary Member
I've not used my iPod Classic for a couple of years due to a general loss of interest in recorded music.
A recent long car journey motivated me to fire it up again.
This did not go well.
Despite being on charge for a couple of hours, it wouldn't play for more than a few minutes, even while still plugged in.
"Use it or lose it' is the perceived wisdom with lithium batteries, so I thought it was kaput.
I left it plugged into the car's usb socket, where it has been for the last couple of weeks.
The socket is only powered when the car is running, but the battery will have had quite a bit of on and off charging in that time.
A google of battery replacement revealed that was also a job that might not go well.
So I decided to give the iPod one last try, more in hope than expectation.
Great joy - it lives.
It's been playing in the house for the last hour or so on battery only with no drop of the charge indicator.
Two morals of the story.
Don't leave a rechargeable gadget unused, but if you do, charging it for ages might bring it back to life.
A recent long car journey motivated me to fire it up again.
This did not go well.
Despite being on charge for a couple of hours, it wouldn't play for more than a few minutes, even while still plugged in.
"Use it or lose it' is the perceived wisdom with lithium batteries, so I thought it was kaput.
I left it plugged into the car's usb socket, where it has been for the last couple of weeks.
The socket is only powered when the car is running, but the battery will have had quite a bit of on and off charging in that time.
A google of battery replacement revealed that was also a job that might not go well.
So I decided to give the iPod one last try, more in hope than expectation.
Great joy - it lives.
It's been playing in the house for the last hour or so on battery only with no drop of the charge indicator.
Two morals of the story.
Don't leave a rechargeable gadget unused, but if you do, charging it for ages might bring it back to life.