Originally Posted by
Tartarus I don’t mind letting my Watch battery die. Sometimes when you’re out and about it’s inevitable. I don’t lose sleep over it if it happens.
Lithium batteries are designed to withstand this. Lithium batteries are so sophisticated that you as end user actually don’t have to worry about anything else than using the device as you yourself intend to use it.
The only thing to avoid is leaving a lithium battery without charge for more than a few months.
Lithium batteries are not so complicated and are highly inefficient. It really is a quite old technology that need to be discharged.
Yes a battery could deal with a complete discharge (because it is not really completely discharged when it shows 0%), but if you recharge it from 0 you are putting a lot of strain on the battery itself. No problem if you do that once in a while, but it is a practice to avoid on a regular basis.
By the way, my Apple Watch lasts about two days on the battery, so what’s the problem in put it to charge one hour every evening at higher percentage ?
My two cents