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Chinese Consumer Group Has Asked Apple To Investigate 'a Considerable Number' of iPhone Shutdowns (businessinsider.com)

An anonymous reader writes:The China Consumers Association (CCA) has asked Apple to investigate "a considerable number" of reports by users of iPhone 6 and 6s phones that the devices have been shutting off and cannot be turned back on again, it said on Tuesday. The reported problems specifically involve users seeing their iPhones automatically shut off despite 50-60 percent battery levels, and the involuntary shutting off in room temperature or colder environments, as well as the inability to turn the cellphone back on despite continuous battery charging, the statement said. "In view that Apple iPhone 6 and iPhone 6s series cellphones in China have a considerable number of users, and the number of people who've reported this problem is rather many, China Consumer Association has already made a query with Apple," the association said in a statement on its website.

18 of 73 comments (clear)

  1. Questions. by garote · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First question: Are they knockoffs?
    Second question: If this is only happening in China, has the Chinese government asked Apple to modify their firmware in some way?
    Third question: Are we hearing about this because someone is trying to FUD Apple out of the Chinese market?

    1. Re:Questions. by AK+Marc · · Score: 2
    2. Re:Questions. by Killall+-9+Bash · · Score: 4, Insightful

      oh, boo hooo. We sell a few less iPhones. How will the American workers who manufacture and assemble iPhones live?!?!?! Oh, wait.......

      If China wants to take some spare change out of the pockets of the 1%-ers who sent our fucking jobs to China in the first place, FUCKING GREAT.

      --
      "Prediction: within 10 years, Windows will be a Linux distribution." Me, 7-6-2016
    3. Re:Questions. by mrclevesque · · Score: 4, Insightful

      From the link:

      “Apple took my phone and details, but said it couldn’t have been the phone because it didn’t have a distinct smell,”

      It doesn't tell us how often it happens but it does tell us it happens with iphones too

    4. Re:Questions. by jittles · · Score: 2

      From the link:

      “Apple took my phone and details, but said it couldn’t have been the phone because it didn’t have a distinct smell,”

      It doesn't tell us how often it happens but it does tell us it happens with iphones too

      Yes I read the article. Clearly her arm was burned but everyone who was burned by a Note 7 took pictures of the phone because the phone was obviously damaged. She took pictures of her arm and nothing else. Why did she not take any other pictures? If I were Apple, I would want the phone too, just to validate the claim. They offered her a new phone, but I wouldn't expect any less after they took the first. The fact that it happens to iPhones does not surprise me in the least. I just don't trust that particular claim.

  2. Planned obsolescence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    What are they whining? Device works as designed, the consumers just need to walk into iStore and renew their yearly iPhone iSubscription.

    1. Re: Planned obsolescence by mark-t · · Score: 2

      Wtf is an iPhone 3S?

  3. What this really means by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "That $100 dollar brand new iPhone that I bought at the night market/store that sells electronics for a fraction of their cost stopped working. But I know it must be legit despite the low cost because the guy who sold it to me told me it was legit. Funny, neither he nor the store are there any more. What's wrong with your crap products, Apple?"

    I've been to China. It's definitely that. Keep in mind that this is also a country where most of its citizens believe that you can't lose money on the stock market no matter what stock you buy - ever.

    1. Re:What this really means by ripvlan · · Score: 3, Informative

      They were all bought from the fake Apple Store.

      http://www.forbes.com/pictures...

    2. Re:What this really means by rtb61 · · Score: 2

      Likely the complaints are occuring because these are actual Apple products and the tiny percentage of middle class workers in China are being impacted. So far more likely quality control is not being as honest as it should be and production runs that have failed, instead of being broken down and being dumped onto the Chinese market because the negative impact will not affect the global market and also because of the post I am replying to (yep, uh huh sure, not their product a forgery, nope bad production runs that still got dumped into the market, for really, really big profits).

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  4. China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Chinese people are really behind in basic concepts of Capitalism. They'll never catch up to the rest of the developed world if they keep being so naive as to expect that things that worked before will keep working after a newer model is released.

    Things just don't work that way. When "thing model n" comes out, it's time to throw away "thing model n-1" and buy the newer model.

    This is basic stuff.

  5. Had this same issue with my 6s in the USA by JoeyRox · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Phone would randomly shutdown even though battery was 40%+ per the iOS UI. If I then tried to power it back up I would get the big charging icon, implying that the battery was completely drained. If I then charged the battery for just 5 minutes the phone would work fine and allow the battery to be discharged from its previously indicated 40%+ as expected. Based on my observations it appeared to be an intermittent problem with the power gauge firmware mistakenly detecting the battery as depleted and engaging the Li-Ion full-discharge protection logic as a result.

    I brought mine to the Genius bar and of course all their battery diagnostics showed nothing wrong. Took three return attempts before they finally agreed to replace my phone even though it was still under warranty. This guy wasn't as persistent as me:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_XCBydkR6dI

    1. Re:Had this same issue with my 6s in the USA by swb · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This happened to me once -- after a 40 minute drive with a 6+ connected to a decent (ie, brand name) USB car charger. I got out, used the phone to take a dozen pictures and when I got back into the car to email them my phone gave me a low power warning and indicated it was nearly dead. I connected it back to the charger and within minutes it was back to the correct charge level.

      I've also had a couple of situations where the phone wouldn't go into charging mode at all, acting as if it was not connected to a charge source (and I tried 3-4 different adapters, including two Apple adapters). I finally figured out that powering it off completely and then restarting it resolved it.

      Fortunately these have been unusual occurrences.

  6. Re:sounds to me like.. by myowntrueself · · Score: 2

    the great firewall got an upgrade. now bricks devices of 'problem' citizens. this is your first warning. and don't think about switching to samsung, because when the government turns those off, it might hurt.

    Or possibly, Chinese intelligence service has been distributing some defective malware which bricks target iphones.

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  7. Regarding the knockoff jokes by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A coworker of mine went to China on vacation and bought one of these knockoff phones and holy crap, I had a hard time telling it apart from the real thing.
    The thing that really surprised me was the cut of Android on it that had been skinned to look just like iOS. There was some serious work put into the product.
    Clearly there's a huge market for these knockoffs.

    --
    Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    1. Re:Regarding the knockoff jokes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm not sure what I should expect from the results.
      If it works, does that mean that it is an Android phone or an Apple phone?

  8. Battery problem has been known, and is fixable by Hawks · · Score: 4, Informative

    I had an iPhone6 that would do the same thing, die with a 30-40% charge, then show the charge again and work after plugging it into a charger for a minute. This problem has been known for a while. A quick search shows the following thread on the apple discussion boards. There is a fix posted on payetteforward. I used that fix and my iPhone6 never had that battery problem again. I'd forgotten how I fixed it but 5 secods of a Google search for "iphone 6 turns off at 40" turned it up again.

    --
    in anima Apparatus
  9. pushed updates & crap batteries. by gl4ss · · Score: 4, Informative

    but asians expect even shit electronics to last couple of years.
    they expect premium electronics to work forever, basically, and the crappy one's to be able to be fixed for pennies.

    you would too if iPhone cost 6000$ to you.

    My girlfriends iPhone6 shuts off at randomly at anything under 50 percent now, it pretty much needs to be tethered with a charger all the time to use. without you can use it for maybe like 45 minutes. it's nearly 2 years old.

    this is in Thailand though - but the point is that iPhone batteries degrade in 2-3 years and the power management doesn't seem to be able to handle the fluctation and degrading of the battery at all - resulting in phones shutting down when it shows to have 50%+ battery. the charge indicator circuitry doesn't learn and the power management circuitry doesn't limit speed or anything if the voltage dips - instead it just does a random shutdown - which might just as well make some phones unbootable if you run this scenario enough times.

    in china though most of the apple looking chargers can't provide the 2.1 amps anyways, but the issue happens even with genuine chargers.

    I think it's just about westerners not complaining about it or they change the phone after 2 years anyways - in Asia though they still sold new(unrefurbished) iphone5s' like couple of months ago at least - direct from operator. Point being, that status phones like iPhones have a much longer life in Asia - and where do you think all the trade-in iPhones from the west end up as well?

    and about the organized complaints only happening in China.. well.. eh. this might surprise you but Consumer protection agencies practically don't exist in most of southeast Asia at least and in the West there is the 24month mandatory warranty anyways.

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.