XTF1
100+ Head-Fier
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2014
- Posts
- 446
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- 511
Don’t know… I don’t use Tidal, and did not see any mention of a fix in the FW description.Did it solve the Tidal Issues I've mentioned before?
Don’t know… I don’t use Tidal, and did not see any mention of a fix in the FW description.Did it solve the Tidal Issues I've mentioned before?
You have to set correct date/time in settings:R3 II isn't working with Qobuz, I see this message
If you are a Qobuz User and get Error 400 go into settings and set clock/time it should then work fine for you.
Make sure you set the correct Date/Time in the settings then retry Qobuz.
That did it. Thanks!You have to set correct date/time in settings:
I really liked the hiby devices functionality, which is why when my first one died I bought the pro saber, but at some point I have to hit the brakes. These aren't supposed to be disposables. I'm not the only one this has happened to either, if you search around.
Don't keep it plugged in all the time, don't store it at 100% charge, don't discharge it all the down to 0 and the battery will last a very long time. LiPo batteries like to be kept between 20 and 80% charge for optimal lifetime, I follow these rules myself and have zero problems with the ton of devices I have, more than I like to admit, some of them are 5+ years old and still going strong.
If you need to use it plugged in to a PC/Phone just buy a dongle without a battery, it's just better overall.
Yes, I wish Hiby would add a battery protection mode like the Qudelix 5k or the newer Fiio devices have, let's hope they will one day.
All Lithium batteries are best stored between 20 and 80%. These devices do not have poor charge protection. They have the same type of charge protection that all protected batteries have. In fact, that very protection circuit is what may be keeping your device from charging it's battery. If you depleted the battery fully, and left it on, or did not recharge for a few weeks, the battery will go below it's "minimum Voltage". When a protected lithium battery goes below it's designed minimum voltage; and you try to charge it, the protection circuit "thinks" it is dead, and does not allow fast charging. BUT, if you connect a low power charger (500mah or lower, like original USB--1 power level) to the player (with the player ON to slow charging rate even more),) the lower charge rate can slowly start a charge. Once above like 5%, you can go back to faster speed charging. If this works, you should end up with close to original battery life.I also use it on the run, and doing yardwork, landscaping, working out. It can run to zero easily over hours of labor even from a full charge - or if you aren't micro managing (e.g. you didn't want to babysit it to not go over 80%) . . and pick it up at 1/2 charge to do some work or work out.
If you aren't going to have resilient charge protection included in 2020 - 2024, then you need to have swappable batteries.
I appreciate the reply, but . .
There are plenty of devices that don't have that fragility. It's pretty standard. I'm not micromanaging my charging (or the marketed and promoted pc/dac usage features) on a device in 2024. That's crap.