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Jutah

macrumors 65816
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Mar 30, 2012
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Today, for the third time, my iPhone Air became extremely hot.

The first two times I had the battery pack attached, so I thought that was the cause — but it wasn’t.

I’ve identified these conditions when the overheating occurs:

- warm environment and I’m feeling hot
- phone in my pocket
- while on the move (high-speed train or driving on the highway)

It also happened with two different Air models, one of which (this one) was completely reset with no backup imported.

How is that even possible?

Of course, the battery drains very quickly when it heats up like that.
 
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Because this is the Internet, I feel a need to preface… The following is meant as constructive, not snippy.

If your iPhone is truly overheating, it will tell you. If your iPhone is actually “throttling" — addressing another often misunderstood/misued term — you’ll very blatantly notice. Every action of the UI will be laggy. For example, it occurs at ~5% battery charge and lower.

I’ve identified these conditions when the overheating occurs:

- warm environment and I’m feeling hot
- phone in my pocket
Indeed, the warmer the environment (i.e., higher ambient temp and/or less cooling airflow), the warmer the device (and you) will get/feel, even under the same workload. The outside of the device becoming hot is intended, well, sometimes. Especially in Apple’s case, the outer shell, typically a metal alloy, is designed as part of the thermal system (i.e., it’s a heat spreader).

- while on the move (high-speed train or driving on the highway)
Simple speculation would assume the device is using more power as it attempts to hang onto cellular signals while trying to efficiently transition tower connections.

Of course, the battery drains very quickly when it heats up like that.
This is likely vice-versa.

 
Because this is the Internet, I feel a need to preface… The following is meant as constructive, not snippy.

If your iPhone is truly overheating, it will tell you. If your iPhone is actually “throttling" — addressing another often misunderstood/misued term — you’ll very blatantly notice. Every action of the UI will be laggy. For example, it occurs at ~5% battery charge and lower.

Indeed, the warmer the environment (i.e., higher ambient temp and/or less cooling airflow), the warmer the device (and you) will get/feel, even under the same workload. The outside of the device becoming hot is intended, well, sometimes. Especially in Apple’s case, the outer shell, typically a metal alloy, is designed as part of the thermal system (i.e., it’s a heat spreader).


Simple speculation would assume the device is using more power as it attempts to hang onto cellular signals while trying to efficiently transition tower connections.


This is likely vice-versa.


Thanks for you feedback!

The two times it overheated while I had the MagSafe battery pack attached, a message appeared saying that charging would pause until the phone returned to a normal temperature.

1763063693602.jpeg


Today it was burning hot, but no message appeared.


What puzzles me is that my habits are consistent, and this never happened with my previous iPhones (14, 15, 16 Pro Max). It only ever happened when I recorded long videos — in those cases, I could feel the phone heating up. But never when it was locked and idle.
 
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The two times it overheated while I had the MagSafe battery pack attached, a message appeared saying that charging would pause until the phone returned to a normal temperature.

View attachment 2579228
That would technically fall within overheating. If it only happens when the battery pack is attached, I wouldn’t be worried. Unfortunately, of course, it’s not ideal. Battery cells are going to heat up when used, whether (rapidly) charging or discharging. I use a power bank with my AVP. I keep both battery packs in a sling bag, and both get toasty, not alarmingly (yet?) but, indeed, also not ideal.

What puzzles me is that my habits are consistent, and this never happened with my previous iPhones (14, 15, 16 Pro Max). It only ever happened when I recorded long videos — in those cases, I could feel the phone heating up. But never when it was locked and idle.
The two times it overheated while I had the MagSafe battery pack attached, a message appeared saying that charging would pause until the phone returned to a normal temperature.
If it’s only occasionally, I would suggest not to worry. You can attempt to troubleshoot, nonetheless. The Battery section of Settings is really the only tool. There are developer-focused tools that can show and track more details but that’s not typically feasible for this type of troubleshooting. Anyway, the thing to realize and difficulty comes from: a lot of possibilities. The OS will do — somewhat randomly — syncs (e.g., Mail, iCloud (e.g., photos)) when your iPhone is idle. Apps can also, to an extent, maintain background connections. If you haven’t in a while (e.g., a few days or more), perform a device restart/reboot.

In other words, a sparse, unexpected warming of your iPhone wouldn’t be indicative of an issue. There are a lot of behind the scenes tasks striving to share resources. If it’s a common occurrence, I recommend continuing attempting to eliminate culprits.
 
The new iOS 26 battery usage screen is pretty horrific on reporting, especially for anything while you're plugged in (it doesn't report anything while you're plugged in (MagSafe included)).

I never got that message on my Air when I had it, and I was doing things that got the phone warm.

How long as it been since you've set up your phone? Whenever I set up a new phone, I leave it plugged in as much as I can for the next 2+ days because of indexing, and stuff that requires a lot of battery. I'd give it a few extra days.

Also, I'd encourage less MagSafe charging as the thin iPhone Air will not deal with additional heat as well. You can find some super thin 10,000 mAh batteries (iniu) with a thin cable that will keep your phone significantly cooler and make it easier to hold (assuming you aren't walking around or something). The Apple MagSafe Air battery is insanely cool.

Or use your MagSafe batteries wired (this is what I'm doing).
 
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That would technically fall within overheating. If it only happens when the battery pack is attached, I wouldn’t be worried. Unfortunately, of course, it’s not ideal. Battery cells are going to heat up when used, whether (rapidly) charging or discharging. I use a power bank with my AVP. I keep both battery packs in a sling bag, and both get toasty, not alarmingly (yet?) but, indeed, also not ideal.



If it’s only occasionally, I would suggest not to worry. You can attempt to troubleshoot, nonetheless. The Battery section of Settings is really the only tool. There are developer-focused tools that can show and track more details but that’s not typically feasible for this type of troubleshooting. Anyway, the thing to realize and difficulty comes from: a lot of possibilities. The OS will do — somewhat randomly — syncs (e.g., Mail, iCloud (e.g., photos)) when your iPhone is idle. Apps can also, to an extent, maintain background connections. If you haven’t in a while (e.g., a few days or more), perform a device restart/reboot.

In other words, a sparse, unexpected warming of your iPhone wouldn’t be indicative of an issue. There are a lot of behind the scenes tasks striving to share resources. If it’s a common occurrence, I recommend continuing attempting to eliminate culprits.

You’re right — so far it’s happened only occasionally. A week ago, under the same conditions (on a high-speed train, with the phone in my pocket), it didn’t occur.

One thing I noticed today is that when I checked the apps with the highest battery usage, the Photos app had been running in the background for 50 minutes, which is quite unusual. Then I opened the Photos app and saw this message: “Sync paused because your internet connection is slow. Would you like to resume in an hour?”
That makes me think it might have been syncing photos randomly while the phone was idle.

Combined with the warm environment, that could have caused the overheating.
It never happened with my previous iPhones, though.
 
The new iOS 26 battery usage screen is pretty horrific on reporting, especially for anything while you're plugged in (it doesn't report anything while you're plugged in (MagSafe included)).

I never got that message on my Air when I had it, and I was doing things that got the phone warm.

How long as it been since you've set up your phone? Whenever I set up a new phone, I leave it plugged in as much as I can for the next 2+ days because of indexing, and stuff that requires a lot of battery. I'd give it a few extra days.

Also, I'd encourage less MagSafe charging as the thin iPhone Air will not deal with additional heat as well. You can find some super thin 10,000 mAh batteries (iniu) with a thin cable that will keep your phone significantly cooler and make it easier to hold (assuming you aren't walking around or something). The Apple MagSafe Air battery is insanely cool.

Or use your MagSafe batteries wired (this is what I'm doing).
i agree with the complaints about the battery stats, really poor.

I rarely use the MagSafe Battery. I use it occasionally to preserve the iPhone’s battery charge cycles. I prefer the original MagSafe because it’s an extended battery, not just a charger, and it’s “smart” — designed to work seamlessly with the iPhone, unlike a “dumb” battery pack that simply acts as a basic wireless charger.
 
Today, for the third time, my iPhone Air became extremely hot.

The first two times I had the battery pack attached, so I thought that was the cause — but it wasn’t.

I’ve identified these conditions when the overheating occurs:

- warm environment and I’m feeling hot
- phone in my pocket
- while on the move (high-speed train or driving on the highway)

It also happened with two different Air models, one of which (this one) was completely reset with no backup imported.

How is that even possible?

Of course, the battery drains very quickly when it heats up like that.
Never faced this problem - my Air is the best phone I've ever had.
 
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If it does it while driving, I highly recommend getting on of those MagSafe vent mounts and a cheap little 20W charging adapter (about $10 @ Best Buy) that can go in the old "cigarette lighter" port. That way you can charge it and fully use it but also keep it cool with your car's AC blowing right on it.
 
That would technically fall within overheating. If it only happens when the battery pack is attached, I wouldn’t be worried. Unfortunately, of course, it’s not ideal. Battery cells are going to heat up when used, whether (rapidly) charging or discharging. I use a power bank with my AVP. I keep both battery packs in a sling bag, and both get toasty, not alarmingly (yet?) but, indeed, also not ideal.



If it’s only occasionally, I would suggest not to worry. You can attempt to troubleshoot, nonetheless. The Battery section of Settings is really the only tool. There are developer-focused tools that can show and track more details but that’s not typically feasible for this type of troubleshooting. Anyway, the thing to realize and difficulty comes from: a lot of possibilities. The OS will do — somewhat randomly — syncs (e.g., Mail, iCloud (e.g., photos)) when your iPhone is idle. Apps can also, to an extent, maintain background connections. If you haven’t in a while (e.g., a few days or more), perform a device restart/reboot.

In other words, a sparse, unexpected warming of your iPhone wouldn’t be indicative of an issue. There are a lot of behind the scenes tasks striving to share resources. If it’s a common occurrence, I recommend continuing attempting to eliminate culprits.


I’m running some tests and noticed that when I use a case and keep the phone in my pocket, the temperature rises by about 2–3 degrees, going from 25/26°C to 31/32°C while using spotify (measured with thermal gun). So the phone in a warm environment, combined with limited heat dissipation due to its extreme thinness and the titanium build, tends to run hotter compared to other models.
 
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