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Here are the specs: Brand new XCAP - Extended Capacity Battery for iPhone 7 Plus. This item often fixes the following problems Battery charge dies quicklyBattery will not charge XCAP Batteries use the latest technological breakthroughs in cell chemistry to provide you with consistently more capacity then the original design, giving unparalleled performance for your device and it is verified by COMMBATT. Premium Protection BoardsTI Gas Gauge IC ChipsetExtended Capacity for your iPhoneOver Current / Discharge ProtectionUN 38.3, CE, RoHS, FCC CertificationsDouble Capacity VerificationWith New Easy Release Adhesive3300 mAh https://www.injuredgadgets.com/catalogse

With all due respect to @oldturkey03 , @nick and @bobcat1981, I would not categorize this as a scam. Injured Gadgets is one of the most reputable suppliers out there and they, along with MobileSentrix, have recently introduced a new line of batteries. At 3300mAh, this battery claims about 13% more capacity than a standard, Apple-original, which is certainly in the realm of possibility given constant updates in Li-Ion technology. Full Disclosure: I have not tried these new XCAP batteries. At the very least, they could be playing around with spec-speak because no one knows how Apple or Injured Gadgets tests their respective batteries. Apple could be conservative and IG a bit optimistic and that’s all it would take. We are not back in the days when unscrupulous suppliers would claim 40-50% increases just because they added a gold sticker. The only way to know for sure is to actually test them under identical conditions on a constant-power meter setup. I have a constant-current setup (Correct Battery Operating Voltage (Leak?))) which I use to test batteries I receive. While not as good for truly replicating a contant-power device like the iPhone, it serves as a very good proxy. In my experience, I have seen battery capacity fluctuate by up to +/-15% of the stated nominal capacity for identical batteries from multiple vendors. But regardless of the result, when a reputable supplier, who has been pushing Chinese suppliers to create and provide better quality replacement parts claims a 13% increase, I wouldn’t call it a scam and it may very well be true.

Hey guys, I am the CEO of InjuredGadgets.com As a note I tried to reply 5 times, but for some reason my reply keeps getting deleted. So I will reply with no links. First of all, I want to say thank you sincerely for questioning the product. You should. As before this, every single extended capacity battery on the market was just that, marketing fluff. They were not real and just overpriced scams. I am going to try to answer every single question in here. @oldturkey03 I assure you we actually under rate our batteries. They exceed 3300 mAh. Please test them with any hardware battery tester, or coconut batter, 3u tools, whatever you want. Do real drainage test. They’re extended cap. We even made a video of our 6s battery compared to an OEM via drainage run time. Check it out on YouTube, Type Injured Gadgets XCAP @Nick I emplore you to use a Kaisi tester as was shown in the iFixit article of high capacity batteries. Please note, that article is very old. It also shows a iPhone 5 battery with 2680 mAh, which is impossible. We were able to get our 5 series to 1800 mAh which is a near 25%+ increase over the oem capacity. @bobcat1981 Actually….. The first photo is a client image of our 6s Plus installed.

This second image is on a 6s that I was testing in house.

@refectio Thank you. We have been working on these batteries for nearly 6 months. We literally have gone from working with not just the battery factory but also the cell factory to produce these.

A load of bull, seen these a few times and when checked on 3utool they have standard mAh as normal batterys.

I just replaced the battery in my iPhone 6s Plus with a Loctus High Capacity Battery and I notice the difference in everyday use as well as in 3uTools.