Facedown detection stands as one of the underrated features in iOS 9’s rich arsenal of power-saving tactics designed to help extend your run time by up to an additional hour.

Facedown detection avoids turning the display on when a notification comes in and your phone is put facedown. But as it turns out, Facedown detection doesn’t work on all devices compatible with iOS 9 and there is a good explanation for that  why.

iPhone 6s

Gautam Prabhuexplainsthat Facedown requires the M7, M8 or M9 motion co-processors which are found inside the following iOS devices:

In addition to a motion co-processor, Facedown detection requires the proximity and ambient light sensors, too.

“Thanks to ambient light and proximity sensors, your iPhone knows if it’s facedown on the table and prevents the screen from turning on, even when you receive a notification,”confirms the iPhone 6s webpage.

Due to these requirements, Facedown is not supported on the following devices:

About motion co-processors

Apple’s motion co-processors were designed to calibrate and poll integrated accelerometer, gyroscope, proximity and compass sensors without waking up the power-hungry main central processing unit (CPU).

Beginning with the iPhone 6s and iPad Air, Apple’s motion coprocessor is now integrated within the main A9/A9X chip rather than being a separate module. In addition, it’s always on which makes possibleuntethered ‘Hey Siri’ functionality on these devices.

How iOS 9 saves your battery

iOS 9 employs several energy-saving techniques to extend your run time by up to an hour. In addition to core OS optimizations designed to trim battery use whenever possible, iOS 9 cuts the display power and mutes Lock screen notification alerts when your device is facedown on the table.

But that’s not all: other power-saving tactics include anew Low Power Modewhich gives you up to three hours of additional run time and more granular battery-related options in the Settings app.

Are you excited about Facedown detection?