ISSUE 21.16 • 2024-04-15 Look for our BONUS issue on Monday, April 22! WINDOWS 11 By Lance Whitney Frustrated because your Windows laptop runs out of
[See the full post at: How to preserve your battery charge on a Windows 11 laptop]
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How to preserve your battery charge on a Windows 11 laptop
Home » Forums » Newsletter and Homepage topics » How to preserve your battery charge on a Windows 11 laptop
- This topic has 12 replies, 9 voices, and was last updated 1 year, 2 months ago.
AuthorTopicLance Whitney
AskWoody_MVPApril 15, 2024 at 2:45 am #2659788Viewing 6 reply threadsAuthorReplies-
John Dwyer
AskWoody PlusApril 15, 2024 at 6:08 am #2659865You might want to add something on extending the life of the battery. Too many people run their laptop on battery for a while not putting much of a drain on it, then connect it to the charger and continually do this. This cuts the life of the battery as it goes through a charge cycle each time. The number of charge cycles are limited as the battery report will indicate over time. Most new laptops have an option to charge the battery up to a certain level (usually around 80%) and not recharge it until it hits around 50%. This does a log way to extend the batteries life.
JohnD
Eddy G
GuestApril 15, 2024 at 9:12 am #2659794This is a good, detailed article for newbies and maybe even some veteran windows users. However you didn’t note that a good way to extend battery life is to allow your battery to charge only to 80-85% instead of 100%. To ease doing this some laptop manufacturers (including Lenovo which as you noted abandoned heavy clipon batteries) have a bundled proprietary system management app which allows the user to specify maximum the battery charge.
Iram Weinstein
Guest-
George S. Augustas
AskWoody PlusApril 15, 2024 at 10:13 am #2659963
Douglas
GuestApril 15, 2024 at 4:53 pm #2660056I have an HP Envy 17 inch 23H2 Windows 11 laptop that’s less than a year old. Ever since I got it I’ve noticed that when the laptop is completely shut down (not sleeping, not hibernating, rapid boot disabled) and unplugged, it loses 9% of total battery capacity each 24 hours that it is off and shut down, despite not doing anything to discharge the battery. When I check with Windows 11’s system/battery settings after booting up, it sometimes (but not always) says that the screen was in use while the laptop was off (no one was using the screen while it was shut down and off). It is a touch-enabled screen, though I never touch the screen when using it. My previous Windows 10 HP laptop did not exhibit this behavior, but it wasn’t touch screen enabled. It’s a poor battery anyway and will only provide about four hours of use unplugged between 100% and 20% charged. I hesitate to always use it plugged in, because that’s how I always used the Windows 10 laptop and the result was a swollen pillowed battery after only a few years use.
WSGeo
AskWoody PlusApril 17, 2024 at 9:42 am #2660695Why can’t I find these settings on my desktop, that’s plugged into the wall?
Oh… right.
Sorry, just having some fun, I hope our support people will relate to. Remember the old story about the person who called support when they couldn’t start their computer in a power outage?
It does kinda bring to mind a question of, where in the OS or whatever does it recognize that it’s on a battery, and not AC? Thanks,
Christy
GuestApril 18, 2024 at 1:30 am #2660881Please don’t recommend people buy power banks, batteries and chargers off of Amazon. Amazon has become awash with counterfeiters and dodgy sellers in the last 5-8 years.
Underwriters Laboratories (UL) and the Electrical Safety Foundation (ESFI) have some good YouTube videos about this. They also discuss the insidious counterfeiting problem with chargers, LI batteries, and power banks – and even for electrical outlets (sold on Amazon and ebay), surge protectors and extension cords. Interpol co-sponsors the ESFI and their awareness campaigns, which should tell you something.
ESFI and UL Counterfeit Charger Short – Electrical Safety Foundation
An expert from UL advises [emphasis mine]:
“To be on the safe side, always order lithium-ion batteries directly from the manufacturer of your device. This recommendation also applies to battery chargers. Using a generic or non-branded charger can cause thermal runaway in even a properly manufactured and certified battery. Lithium-ion batteries operate in different voltage ranges based on the chemistry of the components, so an incorrect or counterfeit charger will not know how to “talk” to the battery in the right way.” She gives tips for how to avoid problems in this article:
“A lot of what goes into a lithium-ion battery are safety mechanisms – both in and around the cell. Everything in and around the cell is there to control the energy and power so it delivers the electricity you need in a safe and measured way.”
I advise my family to only buy OEM products from the laptop maker (or cellphone maker) or a known local retailer, or from authorized resellers linked from the OEM’s website. At minimum, look for UL listed 3rd-party chargers and buy them direct via a trusted source. (Some counterfeiters will bother to fake the UL mark as well as the maker’s logo, so simply seeing the UL mark isn’t much better.)
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Douglas
GuestApril 18, 2024 at 8:21 am #2660921 -
Ascaris
AskWoody MVPApril 18, 2024 at 5:44 pm #2661150If the laptop uses USB-C PD (power delivery), it is a standard protocol independent of vendor, so there is no issue of the charger not knowing how to “talk” to the battery. If it uses a barrel plug, there’s usually no talk going on at all (unless there is a third pin, as on many Dell models, which communicates the wattage capability of the charger).
The charger provides whatever voltage it provides (generally 19.5v, plus or minus half a volt), and the onboard electronics built into the laptop motherboard either connect the power to the battery or not depending on the charge state (voltage) of the battery. The era of laptop charger ports that are hardwired to the battery charge circuit (and that cannot be interrupted by the charging logic) are over, and if the voltage is out of spec that the MOSFETs can handle, it should (hopefully) disconnect the charging circuit to protect the unit. Hopefully.
The thing I would be more concerned with is ripple current. All AC to DC converters will have some degree of ripple, and too much of it can harm the components and/or cause stability issues. I bought a USB-C tester to be able to quantify the ripple for this.
There are good aftermarket brands of these items. My Acer’s OEM power wart has more ripple than the aftermarket one I got on Amazon for a low price. I was not going to connect it until I knew, but now that I do, I use it.
Dell XPS 13/9310, i5-1135G7/16GB, KDE Neon 6.2
XPG Xenia 15, i7-9750H/32GB & GTX1660ti, Kubuntu 24.04
Acer Swift Go 14, i5-1335U/16GB, Kubuntu 24.04 (and Win 11)1 user thanked author for this post.
Alex5723
AskWoody PlusApril 19, 2024 at 1:35 pm #2661491How to preserve your battery charge ?
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