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I've been staring at i3bar for a while now, It seems like my battery is only charging up to 56.58%, then stopping. I am running a couple of laptop-power daemons with default settings...
acpid
cpupower
some info:
~ % acpi -i
Battery 0: Unknown, 56%
Battery 0: design capacity 4040 mAh, last full capacity 4038 mAh = 99%
To be honest, I haven't really looked too far into this issue as I just noticed this about half an hour ago (installed this Arch on a new laptop a couple of days ago), but I wanted to post this before I went off to bed to maybe get some opinions/comments on what this might be.
Last edited by wolfcore (2012-09-20 05:00:29)
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I am not sure why this works, or if it will work for your machine, but with my computer I read somwhere that this can be fixed by removing the battery with the machine off and plugged in. Now hold the power button for a bit (20-30sec?) unplug and continue to hold (20-30 again), still holding plug it back in and hold (same amount). Let 'er rip. When you remove your finger it should start up. So let it get going for a second and then put the battery back in.
I also read somwhere else that someone is able to fix this by simply holding the power button for a good while with no battery and no power cable.
From what I understand, the method I suggested is what is used to reset a router. It has something to do with flash having a tendency to hold its state, so an extra long 'reset hold' is needed. No idea if that applies in this case though. All I know is that my battery now charges to 100%, and when it sometimes borks when I change batteries, I can fix it this way.
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I am not sure why this works, or if it will work for your machine, but with my computer I read somwhere that this can be fixed by removing the battery with the machine off and plugged in. Now hold the power button for a bit (20-30sec?) unplug and continue to hold (20-30 again), still holding plug it back in and hold (same amount). Let 'er rip. When you remove your finger it should start up. So let it get going for a second and then put the battery back in.
This worked. The only thing that was different was that when I let go of the power button, the laptop didn't turn on so I had to press it a second time. Now it is charged almost to 100! Thanks, marking this solved.
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Good to know that this works for others as well. Not I can recommend with a bit more confidence.
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