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I just noticed that when I unplug the battery, conky reports that the battery is draining at 61%. I can let it drain and when I plug it back in it reports its charging, but it stops once it gets to 60-61% it stops charging. whats the deal here? is it just conky reporting wrong or is it the battery?
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Probably the battery. Check out your bios for a commands like "Battery format" or "Battery refresh" or similar..
-miky
What happened to Arch's KISS? systemd sure is stupid but I must have missed the simple part ...
... and who is general Failure and why is he reading my harddisk?
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How old is your laptop?
From wikipedia:
A unique drawback of the Li-ion battery is that its life span is dependent upon aging from time of manufacturing (shelf life) regardless of whether it was charged, and not just on the number of charge/discharge cycles. So an older battery will not last as long as a new battery due solely to its age, unlike other batteries. This drawback is not widely publicised.
At a 100% charge level, a typical Li-ion laptop battery that is full most of the time at 25 degrees Celsius or 77 degrees Fahrenheit will irreversibly lose approximately 20% capacity per year. However, a battery stored inside a poorly ventilated laptop may be subject to a prolonged exposure to much higher temperatures than 25 °C, which will significantly shorten its life. The capacity loss begins from the time the battery was manufactured, and occurs even when the battery is unused. Different storage temperatures produce different loss results: 6% loss at 0 °C (32 °F), 20% at 25 °C (77 °F), and 35% at 40 °C (104 °F). When stored at 40% - 60% charge level, these figures are reduced to 2%, 4%, 15% at 0, 25 and 40 degrees Celsius respectively.
Like MikyMaus said, if you refresh, the full indicator will switch the 100% (or full state) from the original 100% to your current level of 61% .
Last edited by quarks (2007-12-18 12:48:17)
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My 9-cell battery from Dell does the same thing now after having it a year and a bit... the max charge is about 67%. I'd consider it normal behaviour if the battery's at least 5-6 months old (I've watched the maximum charge slowly decrement each month to the point where it's at now.)
thayer williams ~ cinderwick.ca
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My 9-cell battery from Dell does the same thing now after having it a year and a bit... the max charge is about 67%. I'd consider it normal behaviour if the battery's at least 5-6 months old (I've watched the maximum charge slowly decrement each month to the point where it's at now.)
That's definitely not normal behaviour for a battery that's _only_ 5-6 months old. It shouldn't be dropping that rapidly.
Batteries typically have 1 year warranty, so you might want to get a new one before that runs out.
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Just to clarify, my meaning was that it's normal behaviour for a battery's maximum charge to diminish after about 5-6 months--not that 60% of the maximum was normal within that time frame. I would expect 65% max charge after a period of 12-18 months however, especially if the battery is left in the bay most of the time.
Last edited by thayer (2007-12-18 21:20:14)
thayer williams ~ cinderwick.ca
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well it is a old laptop, its a dell inspiron 1100. about 4-5 years old
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Its more than likely a battery problem as everyone suggested....
"The only thing we have to fear is fear itself." - Franklin D. Roosevelt
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