i_hate_toms
New Member
Everywhere I see tips about notebook battery care, experts suggest, if you aren't using it, charge it to 40%, remove it from laptop and store in a safe place at room temperature in a plastic bag. Every 15 days, put it back in the computer, top it up to 40%, remove and store again. Every once in a while, exercise the battery by charging it to 100%, using your laptop unplugged until windows warns "plug in or i'll hibernate", plug in and charge to 40% again, shut down computer, remove battery and store.
I have this laptop for almost two years. It stays powered on about 14 hours every day, always plugged in. On occasions i use it unplugged, i get a whooping 6 hours of backup, even after two years (if all I'm doing is Firefox, with "power saver" profile and screen brightness set to 0. On Windows 8. Strangely, battery dies MUCH faster if I'm using windows 7 - 3.5 hours, performing the same Firefox browsing, i dual boot)
I have this software called "HP Battery Health Check" , came pre-installed with Windows 7, it shows here i have cycled the battery only 18 times in all these days. Always used it plugged in, and I get 6 hours of backup, with battery health at 100%.
So then, on laptops about two years old or newer, is it at all needed to remove the battery while plugged in? Of course, my personal experience lets me strongly believe it isn't, nevertheless, what do you people think? Is this an exceptional case? or is this true for all present laptops and removing the battery is just a waste of time.
I have this laptop for almost two years. It stays powered on about 14 hours every day, always plugged in. On occasions i use it unplugged, i get a whooping 6 hours of backup, even after two years (if all I'm doing is Firefox, with "power saver" profile and screen brightness set to 0. On Windows 8. Strangely, battery dies MUCH faster if I'm using windows 7 - 3.5 hours, performing the same Firefox browsing, i dual boot)
I have this software called "HP Battery Health Check" , came pre-installed with Windows 7, it shows here i have cycled the battery only 18 times in all these days. Always used it plugged in, and I get 6 hours of backup, with battery health at 100%.

So then, on laptops about two years old or newer, is it at all needed to remove the battery while plugged in? Of course, my personal experience lets me strongly believe it isn't, nevertheless, what do you people think? Is this an exceptional case? or is this true for all present laptops and removing the battery is just a waste of time.
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