In
news:57b9c901-f6e7-4fe3-907e-,
htnakirs typed on Sun, 1 Nov 2009 05:31:15 -0800 (PST):
>> 1) Battery is 3 years old
>>
>> 2) Battery is left in the laptop 24/7
>>
>> 3) Laptop will only run 10 minutes on battery and shutdown
>>
>> If the answer is yes to all in the above, regardless of the power
>> meter reading, your battery is shot. >
>
> The answer to the last question is NO, in my case. Eventhough the
> meter shows critical level after 10 mins, the battery will support the
> laptop for well over an hour - the LED will blink, but the laptop
> continues till the battery dies and the laptop shuts down. So this is
> not a question of the Li cell losing its capacity, rather the onboard
> circuitry going bonkers.
>
> But, from the response it seems there is no routine to recalibrate the
> onboard circuitry. I guess I'll have to use it this way till the
> battery loses capacity.
Okay. Which battery program are you using? The windows one, or another
one? And I would be curious to know what something like BattStat v0.98
tells you.
http://users.rcn.com/tmtalpey/BattStat/
> By the way, how frequently would you suggest that the battery should
> be removed to prolong it's life?
It is best to leave it out whenever you are not using it on battery
power or charging it. Although you have had 3 years out of it and that
is doing well if it was left in. As this suggests the battery doesn't
get too warm too deteriorate very much. Do you believe this is true?
--
Bill
Asus EEE PC 701G4 ~ 2GB RAM ~ 16GB-SDHC
Windows XP SP2