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Battery won't charge past 99%

Posted: Fri Oct 10, 2008 3:34 pm
by Mrjoe1008
Hi,

The 6 cell battery on my x200 won't charge past 99%--- the computer is only 2 days old!

Any ideas?

Many thanks,
Joe

Posted: Fri Oct 10, 2008 3:40 pm
by erik
with the default power settings they won't start charging again until about 95%.

Posted: Sat Oct 11, 2008 2:36 am
by lightweight
It's not a bad idea to lower that threshold. At 80% charge, battery minded x60s with 8cell can get around 6 hours, and presumably your x200 is similar. By lowering the upper limit for charging, you save cycles on your battery while staying mobile. More importantly, you can go wireless and then plug in to your desk (allowing full brightness, full disk io, etc) and vice versa whenever you want and not care about abusing your battery.

Posted: Sat Oct 11, 2008 11:21 am
by Mrjoe1008
Thanks for the info! If I understand correctly, lowering the charge threshold, I'll reduce the strain on battery?

How can I lower this threshold?

Many thanks,
Joe

Posted: Sun Oct 12, 2008 2:52 am
by 732
lightweight wrote:By lowering the upper limit for charging, you save cycles on your battery while staying mobile.
It does not save cycles because you don't fully charge - the cycle counter doesn't work this way.

The cycle count is an estimate. So if you drain from 100-30% and recharge that's a cycle count. If you charge it to 90% and let it self drain to 80% and recharge that's a 0.1cycle. It'll take 10 of those to get 1 cycle.

The default is 96% but I would recommend using 90%.


Mrjoe1008, you can set this in ThinkVantage power manager > battery information > battery maintenance > custom

Posted: Sun Oct 12, 2008 11:16 pm
by lightweight
By lowering the upper limit for charging, you save cycles on your battery while staying mobile.
It does not save cycles because you don't fully charge - the cycle counter doesn't work this way.
My poor choice of words: I do not mean the cycle count feature in battery monitoring but rather limiting the number of charges of the battery cells, including partial charges, for those who frequently prefer or find themselves on battery for relatively short periods throughout the day.