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Maintaining
and Troubleshooting Your Laptop Battery
By
Bill Platt, Owner of WindstormComputing.com
The actual life of a laptop
battery will vary with computer usage habits. For most users, it
is not uncommon to experience differences in battery life, of anywhere
from just under one hour to over two hours in each sitting. If you
are experiencing shorter battery life cycles, say 10 to 15 minutes,
it may not yet be time to order that new battery.
There are several factors
to take into consideration when determining if the time has come
to replace your battery. This information may also apply to that
new battery that you have recently purchased, that has been giving
you fits. The two primary things to consider when troubleshooting
battery problems is Usage Habits and Battery Memory. We will cover
both in their complexities in just a moment, but first, let us take
a look at what you should expect from your battery's life cycle.
NiMH batteries usually last
1.5 to 2.5 hours.
LiION batteries usually last 2.0 to 3.0 hours.
These are average results
and the results will vary greatly depending on your system's conservation
settings, the temperature of the room and the climate that you are
operating your computer in. As a general rule, your Lithium Ion
battery will last much longer than your standard Nickel Metal Hydride
battery.
Now let's take a look at
the various usage habits to consider when troubleshooting your laptop's
battery. These processes are very similar to the way that your portable
stereo uses batteries ... just think how much faster your stereo
eats batteries when you are playing the CD or the tape deck, as
opposed to when you are just playing the radio.
The more you use physical
devices --- which require more electricity to operate --- the more
of the battery's power you can expect to consume. The devices that
create a larger power drain are the hard drive, the floppy drive
and the CD-ROM.
When the computer is able
to use its physical memory resources to store information, the computer
will use less of the battery's power, since the process is mostly
electrical in nature. However, when the processes you are using
exhaust the physical memory resources available to your system,
the system will turn to virtual memory to continue the process at
hand. Virtual Memory is designed to extend system memory resources
by building a memory swap file on the hard drive, and then transfer
needed information between the hard drive and the physical memory
as required. Since the hard drive is a electricity hog, the use
of virtual memory becomes an electricity hog by proxy.
Two other processes that
engage virtual memory on your computer are computational programs
and the calculation processes used by spreadsheet applications and
database programs. Both of these items engage the processor to a
greater degree as well, which in itself is a consumer of electricity.
Because they both compute and calculate large quantities of information,
they will also increase the amount of electricity that your laptop
will consume.
Other physical devices that
cannot be left out of this discussion are audio and display devices.
As far as audio devices are concerned, speakers require electricity
to run and the software that is responsible for producing the sound
does so by processing information. The display panel consumes electricity
as well. In fact, the brighter the screen appears, the more electricity
that it is consuming. You may turn down the brightness on the screen,
thereby conserving more electricity than you may have considered
possible. And when considering the battery drain caused by video
devices, don't forget the effect that graphics programs will have
on your system. Video applications can have an intense effect on
your electrical needs, due to its usage of computation, calculations
and virtual memory.
Battery Memory is an odd
little creature. The concept of battery memory is reminiscent of
Pavlovian Conditioning. Do you remember the story about Pavlov and
his dogs? Pavlov would serve his dogs food and when they realized
it was dinner time, he would ring a bell. After some time of conditioning
his dogs, all he would have to do to get the dogs to salivate, was
to ring the bell. Battery Memory is a lot like that.
Battery memory is where the
battery becomes conditioned to run for less time than it is designed
to run. Say for example, you run your computer on battery for an
hour and then you plug it back in to let it recharge. The battery
will become conditioned to run only an hour before it runs out of
juice.
To correct Battery Memory
problems, you must completely drain the battery and recharge it.
To completely drain your battery, you must go into your Windows
Control Panel and select Power. Then you must turn Power Management
Off. Next, you must go into your BIOS and make sure that if there
is a power management setting there, that you turn it off as well.
In most cases, once you are inside the BIOS, you will highlight
Power Management and press Enter. Then locate the item Hibernation
at Critical Battery, and by using the Minus sign, change the setting
to Off. Once these steps have been completed, then use your Escape
key to return to the top level menu, and select Save Settings and
Exit.
Once you have completed turning
off the power management in both the BIOS and the Operating System,
you must unplug the computer, turn the computer on and let it run
until it completely runs out of electricity. Then you should charge
the battery for 12 hours. At the end of the charging cycle, then
run the computer again until the battery is dead, and then charge
the battery for 12 more hours. You should repeat this process four
times, before returning the computer to its original power management
settings.
As far as battery usage goes,
it is recommended that you should use the battery once every two
weeks, and keep the battery in the system so that the AC adapter
can keep the battery charged at all times. It is also recommended
that if you don't use the battery for more than two weeks, you should
completely discharge the battery and store it at room temperature.
Bill Platt is the
Owner of www.WindstormComputing.com
, a large computer support knowledge-base, & a free-reprint article
archive. He is also the owner of "America's Icons - Best of The
Web!" at: www.Americas-Icons.com.
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