Battery drain in switched off laptops [closed]












1














Say, I charge a laptop fully while using it, then once it's 100% charged, I switch it off, and don't use it again, at all, for around a month.



Will all the battery automatically have discharged due to self-discharge, and thus when I have to power it back on after a month, I will first have to charge it again and then it will power on?



Or, say if the battery is in good health, then the self-discharge won't be significant enough to drain the full battery power, and hence even after a month, I will be able to power it back on without having to charge it first?



My emphasis is here on the timeframe, like is a whole month enough to let the battery self-discharge fully?










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closed as too broad by DrMoishe Pippik, PeterH, bertieb, K7AAY, Pimp Juice IT Dec 21 '18 at 22:44


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.















  • This question is impossible to answer, except if you'd accept a carefully stated "it depends". What is the actual problem you are facing? Please help us understand the context of your problem.
    – slhck
    Dec 19 '18 at 16:29










  • I want to know what should be a relatively normal self-discharge rate for a battery in good condition. Like under any normal circumstances, would it be strange if the battery power lasted even after no use for a month? Or vice versa? I can understand it may vary depending on the battery, but to generalize it. I'm asking because in several situations it has happened that after fully charging a laptop and then not using it, the next time I tried to turn it on it wouldn't and I would have to charge it again. But now even after no use or charging for a month, it still powers up. Is that unusual?
    – Dobby
    Dec 19 '18 at 16:36










  • @Rik, there are many different kinds of batteries and many different situations (mostly temperature and whether or not the laptop is completely off) that control whether or not there will be sufficient charge left to start after a month in storage.
    – Christopher Hostage
    Dec 19 '18 at 21:10










  • Suggest you visit the Rechargeable Battery Applications Handbook elsevier.com/books/rechargeable-batteries-applications-handbook/…
    – K7AAY
    Dec 21 '18 at 0:20
















1














Say, I charge a laptop fully while using it, then once it's 100% charged, I switch it off, and don't use it again, at all, for around a month.



Will all the battery automatically have discharged due to self-discharge, and thus when I have to power it back on after a month, I will first have to charge it again and then it will power on?



Or, say if the battery is in good health, then the self-discharge won't be significant enough to drain the full battery power, and hence even after a month, I will be able to power it back on without having to charge it first?



My emphasis is here on the timeframe, like is a whole month enough to let the battery self-discharge fully?










share|improve this question















closed as too broad by DrMoishe Pippik, PeterH, bertieb, K7AAY, Pimp Juice IT Dec 21 '18 at 22:44


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.















  • This question is impossible to answer, except if you'd accept a carefully stated "it depends". What is the actual problem you are facing? Please help us understand the context of your problem.
    – slhck
    Dec 19 '18 at 16:29










  • I want to know what should be a relatively normal self-discharge rate for a battery in good condition. Like under any normal circumstances, would it be strange if the battery power lasted even after no use for a month? Or vice versa? I can understand it may vary depending on the battery, but to generalize it. I'm asking because in several situations it has happened that after fully charging a laptop and then not using it, the next time I tried to turn it on it wouldn't and I would have to charge it again. But now even after no use or charging for a month, it still powers up. Is that unusual?
    – Dobby
    Dec 19 '18 at 16:36










  • @Rik, there are many different kinds of batteries and many different situations (mostly temperature and whether or not the laptop is completely off) that control whether or not there will be sufficient charge left to start after a month in storage.
    – Christopher Hostage
    Dec 19 '18 at 21:10










  • Suggest you visit the Rechargeable Battery Applications Handbook elsevier.com/books/rechargeable-batteries-applications-handbook/…
    – K7AAY
    Dec 21 '18 at 0:20














1












1








1


1





Say, I charge a laptop fully while using it, then once it's 100% charged, I switch it off, and don't use it again, at all, for around a month.



Will all the battery automatically have discharged due to self-discharge, and thus when I have to power it back on after a month, I will first have to charge it again and then it will power on?



Or, say if the battery is in good health, then the self-discharge won't be significant enough to drain the full battery power, and hence even after a month, I will be able to power it back on without having to charge it first?



My emphasis is here on the timeframe, like is a whole month enough to let the battery self-discharge fully?










share|improve this question















Say, I charge a laptop fully while using it, then once it's 100% charged, I switch it off, and don't use it again, at all, for around a month.



Will all the battery automatically have discharged due to self-discharge, and thus when I have to power it back on after a month, I will first have to charge it again and then it will power on?



Or, say if the battery is in good health, then the self-discharge won't be significant enough to drain the full battery power, and hence even after a month, I will be able to power it back on without having to charge it first?



My emphasis is here on the timeframe, like is a whole month enough to let the battery self-discharge fully?







laptop battery battery-life charging






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 19 '18 at 16:18

























asked Dec 19 '18 at 16:13









Dobby

254




254




closed as too broad by DrMoishe Pippik, PeterH, bertieb, K7AAY, Pimp Juice IT Dec 21 '18 at 22:44


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






closed as too broad by DrMoishe Pippik, PeterH, bertieb, K7AAY, Pimp Juice IT Dec 21 '18 at 22:44


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • This question is impossible to answer, except if you'd accept a carefully stated "it depends". What is the actual problem you are facing? Please help us understand the context of your problem.
    – slhck
    Dec 19 '18 at 16:29










  • I want to know what should be a relatively normal self-discharge rate for a battery in good condition. Like under any normal circumstances, would it be strange if the battery power lasted even after no use for a month? Or vice versa? I can understand it may vary depending on the battery, but to generalize it. I'm asking because in several situations it has happened that after fully charging a laptop and then not using it, the next time I tried to turn it on it wouldn't and I would have to charge it again. But now even after no use or charging for a month, it still powers up. Is that unusual?
    – Dobby
    Dec 19 '18 at 16:36










  • @Rik, there are many different kinds of batteries and many different situations (mostly temperature and whether or not the laptop is completely off) that control whether or not there will be sufficient charge left to start after a month in storage.
    – Christopher Hostage
    Dec 19 '18 at 21:10










  • Suggest you visit the Rechargeable Battery Applications Handbook elsevier.com/books/rechargeable-batteries-applications-handbook/…
    – K7AAY
    Dec 21 '18 at 0:20


















  • This question is impossible to answer, except if you'd accept a carefully stated "it depends". What is the actual problem you are facing? Please help us understand the context of your problem.
    – slhck
    Dec 19 '18 at 16:29










  • I want to know what should be a relatively normal self-discharge rate for a battery in good condition. Like under any normal circumstances, would it be strange if the battery power lasted even after no use for a month? Or vice versa? I can understand it may vary depending on the battery, but to generalize it. I'm asking because in several situations it has happened that after fully charging a laptop and then not using it, the next time I tried to turn it on it wouldn't and I would have to charge it again. But now even after no use or charging for a month, it still powers up. Is that unusual?
    – Dobby
    Dec 19 '18 at 16:36










  • @Rik, there are many different kinds of batteries and many different situations (mostly temperature and whether or not the laptop is completely off) that control whether or not there will be sufficient charge left to start after a month in storage.
    – Christopher Hostage
    Dec 19 '18 at 21:10










  • Suggest you visit the Rechargeable Battery Applications Handbook elsevier.com/books/rechargeable-batteries-applications-handbook/…
    – K7AAY
    Dec 21 '18 at 0:20
















This question is impossible to answer, except if you'd accept a carefully stated "it depends". What is the actual problem you are facing? Please help us understand the context of your problem.
– slhck
Dec 19 '18 at 16:29




This question is impossible to answer, except if you'd accept a carefully stated "it depends". What is the actual problem you are facing? Please help us understand the context of your problem.
– slhck
Dec 19 '18 at 16:29












I want to know what should be a relatively normal self-discharge rate for a battery in good condition. Like under any normal circumstances, would it be strange if the battery power lasted even after no use for a month? Or vice versa? I can understand it may vary depending on the battery, but to generalize it. I'm asking because in several situations it has happened that after fully charging a laptop and then not using it, the next time I tried to turn it on it wouldn't and I would have to charge it again. But now even after no use or charging for a month, it still powers up. Is that unusual?
– Dobby
Dec 19 '18 at 16:36




I want to know what should be a relatively normal self-discharge rate for a battery in good condition. Like under any normal circumstances, would it be strange if the battery power lasted even after no use for a month? Or vice versa? I can understand it may vary depending on the battery, but to generalize it. I'm asking because in several situations it has happened that after fully charging a laptop and then not using it, the next time I tried to turn it on it wouldn't and I would have to charge it again. But now even after no use or charging for a month, it still powers up. Is that unusual?
– Dobby
Dec 19 '18 at 16:36












@Rik, there are many different kinds of batteries and many different situations (mostly temperature and whether or not the laptop is completely off) that control whether or not there will be sufficient charge left to start after a month in storage.
– Christopher Hostage
Dec 19 '18 at 21:10




@Rik, there are many different kinds of batteries and many different situations (mostly temperature and whether or not the laptop is completely off) that control whether or not there will be sufficient charge left to start after a month in storage.
– Christopher Hostage
Dec 19 '18 at 21:10












Suggest you visit the Rechargeable Battery Applications Handbook elsevier.com/books/rechargeable-batteries-applications-handbook/…
– K7AAY
Dec 21 '18 at 0:20




Suggest you visit the Rechargeable Battery Applications Handbook elsevier.com/books/rechargeable-batteries-applications-handbook/…
– K7AAY
Dec 21 '18 at 0:20










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















2














Generally, this should be fine. The exact amount of self discharge depends on a huge number of factors, but as long as it's a good laptop battery, it usually shouldn't be empty after a month.



Expanding a bit more, self-discharge of healthy lithium-ion or lithium-polymer batteries (the two types in predominant use in laptops tends to be a reasonably slow process that is proportionate to the capacity of the battery. More specifically, it's pretty typical for most such batteries, independent of their size, to take multiple months to self-discharge if they're not connected to anything.



You can generally reduce the rate of self-discharge by:




  • Completely disconnecting the battery. This doesn't strictly reduce discharge from the battery itself, but it eliminates most of the small amount of current drawn by a modern computer when it's powered off (something has to have power to check when the power button is hit).

  • Storing the battery in a location that's not too hot or cold and has minimal temperature fluctuations. Based on personal experience with rechargeable batteries of this type, somewhere around 15-20 degrees Celsius (about 59-68 Fahrenheit) seems to be a good temperature, and the less it fluctuates in the short term the better.

  • Making sure the battery is room temperature before using it again. Cold batteries can provide less energy than appropriately warm ones. Again, this doesn't really reduce self-discharge, but it does help ensure the system is usable when turning it on again for the first time.


Also, it's probably a good idea to go about reconditioning the battery when you use it again if it's been unused for this long. To do this, simply discharge it as far as you can (preferably until the computer just shuts off, you can do this easily (albeit not quickly) by booting into the firmware setup menu and leaving the system sitting there with the screen on until it shuts off by itself), recharging it all the way afterwards, and then repeating the process once or twice more. This isn't quite as important as it used to be, but it can help keep the battery in good condition.






share|improve this answer





















  • Thanks for the detailed answer, appreciate it. And the last point was a good tip, I didn't know that, thanks
    – Dobby
    Dec 20 '18 at 19:16



















2














It varies from laptop model to model. I have an old 32-bit Acer that loses only a few percent charge per week, and a newer 64-bit model with bigger battery that loses ~10%/week, fully shut down. There are a number of factors involved





  • Intel® Anti-Theft Technology may continually try to contact a server even when the laptop is shutdown.


  • Cell equalization within the battery, intended to increase battery lifetime before replacement and to prevent fires, may drain a bit of power.

  • A number of models have particular problems with power drain, even when shut down.

  • Use of Wake on LAN or Wake on keyboard or mouse requires that the CPU is running, though in low power mode, to detect the events.


So the only answer to your question is to research your particular laptop model, or better, test it yourself: shut down fully and check the battery a week later.






share|improve this answer





















  • I understand. Thank you. I have left this machine unused before, but can't seem to exactly recall what the battery drain was like in the past, and I didn't know if I should be alarmed that the battery hadn't drained fully, because I had done a full shut down and Wake on Lan is not enabled. I was probably being paranoid, it would be a bad sign if it was drained, not other way around, but oh well. Thanks for responding with the possible scenarios
    – Dobby
    Dec 20 '18 at 19:22










  • If there are issues, it may help to reset charging. See superuser.com/questions/1035641/…
    – DrMoishe Pippik
    Dec 20 '18 at 22:25


















2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









2














Generally, this should be fine. The exact amount of self discharge depends on a huge number of factors, but as long as it's a good laptop battery, it usually shouldn't be empty after a month.



Expanding a bit more, self-discharge of healthy lithium-ion or lithium-polymer batteries (the two types in predominant use in laptops tends to be a reasonably slow process that is proportionate to the capacity of the battery. More specifically, it's pretty typical for most such batteries, independent of their size, to take multiple months to self-discharge if they're not connected to anything.



You can generally reduce the rate of self-discharge by:




  • Completely disconnecting the battery. This doesn't strictly reduce discharge from the battery itself, but it eliminates most of the small amount of current drawn by a modern computer when it's powered off (something has to have power to check when the power button is hit).

  • Storing the battery in a location that's not too hot or cold and has minimal temperature fluctuations. Based on personal experience with rechargeable batteries of this type, somewhere around 15-20 degrees Celsius (about 59-68 Fahrenheit) seems to be a good temperature, and the less it fluctuates in the short term the better.

  • Making sure the battery is room temperature before using it again. Cold batteries can provide less energy than appropriately warm ones. Again, this doesn't really reduce self-discharge, but it does help ensure the system is usable when turning it on again for the first time.


Also, it's probably a good idea to go about reconditioning the battery when you use it again if it's been unused for this long. To do this, simply discharge it as far as you can (preferably until the computer just shuts off, you can do this easily (albeit not quickly) by booting into the firmware setup menu and leaving the system sitting there with the screen on until it shuts off by itself), recharging it all the way afterwards, and then repeating the process once or twice more. This isn't quite as important as it used to be, but it can help keep the battery in good condition.






share|improve this answer





















  • Thanks for the detailed answer, appreciate it. And the last point was a good tip, I didn't know that, thanks
    – Dobby
    Dec 20 '18 at 19:16
















2














Generally, this should be fine. The exact amount of self discharge depends on a huge number of factors, but as long as it's a good laptop battery, it usually shouldn't be empty after a month.



Expanding a bit more, self-discharge of healthy lithium-ion or lithium-polymer batteries (the two types in predominant use in laptops tends to be a reasonably slow process that is proportionate to the capacity of the battery. More specifically, it's pretty typical for most such batteries, independent of their size, to take multiple months to self-discharge if they're not connected to anything.



You can generally reduce the rate of self-discharge by:




  • Completely disconnecting the battery. This doesn't strictly reduce discharge from the battery itself, but it eliminates most of the small amount of current drawn by a modern computer when it's powered off (something has to have power to check when the power button is hit).

  • Storing the battery in a location that's not too hot or cold and has minimal temperature fluctuations. Based on personal experience with rechargeable batteries of this type, somewhere around 15-20 degrees Celsius (about 59-68 Fahrenheit) seems to be a good temperature, and the less it fluctuates in the short term the better.

  • Making sure the battery is room temperature before using it again. Cold batteries can provide less energy than appropriately warm ones. Again, this doesn't really reduce self-discharge, but it does help ensure the system is usable when turning it on again for the first time.


Also, it's probably a good idea to go about reconditioning the battery when you use it again if it's been unused for this long. To do this, simply discharge it as far as you can (preferably until the computer just shuts off, you can do this easily (albeit not quickly) by booting into the firmware setup menu and leaving the system sitting there with the screen on until it shuts off by itself), recharging it all the way afterwards, and then repeating the process once or twice more. This isn't quite as important as it used to be, but it can help keep the battery in good condition.






share|improve this answer





















  • Thanks for the detailed answer, appreciate it. And the last point was a good tip, I didn't know that, thanks
    – Dobby
    Dec 20 '18 at 19:16














2












2








2






Generally, this should be fine. The exact amount of self discharge depends on a huge number of factors, but as long as it's a good laptop battery, it usually shouldn't be empty after a month.



Expanding a bit more, self-discharge of healthy lithium-ion or lithium-polymer batteries (the two types in predominant use in laptops tends to be a reasonably slow process that is proportionate to the capacity of the battery. More specifically, it's pretty typical for most such batteries, independent of their size, to take multiple months to self-discharge if they're not connected to anything.



You can generally reduce the rate of self-discharge by:




  • Completely disconnecting the battery. This doesn't strictly reduce discharge from the battery itself, but it eliminates most of the small amount of current drawn by a modern computer when it's powered off (something has to have power to check when the power button is hit).

  • Storing the battery in a location that's not too hot or cold and has minimal temperature fluctuations. Based on personal experience with rechargeable batteries of this type, somewhere around 15-20 degrees Celsius (about 59-68 Fahrenheit) seems to be a good temperature, and the less it fluctuates in the short term the better.

  • Making sure the battery is room temperature before using it again. Cold batteries can provide less energy than appropriately warm ones. Again, this doesn't really reduce self-discharge, but it does help ensure the system is usable when turning it on again for the first time.


Also, it's probably a good idea to go about reconditioning the battery when you use it again if it's been unused for this long. To do this, simply discharge it as far as you can (preferably until the computer just shuts off, you can do this easily (albeit not quickly) by booting into the firmware setup menu and leaving the system sitting there with the screen on until it shuts off by itself), recharging it all the way afterwards, and then repeating the process once or twice more. This isn't quite as important as it used to be, but it can help keep the battery in good condition.






share|improve this answer












Generally, this should be fine. The exact amount of self discharge depends on a huge number of factors, but as long as it's a good laptop battery, it usually shouldn't be empty after a month.



Expanding a bit more, self-discharge of healthy lithium-ion or lithium-polymer batteries (the two types in predominant use in laptops tends to be a reasonably slow process that is proportionate to the capacity of the battery. More specifically, it's pretty typical for most such batteries, independent of their size, to take multiple months to self-discharge if they're not connected to anything.



You can generally reduce the rate of self-discharge by:




  • Completely disconnecting the battery. This doesn't strictly reduce discharge from the battery itself, but it eliminates most of the small amount of current drawn by a modern computer when it's powered off (something has to have power to check when the power button is hit).

  • Storing the battery in a location that's not too hot or cold and has minimal temperature fluctuations. Based on personal experience with rechargeable batteries of this type, somewhere around 15-20 degrees Celsius (about 59-68 Fahrenheit) seems to be a good temperature, and the less it fluctuates in the short term the better.

  • Making sure the battery is room temperature before using it again. Cold batteries can provide less energy than appropriately warm ones. Again, this doesn't really reduce self-discharge, but it does help ensure the system is usable when turning it on again for the first time.


Also, it's probably a good idea to go about reconditioning the battery when you use it again if it's been unused for this long. To do this, simply discharge it as far as you can (preferably until the computer just shuts off, you can do this easily (albeit not quickly) by booting into the firmware setup menu and leaving the system sitting there with the screen on until it shuts off by itself), recharging it all the way afterwards, and then repeating the process once or twice more. This isn't quite as important as it used to be, but it can help keep the battery in good condition.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 19 '18 at 19:52









Austin Hemmelgarn

2,53919




2,53919












  • Thanks for the detailed answer, appreciate it. And the last point was a good tip, I didn't know that, thanks
    – Dobby
    Dec 20 '18 at 19:16


















  • Thanks for the detailed answer, appreciate it. And the last point was a good tip, I didn't know that, thanks
    – Dobby
    Dec 20 '18 at 19:16
















Thanks for the detailed answer, appreciate it. And the last point was a good tip, I didn't know that, thanks
– Dobby
Dec 20 '18 at 19:16




Thanks for the detailed answer, appreciate it. And the last point was a good tip, I didn't know that, thanks
– Dobby
Dec 20 '18 at 19:16













2














It varies from laptop model to model. I have an old 32-bit Acer that loses only a few percent charge per week, and a newer 64-bit model with bigger battery that loses ~10%/week, fully shut down. There are a number of factors involved





  • Intel® Anti-Theft Technology may continually try to contact a server even when the laptop is shutdown.


  • Cell equalization within the battery, intended to increase battery lifetime before replacement and to prevent fires, may drain a bit of power.

  • A number of models have particular problems with power drain, even when shut down.

  • Use of Wake on LAN or Wake on keyboard or mouse requires that the CPU is running, though in low power mode, to detect the events.


So the only answer to your question is to research your particular laptop model, or better, test it yourself: shut down fully and check the battery a week later.






share|improve this answer





















  • I understand. Thank you. I have left this machine unused before, but can't seem to exactly recall what the battery drain was like in the past, and I didn't know if I should be alarmed that the battery hadn't drained fully, because I had done a full shut down and Wake on Lan is not enabled. I was probably being paranoid, it would be a bad sign if it was drained, not other way around, but oh well. Thanks for responding with the possible scenarios
    – Dobby
    Dec 20 '18 at 19:22










  • If there are issues, it may help to reset charging. See superuser.com/questions/1035641/…
    – DrMoishe Pippik
    Dec 20 '18 at 22:25
















2














It varies from laptop model to model. I have an old 32-bit Acer that loses only a few percent charge per week, and a newer 64-bit model with bigger battery that loses ~10%/week, fully shut down. There are a number of factors involved





  • Intel® Anti-Theft Technology may continually try to contact a server even when the laptop is shutdown.


  • Cell equalization within the battery, intended to increase battery lifetime before replacement and to prevent fires, may drain a bit of power.

  • A number of models have particular problems with power drain, even when shut down.

  • Use of Wake on LAN or Wake on keyboard or mouse requires that the CPU is running, though in low power mode, to detect the events.


So the only answer to your question is to research your particular laptop model, or better, test it yourself: shut down fully and check the battery a week later.






share|improve this answer





















  • I understand. Thank you. I have left this machine unused before, but can't seem to exactly recall what the battery drain was like in the past, and I didn't know if I should be alarmed that the battery hadn't drained fully, because I had done a full shut down and Wake on Lan is not enabled. I was probably being paranoid, it would be a bad sign if it was drained, not other way around, but oh well. Thanks for responding with the possible scenarios
    – Dobby
    Dec 20 '18 at 19:22










  • If there are issues, it may help to reset charging. See superuser.com/questions/1035641/…
    – DrMoishe Pippik
    Dec 20 '18 at 22:25














2












2








2






It varies from laptop model to model. I have an old 32-bit Acer that loses only a few percent charge per week, and a newer 64-bit model with bigger battery that loses ~10%/week, fully shut down. There are a number of factors involved





  • Intel® Anti-Theft Technology may continually try to contact a server even when the laptop is shutdown.


  • Cell equalization within the battery, intended to increase battery lifetime before replacement and to prevent fires, may drain a bit of power.

  • A number of models have particular problems with power drain, even when shut down.

  • Use of Wake on LAN or Wake on keyboard or mouse requires that the CPU is running, though in low power mode, to detect the events.


So the only answer to your question is to research your particular laptop model, or better, test it yourself: shut down fully and check the battery a week later.






share|improve this answer












It varies from laptop model to model. I have an old 32-bit Acer that loses only a few percent charge per week, and a newer 64-bit model with bigger battery that loses ~10%/week, fully shut down. There are a number of factors involved





  • Intel® Anti-Theft Technology may continually try to contact a server even when the laptop is shutdown.


  • Cell equalization within the battery, intended to increase battery lifetime before replacement and to prevent fires, may drain a bit of power.

  • A number of models have particular problems with power drain, even when shut down.

  • Use of Wake on LAN or Wake on keyboard or mouse requires that the CPU is running, though in low power mode, to detect the events.


So the only answer to your question is to research your particular laptop model, or better, test it yourself: shut down fully and check the battery a week later.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 19 '18 at 19:52









DrMoishe Pippik

9,70721330




9,70721330












  • I understand. Thank you. I have left this machine unused before, but can't seem to exactly recall what the battery drain was like in the past, and I didn't know if I should be alarmed that the battery hadn't drained fully, because I had done a full shut down and Wake on Lan is not enabled. I was probably being paranoid, it would be a bad sign if it was drained, not other way around, but oh well. Thanks for responding with the possible scenarios
    – Dobby
    Dec 20 '18 at 19:22










  • If there are issues, it may help to reset charging. See superuser.com/questions/1035641/…
    – DrMoishe Pippik
    Dec 20 '18 at 22:25


















  • I understand. Thank you. I have left this machine unused before, but can't seem to exactly recall what the battery drain was like in the past, and I didn't know if I should be alarmed that the battery hadn't drained fully, because I had done a full shut down and Wake on Lan is not enabled. I was probably being paranoid, it would be a bad sign if it was drained, not other way around, but oh well. Thanks for responding with the possible scenarios
    – Dobby
    Dec 20 '18 at 19:22










  • If there are issues, it may help to reset charging. See superuser.com/questions/1035641/…
    – DrMoishe Pippik
    Dec 20 '18 at 22:25
















I understand. Thank you. I have left this machine unused before, but can't seem to exactly recall what the battery drain was like in the past, and I didn't know if I should be alarmed that the battery hadn't drained fully, because I had done a full shut down and Wake on Lan is not enabled. I was probably being paranoid, it would be a bad sign if it was drained, not other way around, but oh well. Thanks for responding with the possible scenarios
– Dobby
Dec 20 '18 at 19:22




I understand. Thank you. I have left this machine unused before, but can't seem to exactly recall what the battery drain was like in the past, and I didn't know if I should be alarmed that the battery hadn't drained fully, because I had done a full shut down and Wake on Lan is not enabled. I was probably being paranoid, it would be a bad sign if it was drained, not other way around, but oh well. Thanks for responding with the possible scenarios
– Dobby
Dec 20 '18 at 19:22












If there are issues, it may help to reset charging. See superuser.com/questions/1035641/…
– DrMoishe Pippik
Dec 20 '18 at 22:25




If there are issues, it may help to reset charging. See superuser.com/questions/1035641/…
– DrMoishe Pippik
Dec 20 '18 at 22:25



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