John M Flinchbaugh wrote:
On Fri, Feb 17, 2006 at 01:19:32PM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Once the battery meter warned me that I had 0 minutes left, I rebooted
it to the LILO prompt, stopped it there and let it drain the battery
until it just died and couldn't be turned back on. I think it ran for
nearly another hour after initially reporting empty, so obviously it
was a bit out of calibration.
After a recharge, the battery meter more accurately reported that I
had 2 hours left. It was still degraded from original performance, but
I at least regained a little extra use before having to replace this
aging battery.
Yeah. I've heard elsewhere that some kinds of batteries (those with
"battery memory", like NiCads) can be rejuvenated by completely draining
them. Apparently they remember the point to which they have been
discharged last and start to act empty when they get back to that point.
Other kinds of batteries (like lead-acid car batteries can be damaged
severely by discharging them conpletely. And I've heard that the MiMH
batteries don't have a battery memory problem at all.
My little exercise wasn't so much about classic "memory" effect in older
battery technologies, but more about the monitoring hardware reporting
empty prematurely, since the juice is there to run another hour, but the
battery status says its empty. Once it's seen real empty, it can better
report to the OS.
I have an ancient laptop which was old when I bought it second hand from
E-Bay. The battery was not warrented and it was completely non-usable.
I bought a replacement which has done just fine. Recently, I started up
the laptop after not using it for several months. The battery, which
used to last about three hours, or more, started warning me that it was
low after only about 30 minutes. After recharging it the battery lasted
a more resonable amount of time. I let it discharge fully before
recharging it again and it now seems to be back to full charging. It
just seems to have needed a few reminders about how to actually hold a
charge. YMMV.
--
Marc Shapiro
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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