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Find out if it’s time to replace your Windows laptop battery

The windows 10 Toshiba laptop. Image Credit: msecnd

The windows 10 Toshiba laptop. Image Credit: msecnd

If you’ve tried all the tricks dimming your screen, closing apps and turning off unused antennae but your laptop’s battery still can’t hold a charge, it might be time to replace the battery.

A battery’s capacity (the amount of energy it can hold) depletes over time. Eventually, your once high-endurance laptop might only last a couple hours. Same goes for phones and tablets.

On Windows, the best way to find out if it’s time to replace your battery is to generate a battery report.

How to generate a battery report in Windows

There’s a lot to learn from the battery report, like your battery’s capacity history (how it’s depleted over time) and analysis for the last three charge cycles. But for our purposes, the most important metric is Design Capacity versus Full Charge Capacity.[related-posts]

Design Capacity is how much power your laptop could hold when you unboxed it. Full Charge Capacity is how much it can hold now. For instance, my laptop’s Design Capacity is 46,030 mWh while the Full Charge Capacity is now 39,030 mWh.

A Laptop Battery is being replaced as seen in the picture. Image Credit: Intel

For me, the depletion is still tolerable. But if your Full Charge Capacity is drastically lower than the Design Capacity, you might want to find out if it’s possible to replace the battery.

[CNET]

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