Why [and How] You Should Regularly Calibrate Your Laptop's Battery
You probably know your battery is best served by shallow discharges and regular top-offs, but calibrating your battery occasionally is important toootherwise the display that shows you how much charge is remaining can be wildly inaccurate.
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Read moreIf you've ever seen your battery zoom from half-full to near empty in what seems like an instant, or plugged in your charger and then unplugged it only to see what you thought was 100% is really only 95%, your phone or laptop battery may not be reporting the correct chargewhich means it may not be properly calibrated. Over at How-To Geek, Chris Hoffman explains that regular top-offs are important, but a good calibration is important too:
No matter how well you take care of the battery, its capacity will still decrease as a result of unavoidable factors like typical usage, age, and heat. If the battery isnt allowed to run from 100% down to 0% occasionally, the batterys power meter wont know how much juice is actually in the battery.
Manufacturers generally recommend calibrating the battery every 2-3 months. This helps keep your battery readings accurate.
In reality, you likely dont have to do this that often if youre not too worried about your laptops battery readings being completely precise. However, if you dont calibrate your battery regularly, you may eventually find your laptop suddenly dying on you when youre using it without any prior warnings. When this happens, its definitely time to calibrate the battery.
Mmm, coffee
You can order subscriptions as small as two bags per month and as large as 24, which is ludicrous, but nice to know that it's an option.
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We'd suggest making it part of your regular PC cleaning ritual, maybe every year in the spring, or every six months or so. Calibrating your laptop battery isn't hardit's essentially the process of running your battery down to near-empty and then charging it all the way back up to full, and some PC manufacturers even have utilities that will do this for you. If you'd prefer to do it manually, the full post linked below will explain how to do it. [Note: If you own a Macbook made in the past few years, Apple says you don't need to worry about calibration at all, as OS X handles it for you.]
If you're interested in calibrating your phone battery, things get a little trickierthere are apps that can help [most Android apps require root to keep the phone from just powering off while you're calibrating] but you can always go manual and just leave the phone discharged as long as possible, then plug it back in until it's fully charged. This StackExchange question may help Android users, and this article at MacBlend should help iOS users.
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How to Calibrate Your Laptop's Battery for Accurate Battery Life Estimates | How-To Geek
Photo by Kyle Van Horn.
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