[Enquiry] Battery capacity decreased

Product name: HP ENVY Sleekbook 4
Running window 8 64bits Single language
Hi there,I would like to ask about my battery capacity.
Please take a look on 2 screen-shots here.
[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/QGbf474.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/1arYOS2.jpg[/IMG]
Both of screen-shots were taken in same day but different time.
As you can see,my battery capacity mah is decreasing from time to time.
It made me worried,I'm afraid soon my laptop can't hold any longer at outdoor without external power.I brought within a month,there is no doubt if my battery age is old from the time of manufactured
Before I post,I have searched few article on internet,I discover something called battery calibration,but I'm not familiar with it.I'm here to look whether any solution to increase my battery mah,please guide me.

3602 mAh down to 3587 mAh is within the margin of error for measurement. About 4 tenths of one percent. I don't see any decline in the capacity of the battery. One screenshot is showing it fully charged and one is showing it at 87% charge. Maybe I am missing something but where do you see that the capacity has declined to any significant extent?

Similar Messages

  • My battery capacity decreases per charge!!!

    Hi guys I need help, I am very frustrated about this matter , This is my first macbook pro retine late 2013 the latest one out yet 4gb ram baseline model with the dubal core i5. I started playing LOL or League of Legends an online game a few weeks back.
    When I did start I was completely hooked and played multiple hours even with the battery charger plugged in. The battery lost its total capacity from 6300 its about 6200 then it fell 6150 ok then I statred carying ok I LOVE MY MAC AND ITS BATTERY.
    So i went like ok i will play max 40 mins per day, fine huh 1 time per charge cycle make sure the charge cycle is 20 hrs long I have been trying to do this more or less BUT EVEYTIME I PLAY THE GAME EVEN IF THE CHARGE drop is only 30% my total battery capacity drops.
    I am checking this through MULTIPLE apps and every time i play the drop is bloody 0.5 percent and i  CANT TAKE IT and when i dont play on a chrge cycle there is NO DROP IN THE OVERALL capacity.
    Note i take soo much care when i pay i charge it to 100 and keep it ice cold when  i play and its not plugged in. Any advice are the apps wrong is my capacity decresing are macs not meant for gaming or if i conture down this path will i have to eventully replace my battery just any adivce or thoughts on this matter will be VERY APPRECIATED!!!

    When Taxing the system, Running it Hard as most all games do, it will draw power from both the AC charger and the battery at the same time.
    The AC charger Apple supplies is not large enough to do both Power the system and charge the battery, or even keep the same charge on the battery, when the system is working hard.
    As to the overall capacity of the battery that will go down with the increase of charge cycles.
    What you are seeing is completely normal for all Mac notebook computers.

  • Battery Capacity decreasing rapidly

    I have a new 11" Air, and i have noticed something very concerning.
    The capacity of the battery (the maximum amount of charge it can hold) is dropping rapidly.
    In the 3 days I have had it, it has already dropped to 97%.
    It charges fine and lasts as long as it should, but the max capacity it can charge to is dropping so rapidly that it'll be down to zero in 3 months!
    I am using System Profiler/Power to interrogate the battery, and if I compare it to my MacBook Pro 13, the difference is stark.
    The MBP13 after 7 months of use and some 50 charges is still showing around 100.2% capacity - in fact, it has hardly budged at all since it was new.
    The Air was at about 99.5% when I first powered it on, but it is dropping very fast.
    Any ideas?
    Shame, otherwise i love it!!!
    Message was edited by: Imran999
    Message was edited by: Imran999

    Hi,
    hmm.. if you dont mind, I suggest you to carry your power adapter with you and plug it in to any power source when you start booting your MBA to prevent your MBA from using the power form the battery. This will greatly reduce the cycle count. I think the cycle count is more important than the health because Apple wrote a software to monitor the health based on the cycle count. Meaning, the health of your battery may in fact good, but the cycle count is, say above 300 and thus software ask the owner to change the battery.
    If you think that this way may work for you, remember to calibrate your battery every 3 months.
    Hope it helps.
    Cheers.

  • MacBook Pro Mid 2010 Battery Capacity

    I've read a few threads about this, mostly about battery capacity rapidly dropping after an install of ML. I installed ML when it first came out, and just noticed the drastic decrease in battery life about 3 weeks ago. My capacity could have potentially been dropping since I installed ML (and I just now noticed it), or it may have just started a couple weeks ago when I noticed. I'm not sure.
    Either way, my MacBook Pro (Mid 2010) now has a battery life of less than an hour, even with extremely light processor load. I contacted Apple about this, and the tech said that the battery was rated for 1000 cycles. I'm currently at 220, and my battery capacity is a pathetic 30%. He said that since I wasn't under warranty, there was nothing they could do besides replace the battery - which I really want to avoid since I'm a broke college student.
    Is there anything I can do here? I understand that I'm not under warranty anymore, and this wouldn't be a problem if my battery was degrading normally. However, getting 1/5th of the recommended battery life is pretty sad. I've read that doing a clean install of Mountain Lion/Lion might help. Is there a way I can do this without having to back up all my files? I don't have an external hard drive or anything.
    It seems this is a common topic in these forums. Any help or links to solutions would be great. If this is answered in a similar topic, I'll gladly delete.
    Here is the system info on my battery, incase that might help:
    Battery Information:
      Model Information:
      Serial Number:          9G030040MD3MA
      Manufacturer:          DP
      Device Name:          bq20z451
      Pack Lot Code:          0
      PCB Lot Code:          0
      Firmware Version:          201
      Hardware Revision:          2
      Cell Revision:          158
      Charge Information:
      Charge Remaining (mAh):          1453
      Fully Charged:          No
      Charging:          Yes
      Full Charge Capacity (mAh):          1939
      Health Information:
      Cycle Count:          220
      Condition:          Service Battery
      Battery Installed:          Yes
      Amperage (mA):          1507
      Voltage (mV):          12214
    System Power Settings:
      AC Power:
      System Sleep Timer (Minutes):          0
      Disk Sleep Timer (Minutes):          10
      Display Sleep Timer (Minutes):          15
      Wake on AC Change:          No
      Wake on Clamshell Open:          Yes
      Wake on LAN:          Yes
      Current Power Source:          Yes
      Display Sleep Uses Dim:          Yes
      PrioritizeNetworkReachabilityOverSleep:          0
      Battery Power:
      System Sleep Timer (Minutes):          15
      Disk Sleep Timer (Minutes):          10
      Display Sleep Timer (Minutes):          10
      Wake on AC Change:          No
      Wake on Clamshell Open:          Yes
      Display Sleep Uses Dim:          Yes
      Reduce Brightness:          Yes
    Hardware Configuration:
      UPS Installed:          No
    AC Charger Information:
      Connected:          Yes
      ID:          0x0100
      Wattage (W):          60
      Revision:          0x0000
      Family:          0x0085
      Serial Number:          0x00cb7bc3
      Charging:          Yes
    Thanks in advance

    Condition:
         Service Battery
    You need a new battery.

  • After software/firmware UD, battery life decreased significantly+overheating problems

    Specs of my laptop:
    13 inch late 2011
    2.4 GHz Intel Core i5
    4gb 1333 MHz DDR3
    Mac OSX Lion 10.7.5 (11G63)
    Hi, a month or two ago I did a software/firmware update (the thing that automatically pops up once in a while and asks if you want to update). Before the update, I was getting 7-8 hours running safari on a bright level (more than half) which was awesome!
    Anyways, after I did the update, my battery life decreased significantly. If my brightness was at half, I got around 2.5 hours MAX. If I ran word and safari it wouldn't even last two hours.
    Along with the horrible decrease in battery life, my laptop now gets really hot, really quickly, even if I'm only running safari on a low brightness. Sometimes the fan vibrates becuase it's working so hard...it's NEVER done that before.
    I took it into the Apple store 'genius' bar, since I still have the warranty and the person that helped me offered no resolution. He told me that my battery still has life and didn't know why my laptop did this, laughed...and then dismissed me (rude). haha
    system report of the battery:
    Firmware Version:          201
      Hardware Revision:          000a
      Cell Revision:          158
      Charge Information:
      Charge Remaining (mAh):          5281
      Fully Charged:          Yes
      Charging:          No
      Full Charge Capacity (mAh):          5333
      Health Information:
      Cycle Count:          392
      Condition:          Normal
      Battery Installed:          Yes
      Amperage (mA):          0
      Voltage (mV):          12457
    I'm not sure what any of this means, but the 'genius' told me my battery still had a lot of life.
    I just want the battery life back.
    Does anyone know what's going on and how I can fix it?
    Thank you

    Hi, thanks for your advice. I just tried resetting and it worked momentarily (battery life improved, fan stopped making so much noise) UNTIL I put my computer to sleep and opened it again... when i first reset, battery life said 5:48. The fan was fine until I put it to sleep (closed the lid and opened five minutes later). Now it's heating up again and the fan is going crazy (making that buzzing noise), battery life is at 2:40 on same display brightness (half). I only have safari open....
    Is there anything else I can try to do? Not sure why this happens after I put it to sleep. I don't want to have to reset my computer every single time I open it.
    thanks
    EDIT: after posting this, not even five minutes later my battery time dropped to 2:07 and is funneling down as I type.

  • Concerned about falling battery capacity on rMBP

    Hello all, I'm starting to worry a bit about my battery capacity vs design capacity on my retina macbook pro 15". It's a early 2013 model that I bought in July. I know that apple guarantees the battery will have at least 80% of it's design capacity after 1000 cycles, but I'm worried mine is going to fall far short of that. Here's my coconut battery info:
    As you can see, I've only had 60 cycles on the battery, the computer is barely half a year old, and it's already down 6%, under 8000 mAh. Should I be concerned/take it to the apple store? I know they won't replace my computer since I'm far outside of my 14 days, but still wondering if they'll do something. Will they even do anything before the battery falls below 80% design capacity?
    I waited to post because I know battery capacity often fluctuates from 5% below to 5% above design frequently and will go up and down with use, but mine has steadily decreased, and has never increased. Every time I check coconut battery, it's 10-50 mAh lower than it was. My macbook does stay plugged in a lot, but I also make a point of using the battery at least once a week to keep the electrons flowing, and most weeks it gets off the charger more like two or three times. Often the battery will get used down to at least 50 or 60 percent before it gets plugged back in, sometimes even as low at 15 or 20 percent. I've tried draining it until it goes to sleep and then letting it charge to full again, but it didn't change anything. I didn't think it would, since lithium based batteries don't suffer memory issues, but I thought maybe it was just an error in measurement by the system.
    Speaking of that, I did reset the NVRAM/PRAM and the SMC (multiple times). Only one of the times I reset the SMC did the light turn orange and then charge more, but it didn't change the max capacity number at all.
    I see a lot of people posting their cocunut results/system information screen and finding they actually have above design capacity. Did I just get a lemon battery, or is it because I have it plugged in so much?
    Thoughts? Thanks!

    Apple guarantees that if your battery is well taken care of and not abused,  however your battery looks fine.
    You state: ~ As you can see, I've only had 60 cycles on the battery
    Cycle counts dont account for much.  People (some) leave their macbooks always hooked on power and worse still in sleep mode and on power and this can ruin a battery in "50 cycles", ergo it means little.
    As for the 5% power fluctuation this means absolutely nothing since charge is just an estimate and the 5% is within that range.
    Information:
    Bad discharging or battery use conditions:
    Heat (due to environmental conditions or due to rapid discharges from heavy use = gaming / video editing)
    Rapid discharging of the battery frequently causes chemical changes over time in the battery leading to decrease capacity and resistance of current flow.
    The very worst use of your battery is often draining the battery very low, and worse still letting it remain in such a state.
    *Most long-term rapid damage to the battery occurs from discharging it with high loading (gaming) conditions but paramount is avoiding deep and frequent low DOD (depths of discharge) in use.
    Undesirable charging or charged conditions:
    High perpetual SOC (state of charge), where the battery is always or very often connected to charge
    Parasitic loading where the battery is both usually on and charging or worse both always charging and in sleep mode, since this induces mini-cycling of the battery.
    Bad general handling conditions:
    Temperature use conditions when either too hot (95F and above) or too cold (50F and below)
    Storing your battery away with a low charge (40% and less) long-term.
    Considerations:
    Your battery is subject to chemical aging even if not in use. A Lithium battery is aging as soon as its made, regardless.
    In a perfect (although impractical) situation, your lithium battery is best idealized swinging back and forth between 25 and 85% SOC (state of charge) roughly.
    Further still how you discharge the battery is far more important than how it is either charged or stored short term.
    Ultimately counting charge cycles is of little to no importance.  Abuse in discharging (foremost), charging, and storing the battery and how it affects battery chemistry is important and not the ‘odometer’ reading, or cycle counts on the battery. 
    Everything boils down to battery chemistry long term, and not to an arbitrary number, or cycle count.
    Keep your macbook plugged in when near a socket since in the near end of long-term life, this is beneficial to the battery.
    http://www.apple.com/batteries/notebooks.html
    "Apple does not recommend leaving your portable plugged in all the time."
    General rule to remember of Lithium batteries is:
    Never drain them LOW  & dont always/often store them HIGH
    While cycle count is commonly seen to be the “miles” on your Lithium Ion pack cell in your Macbook, which they are, this distinction is not a fine line at all, and it is a big misconception to “count charge cycles”
    *A person who has, for example, 300 charge cycles on their battery and is recharging at say 50-60% remaining of a 100% charge has better battery usage and care than another person who has 300 charge cycles at say 15% remaining on a 100% charge. 
    DoD (depth of discharge) is far more important on the wear and tear on your Macbook battery than any mere charge cycle count.  *There is no set “mile” or wear from a charge cycle in general OR in specific.    As such, contrary to popular conception, counting cycles is not conclusive whatsoever, rather the amount of deep DoD on an averaged scale of its use and charging conditions.
    (as a very rough analogy would be 20,000 hard miles put on a car vs. 80,000 good miles being something similar)
    *Contrary to some myths out there, there is protection circuitry in your Macbook and therefore you cannot overcharge it when plugged in and already fully charged
    *However if you don’t plan on using it for a few hours, turn it OFF (plugged in or otherwise) ..*You don’t want your Macbook both always plugged in AND in sleep mode       (When portable devices are charging and in the on or sleep position, the current that is drawn through the device is called the parasitic load and will alter the dynamics of charge cycle. Battery manufacturers advise against parasitic loading because it induces mini-cycles.)
    Keeping batteries connected to a charger ensures that periodic "top-ups" do very minor but continuous damage to individual cells, hence Apples recommendation above:   “Apple does not recommend leaving your portable plugged in all the time”, …this is because “Li-ion degrades fastest at high state-of-charge”. This is also the same reason new Apple notebooks are packaged with 50% charges and not 100%.
    LiPo (lithium polymer, same as in your Macbook) batteries do not need conditioning. However...
    A lot of battery experts call the use of Lithium cells the "80% Rule" ...meaning use 80% of the charge or so, then recharge them for longer overall life.
    Never let your Macbook go into shutdown and safe mode from loss of power, you can corrupt files that way, and the batteries do not like it.
    The only quantified abuse seen to Lithium cells are instances when often the cells are repeatedly drained very low…. key word being "often"
    The good news is that your Macbook has a safety circuit in place to insure the battery doesn’t reach too low before your Macbook will auto power-off. Bad news: if you let your Macbook protection circuitry shut down your notebook at its bottom, and you refrain from charging it for a couple days...the battery will SELF-DRAIN to zero (depending on climate and humidity)…and nothing is worse on a Lithium battery being low-discharged than self-draining down to and sitting at 0
    Contrary to what some might say, Lithium batteries have an "ideal" break in period. First ten cycles or so, don't discharge down past 40% of the battery's capacity. Same way you don’t take a new car out and speed and rev the engine hard first 100 or so miles.
    Proper treatment is still important. Just because LiPo batteries don’t need conditioning in general, does NOT mean they dont have an ideal use / recharge environment. Anything can be abused even if it doesn’t need conditioning.
    From Apple on batteries:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1446
    http://www.apple.com/batteries/
    Storing your MacBook
    If you are going to store your MacBook away for an extended period of time, keep it in a cool location (room temperature roughly 22° C or about 72° F). Make certain you have at least a 50% charge on the internal battery of your Macbook if you plan on storing it away for a few months; recharge your battery to 50% or so every six months roughly if being stored away. If you live in a humid environment, keep your Macbook stored in its zippered case to prevent infiltration of humidity on the internals of your Macbook which could lead to corrosion.

  • Battery capacity rapidly falling

    SInce the battery update about 10 days ago my battery has been losing it's maximum charge capacity. I noticed that when unplugged the time remaining on my powerbook went from about 2hrs 30mins to about 1hr 30mins after the update.
    I downloaded CoconutBattery to monitor this and since Jan 13th, it has gone from 2440mAh to 1805mAh today (20th Jan). I have tried re-calibrating the battery and resetting the power manager (each several times), but this seems to make it worse!!
    My battery is 13 months old (15 according to Coconut battery) and has had 314 loadcycles.
    Is my battery failing and is this just a coincidence that this has happened just after the battery update?
    P.S. perhaps I should give my wife this powerbook and swap for her MacBook Pro when it arrives?
    15" G4 1.33GHz Powerbook   Mac OS X (10.4.4)  

    That thread doesn't solve my problem.
    After the Battery Update, I noticed that my battery capacity was much less than before, I then downloaded Coconut Battery and started recording the capacity. At that time (after the update) the capacity was 2440mAh (13th), it has declined pretty rapidly from then on (2190mAh on the 15th, 2097mAh on the 17th, and 1805mAh on the 20th). During this time I have tried recalibrating and resetting the PMU etc, and this actually seemed to make things worse?!
    I would assume that a decrease of 600mAh in one week is not what one would expect.
    My questions are:
    1. Is the battery failing?
    2. Is this related to the battery update?
    3. My battery has had 315 loadcycles, how many loadcycles should I expect from a battery before replacement?
    4. Is it possible to reset the battery? Or remove the update?
    Thank you for any assistance.
    Rob

  • Macbook pro md101 full charge capacity decrease quickly when using Pin

    When i used Macbook pro in Batterry mode, FULL CHARGE CAPACITY decreased continuously. My Cycle count is only 5 , but Full Charge Capacity is 5453 (Design Capacity is 5770). Please help me ! Thanks

    Condition:
         Service Battery
    You need a new battery.

  • Is About this mac/more info/power reliable for battery capacity assessment

    Hi,
    I calibrated my brand new battery for my Alubook 15". Here are the results :
    First cycle : 4200 mah
    Second cycle : 4520 mah
    Third cycle : 4370 mah
    Fourth cycle : 4220 mah
    Fifth : 3920 mah.
    The battery was sold for 4700 mah.
    1. Does this get any sense ? would you worry about future battery performances based on this capacity decrease from the third cycle ?
    2. I have read that resetting PRAM may reset this battery power assessment to more reliable data : Any experience about this ?

    Luc --
    You raise some interesting points, at least one of which we debated (without resolution ;-)) prior to the change over to the New Discussions -- that concerned whether the batteries used by the new revision of PowerBooks were qualitatively different than the ones used by previous revisions. I don't think we came to a firm conclusion on this.
    But on two other points you raise we did at least draw some firm observations, if not flat out conclusions.
    The first has to do with the 10.4.3 update and whether it may have had power management effects for the better. I personally noticed a slight increase in my battery life since the update, which I have attributed (at least in part) to the fact that a process that runs almost all the time in the background (having, I think, something to do with the trackpad and related functions) called "kernel_task" now runs at about half the CPU usage that it used to. It used to regularly consume 7-8% of my CPU resources. Now, when I check in Activity Monitor, "kernel_task" regularly consumes about 2.5-3.5%.
    The second relates to the new PowerBook revisions, their greater stated battery life and any hardware changes made in them that may be responsible therefor. Here, I remember reading in several places on these Boards and elsewhere that the type of RAM used by the new PowerBook revisions, i.e., PC2-4200 DDR2 SDRAM (running at 333 MHz), while it may not necessarily be faster than the type of RAM used in the previous PB revisions (PC-2700 DDR SDRAM) (since both types of RAM are running at the same 333 MHz in each model), the DDR2 RAM used in the new revision PBs does consume significantly less power to run. Therefore, it seems to have heavily contributed to the new revision PB's claim to longer battery life. Indeed, I've read that since both RAM types run at the same speed in the PB, it was precisely because of the low power consumption signature of the DDR2 RAM that was the reason it was chosen for the new revision PBs.
    Well, good luck testing out your new PB and it's battery. Let us know how it all turns out and, of course, feel free to post back if we can be of any further assistance.
    Bonne chance! A bientôt.
    Oh, by the way, as for battery capacity and degradation over time and with use, you might find my own statistics to be of interest. I've run off battery power quite extensively since I got my PB in March of this year, and, after 164 complete cycles in about 9 months of use (including may times where the battery was completely drained), my original stated capacity of 4400 mAh has only decreased to 4228 mAh (using the same Apple battery that came with my PB when I first got it). I think that's pretty decent from what I've heard and seen with others.
    Later.
    -- JDee

  • Mid 2010 MacBook Pro battery capacity at 89% with 64 cycles

    Hello everyone,
    I have a 13" mid 2010 MacBook Pro that I got around Christmas time. I downloaded coconutbattery a couple days ago and when i used it then My battery capacity had been 91%. So I thought that this was odd because of how new the computer is still (15 wks old with 64 battery cycles) so I read about how the battery needs to be recalibrated from time to time and after doing so (followed the directions perfectly) My capacity is now down to 89%. Should this be something to be concerned about or is this normal?

    It's quite normal and sometimes a recalibration can see things go up as well as down

  • My battery life decreased dramatically after updating to ios 6.1.2.  How do I delete and go back to previous iso?

    I have iphone 5; my battery life decreased dramatically after updating to ios 6.1.2.  How do I delete and go back to previous iso?

    Downgrading the iOS isn't supported and wouldn't help even if you could.   There have been reports of decreased battery life after every update since iOS 1.0.1. 
    There are lots of things that can be done including reinstalling push email accounts. basic phone reset (pressing both home and power buttons for at least 10 seconds until the Apple logo appears), and restoring the phone with and without a backup.

  • Macbook Pro 11,3 High End Retina battery capacity

    HI,
    As recent as 2 weeks ago I receieved a  macbook pro that I purchased online. However due to the physical problems I had another one sent to me by apple. While waiting for the shipping company to pick up the problematic macbook pro I thought I'd compare the battery life on both of these units. to my suprise the old unit was performing better in terms of battery life.
    New Macbook Pro 11,3 Capacity: 8688 mAh
    2 Weeks Old Macbook Pro 11,3 Capacity: 8969 mAh
    My questions are as follows:
    1) Is this to be expected?
    2) Should I complain and get it replaced again?
    3) Anything I could do to increase the capacity on the new MPR?
    Appreciate your input on this, cheers!
    Happy holidays!

    Great to hear :) I was really worried about my battery capacity as well when I got my 2nd mac.
    The reason I exchanged my first one was it had really bad battery life. I tried all sorts of solutions and nothing seemed to work. It would always show I had a high battery capacity but the battery life was just terrible. I decided to exchange it and when I got my replacement I noticed it had low battery capacity. It turned out to be a great laptop it has much better battery life and it's capacity went up after I put a couple cycles on it.

  • Battery Capacity Question

    This morning my battery capacity was at 48% after I calibrated it over night due to the system profiler telling me to "check battery." After using my computer for a little while without it being plugged in, my battery was down to about 45min remaining for power. Then I closed the lid and put it to sleep. After about an hour I opened it and immediately the message popped up saying that my computer was running on reserve power and I should plug it in. Now, my current battery capacity is at 26%.
    Does anyone know why this has happened? Should I just get a new battery?
    Thanks!

    It means that you most likely need a new battery. If your computer is still under warranty then bring it there. If it's out of warranty, then you might have to pay. If your battery has less than 300 charge cycles then you can ask if they are willing to replace it for free or a minimal charge since Apple said their battery should held 80% life after 300 cycles.

  • Fluctuating battery capacity. can you give any tips to maintain my 596 cycles? (1 year old MBP 2012 13")

    battery capacity went from from 80.4% to 78% to 86%  within the same day. is this normal?
    i alraeady have 596 cycles
    1year old mac with applecare
    before i'am always draining my battery, now that i knew that it is bad, what should i do now?
    any tips and suggested routine?

    Here is a list of Apple support documents regarding batteries. 
    http://support.apple.com/kb/ht1446
    Look at the articles under the 'Optimizing battery life' category.
    Ciao.

  • My ipad battery is decreasing about 1%every 2mins . Please help me

    Guys my ipad battery is decreasing about 1% every 2mins. I am in great trouble. Please help me Guys. Please

    How long does a full charge last and what is the iPad doing during that time? % battery is not that accurate

Maybe you are looking for