Life without Lenovo Power Manager: Any thoughts? [battery issue, charging error]

A while back, we discovered the battery maintenance error, where the "stop charging at 90%" feature would cause the battery to only charge partially to like 50% but read that it was fully charged, and then it would turn off early. This was the thread. I know it's a BIOS issue, and I will update eventually, but the partial charge happened to me again, and it got me thinking:
Do I really need the Power Manager?
I use the Power Manager to configure Turbo Boost clock speed and all that, and I suppose the Turbo+ button does crank up the fan, but I can use TPFancontrol to manually control the fan, and I found that Windows power settings by itself allows me to set the clock speed however I want, using a percentage. Setting all the numbers at 45% parks the clockspeed at 1.2GHz, a good compromise for battery life and performance. The best Power Manager can do is to cycle between 700Mhz all the way up to 2.7Ghz, which throws battery life out the window.
So, will I lose anything by just uninstalling Power Manager?

Technically the answer is no, Power Manager is optional.  However, it is a good option for Windows 7 users. It does expose more power management to the user than the power settings under Control panel.
Until they release the Windows 8 version and I run it for a few weeks, I won't know what to say about that environment.

Similar Messages

  • Registry issue with Lenovo Power Manager with X61

    I have the following problem. 
    Hi guys,
    Lenovo power manager v1,6 quit working properly lately so I googled for a solution which involved removing power schemes which had reproduced in the registry to cause an overload to the application.
    Anyway because this wasnt really working (I ended up with having powerschemes but wasnt allowed to change them) I in my brightest moments decieded to delete the messed up part of my registry [HKEY_CURREN_USER --> Control panel --> PoweCfg] because it was preventing my reinstalations of said program from functioning properly since they resorted to the previosly present registryentrys.
    Well it appears that when installing the powermanager it does not write these new registry entrys and Im stuck now without a way to get them back. I wonder at what point that registry entry is written in the first place, does anyone feel like exporting said part of their healthy registry...please...?

    ..this one is from an x200 with Server2003...seems like you're familiar enough with registry exports and wrapping and shoiuld be able to convert this into a *.reg form:
    Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
    [HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Control Panel\PowerCfg]
    "CurrentPowerPolicy"="7"
    [HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Control Panel\PowerCfg\GlobalPowerPolicy]
    "Policies"=hex:01,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,03,00,00,00​,08,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,03,\
      00,00,00,08,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,03,00,00,00,00,00​,00,00,02,00,00,00,03,00,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,01,00,00,00,00,00,00​,80,00,00,00,00,01,00,00,\
      00,00,00,00,80,01,00,00,00,05,00,00,00,02,00,00,00​,04,00,00,c0,01,00,00,00,\
      04,00,00,00,01,00,00,00,0a,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,03​,00,00,00,01,00,01,00,01,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00​,00,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00​,00,00,00,03,00,00,00,00,\
      00,17,00,00,00
    [HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Control Panel\PowerCfg\PowerPolicies]
    [HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Control Panel\PowerCfg\PowerPolicies\0]
    "Name"="Home/Office Desk"
    "Description"="This scheme is suited to most home or desktop computers that are left plugged in all the time."
    "Policies"=hex:01,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,01,00,00,00​,00,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,00,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,2c,01,00,00,32,32​,00,03,04,00,00,00,04,00,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,b0,04,00,00,2c,01,00​,00,00,00,00,00,58,02,00,\
      00,01,01,64,50,64,64,00,00
    [HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Control Panel\PowerCfg\PowerPolicies\1]
    "Name"="Portable/Laptop"
    "Description"="This scheme is designed for extended battery life for portable computers on the road."
    "Policies"=hex:01,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,01,00,00,00​,00,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,01,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,b0,04,00,00,84,03,00,00,32,32​,03,03,04,00,00,00,04,00,\
      00,00,01,00,00,00,14,f2,06,00,84,03,00,00,78,00,00​,00,08,07,00,00,2c,01,00,\
      00,01,01,64,64,64,64,a0,71
    [HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Control Panel\PowerCfg\PowerPolicies\2]
    "Name"="Presentation"
    "Description"="This scheme keeps the monitor on for doing presentations."
    "Policies"=hex:01,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,01,00,00,00​,00,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,01,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,84,03,00,00,32,32​,03,02,04,00,00,00,04,00,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00​,00,00,00,00,00,2c,01,00,\
      00,01,01,50,50,64,64,00,00
    [HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Control Panel\PowerCfg\PowerPolicies\3]
    "Name"="Always On"
    "Description"="This scheme keeps the computer running so that it can be accessed from the network.  Use this scheme if you do not have network wakeup hardware."
    "Policies"=hex:01,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,01,00,00,00​,00,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,00,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,32,32​,00,00,04,00,00,00,04,00,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,b0,04,00,00,84,03,00​,00,00,00,00,00,08,07,00,\
      00,00,01,64,64,64,64,00,00
    [HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Control Panel\PowerCfg\PowerPolicies\4]
    "Name"="Minimal Power Management"
    "Description"="This scheme keeps the computer on and optimizes it for high performance."
    "Policies"=hex:01,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,01,00,00,00​,00,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,00,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,2c,01,00,00,32,32​,03,03,04,00,00,00,04,00,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,84,03,00,00,2c,01,00​,00,00,00,00,00,84,03,00,\
      00,00,01,64,64,64,64,00,00
    [HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Control Panel\PowerCfg\PowerPolicies\5]
    "Name"="Max Battery"
    "Description"="This scheme is extremely aggressive for saving power."
    "Policies"=hex:01,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,01,00,00,00​,00,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,05,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,b0,04,00,00,78,00,00,00,32,32​,03,02,04,00,00,00,04,00,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,84,03,00,00,3c,00,00​,00,00,00,00,00,b4,00,00,\
      00,01,01,64,32,64,64,00,00
    [HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Control Panel\PowerCfg\PowerPolicies\7]
    "Policies"=hex:01,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,01,00,00,00​,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,\
      00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,32,32​,00,00,04,00,00,00,04,00,\
      00,00,00,00,3d,77,2e,f2,07,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00​,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,\
      00,01,01,64,50,64,64,91,7c
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  • Can't uninstall Lenovo Power Manager in Windows 8 - upgraded from Windows 7

    Hi all, I recently purchased a Lenovo X230. It was preloaded with Windows 7 Home Premium. I upgraded this system to Windows 8 Pro without any problems.
    I noticed that Windows 8 Pro has some issues with the Lenovo Power Manager, which after perusing this forum seems to be pretty incompatible with Windows 8. I am trying to uninstall the Power Manager in the Control Panel, but I can't find the application to install. I only see an option to uninstall the Lenovo Power Management Driver. Does anyone know how I can uninstall the entire Lenovo Power Manager from my system?

    Backstory: I installed the Power Manager on a clean installation of Windows 8 by setting it to Windows 7 Compatibility Mode.  It seemed to be working swimmingly, until the next day when I tried to use it and discovered that it would always crash on start-up.  Unfortunate.  I naively attempted to correct this problem by uninstalling and reinstalling the application.  Strangely, I was able to successfully uninstall the program using the Add/Remove Programs Control Panel and then reinstall the program.  But, despite the reinstallation the problem persisted and I tried to uninstall the program again.  It would not uninstall, claiming the installer wasn't compatible with my system.
    Fix: Run "C:\Program Files (x86)\InstallShield Installation Information\{DAC01CEE-5BAE-42D5-81FC-B687E84E8405}\Setup.exe" -l0x9 -AddRemove from an administrative command prompt.  This should completely remove Power Manager and it's entry in the Add/Remove Programs console.  The GUID may be different if you were not using the most recent version of Power Manager, I installed 6.36.  The additional power plans that it originally installed are still in the Windows Power control panel.
    I am still wrestling with the Power Manager to get it working somewhat reliably on Windows 8.  I am very disappointed that this level of effort is required on a new system that is Windows 8 compliant.

  • Tpfancontrol + lenovo Power Manager - what do you use?

    Hi Folks,
    I've recently installed tpfancontrol 0.62 on my T410 that has Lenovo Power Manager 6.36.  My machine started shutting down spontaneously (not often - once or twice a day or so).  I'm wondering what version of Power Manager folks have installed, and whether you encounter these issues when you have tpfancontrol installed?
    Thanks a bunch.  I've tried uninstalling PM, but it hard to live without fn-f5, fn-f6, etc.
    T410 2516-CTO
    Win 7 Pro x64 SP1

    No new T-Series here yet.  I have a couple older ones loaned out.
    I'm on the road a lot so I took a liking to the X-Series.  The newest ones are the x-61s.   
    Make sure that the Hotkeys utility installed the system interface driver .  It'll show up in Programs and Features in Control Panel.  
    I use this fan control alongside of tpfancontrol.  It just depends on what I want to play with.  It's only for Windows 7 and it works on 64 bit.  I just got it to install on Windows 8 64 bit.  
    tpfancontrol  installs the tvi port along with the package.  On this one, you have to install the port first and then reboot, then install the fan control.  There's a few bugs in it:  I've never been able to get it to start with Windows, I start it manually from the desktop. Also, when it hands control to bios if the machine gets too hot, it throws an error and shuts itself off.
    I think part of the problem with it is that the tvi port that comes with it is an old version, but it has potential.  You can change settings from the UI.
    I've never had any shutdowns with either tpfancontrol or this one.
    Dave 
    T430u, x301, x200T, x61T, x61, x32, x41T, x40, U160, ThinkPad Tablet 1838-22R, Z500 touch, Yoga Tab 2 Windows 8.1, Yoga Tablet 3 Pro
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  • X220 Lenovo power manager vs. standard Windows controls

    Hi,
    I have installed Lenovo power manager on my x220 win7 32 bit laptop. Different settings can be configured in standard windows power settings and Lenovo tool, for example what happens when lid gets closed. Which of these two will take effect?

    Hey there mmuza,
    I actually had to go check this on my machine here to see what would happen. Through some trial I found that when you change the setting in one, it should change it in the other. For Example:
    Using Windows Power Options you go in to the Power Plan you are currently using, click change plan settings, click change advanced power settings, and scroll down to lid options. You can change this to shut down. If you then go into the Lenovo Power Manager, open the dropdown for events and look at Lid, it changed to shutdown as well. I then switched this to sleep in the Power Manager, and then went back to the Windows Power Options. It reflected this change to sleep as well. It is important to note that when looking at these settings to make sure you are looking at the same power plans. For example maximum performance, or maximizing battery life.
    I hope this helps mmuza.
    Did someone help you today? Press the star on the left to thank them with a Kudo!
    If you find a post helpful and it answers your question, please mark it as an "Accepted Solution".! This will help the rest of the Community with similar issues identify the verified solution and benefit from it.

  • Lenovo Power Manager in Windows 8

    Hi guys,
    Since Lenovo Power Manager is not available for Windows 8 (no matter my laptop is specified to be FOR Windows 8... grrrrr...) I've been playing around because I needed not the infamous power gauge taking space in my taskbar, but some advanced settings.
    Well, I found a couple of things:
    Power Manager (g6u432ww.exe) can be installed in Windows 8 and can be used. Even the power gauge.
    To install it, you have to run the setup in Windows 7 compatibility mode.
    It doesn't work very well: sometimes it crashes or the UI won't open (at doesn't open anymore, no matter what you do). But it does run the first time (use it before restarting) and you can change battery settings and some other stuff anyway.
    Do create a Restore Point before, because is not created automatically and because you won't be able to uninstall it later, since the setup expects Windows 7.
    If you install Lenovo Settings Dependency Package (gfsd02ww.exe) after that, Power Manager gets upgraded from version 6.36 to 7.11. But still crashes.
    Settings regarding battery charging are kept, no matter you restore Windows using system restore. So you can create a Restore Point, install Power Manager, change battery settings, and then restore Windows.
    Is not a solution (I'm still expecting for Lenovo to fix this support for Windows 8). But at least I was able to stop the battery from charging all the time.
    This has been tested on a ThinkPad Edge S430.
    One important question left is:
    Why Lenovo Power Manager 7.11 can't be downloaded and installed normally? I couldn't care less for the Metro Store Apps and bulky gadgets. But I want to be able to change some settings.
    Cheers.
    If I helped you, please give me some kudos! ^^

    There's a stickied thread at the top of this board which explains / discusses ThinkPad software for Windows 8, hopefully the information you are looking for is there.
    Andy  ______________________________________
    Please remember to come back and mark the post that you feel solved your question as the solution, it earns the member + points
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  • W500: using the switchable graphics with vista ultimate without the power manager software?

    seriously, invest in a new hitachi travelstar 320gb for 49 bucks from that tiger place online and a usb hard drive caddy, pop in your free clonezilla cd and your rescue and recovery problems will be over!
    after reading all the problems with that software i figured my data was too valuble to get caught in that mess so for under 75 bucks problem solved and i rid my w500 of that bloatware. even cheaper then ordering the recovery disks from lenovo.
    working on getting rid of the rest of the useless software now.
    hey question, how do you use the switchable graphics on the w500 with vista ultimate without the power manager software? if you can thats next!!
    Moderator note: Question added to subject line for clarity.
    Message Edited by Agotthelf on 28-04-2009 08:45 AM

    That's because you are asking a T500/W500 question in the Thinkvantage forum. Anyway, the answer to your question is in this thread.
    ATI recently started packaging their switchable graphics driver together with their regular Catalyst. So downloading their latest driver Catalyst 9.4 from the ATI/AMD site and then modifying it with the Mobility Modder will allow you to use switchable graphics without the power manager. The little problem is just that the released version of the Mobility Modder stopped working with Catalyst 9.2 and you are on your own getting a modified Modder  working on 9.4, see here.
    So I decided not to make more work for myself staying on a modded Catalyst 9.1 and for the time being living without switchable graphics.
    T500: Vista 32, 2.8GHz, 4GB RAM, 15.4" 1680x1050, 500GB 7200rpm, ATI Radeon HD3650 + Intel 4500MHD. T42: XP, 1.7GHz, 2GB RAM, 14.1" 1024x768, 250GB PATA, ATI Radeon 7500.

  • T430 unable to sleep with Lenovo Power Manager installed

    I have a T430 with Windows 8 installed with the latest BIOS and Lenovo Power Manager installed, and anytime I try to put the computer to sleep(with Fn+F4 or lid close), the laptop enters a stage where the screen is black and the fan continues to run. There's no way to interact/escape this except for holding down the power button.
    After uninstalling Lenovo Power Manager, the sleep function works again, but the Mic Mute and caps-lock on screen display stop working in addition to the LED in the MicMute refusing to light up.
    Is there any fix to this?

    I'm having the same problem. I've tried all the updates and still have the problem. Sometimes it will sleep, other times it won't. Sometimes when it is trying to sleep I get a bluescreen for "DRIVER POWER STATE FAILURE."

  • Feature request for Lenovo Power Manager

    I typically like to keep my battery charge level at 40-50% in order to optimize the battery's life span.  But, there are times when I need to charge fully and I may change this setting a few times a week.
    Instead of having to wait for the Power Manager to open and dig around for the Battery Maintenance settings, could we have "Battery Charge Levels Min/Max" as part of the Power Plan options?  That way, we can quickly toggle between configurations using FN+F3.

    EDIT: Ah okay sorry now I got what you mean!
    You mean Power MAnager needs quite some time to come up. Not only on boot, but also when trying to do something. Everything seems really slow: You click something and it needs 2-3 seconds to actually happen. Ad yes, bootup time is really worse with newest version of power manager. The battery status icon appears last on bootup and system is not really usable unitl then.
    This app is completely bloated :-(.The features it provides neither really need so much cpu cycles nor that much RAM/resources and there is plenty of room for improvements. Same for Access Connections btw.! You press FN+F5 or F7 and for a few seconds nothing happens. This is really bad for a simple menu to pop up.
    Message Edited by VPN-User on 09-08-2008 02:42 AM

  • [T530] Change Lenovo Power Manager Profiles with [Fn]+[F3]

    T530, 2429-5ZG
    OS: Windows7 Pro SP1 (x64)
    Power Manager 6.45
    Lenovo Power Managment Driver 1.65.05.21
    Hello everybody. I hope someone can help me out as I can't solve this problem myself.
    I used to have a R52 where I could use the keyboad shortcut [Fn]+[F3] to choose between the power profiles or to switch off the display.
    Using the T530 now, the shortcut [Fn]+[F3] just locks the screen instead of choosing between the power profiles.
    Is there a way to make it work like it did on the R52? I did find the executable (C:\Program Files (x86)\ThinkPad\Utilities\PWMOSDV.EXE). Is there a way to "reprogram" the key shortcut not to lock the screen but to execute the PWMOSDV.EXE file?
    I would appreciate any help.

    - [Fn]+[F7] -> choose between internal or external monitor or both. 
    - I know that option tab from my R52, but there is no such option in my Version of Power Manager (v6.45)
    The problem is, that even in the manual provided for the T530/W530, in the chapter for the "special keys", there are no keys defined for choosing between the power profiles, it also says that [Fn]+[F3] locks the screen.
    What thinkpad model and Power Manager Version do you use?
    PS: I browsed the forum and I'm not the only one missing this option:
    http://forums.lenovo.com/t5/W-Series-ThinkPad-Laptops/W530-Fn-F3-F4-and-F5/td-p/958229

  • Lenovo Power Manager on T20?

    Hello,
    Probably impossible and being that T20 is IBM, Lenovo probably wants nothing to do with it.
    Anyway I still use a couple T20s and long for the Battery options that I have on my T60.  Lenovo Power Manager lets me set battery maintance options such as do not charge until below 75% and do not fully top off.  I really like these and would really prefer this on my old, aging T20 batteries.
    I've installed the new program (even though it says it's only for T40 or T60) and it runs fine but will not recognize the battery.  Is there anyway to accomplish this or add % maintance type stuff to the older Battery Maximizer that the T20 uses?
    Thanks.

    Yes,
    It is available. You also need the driver here are the links:
    http://download.lenovo.com/ibmdl/pub/pc/pccbbs/thinkvantage_en/6ju410ww.zip
    http://download.lenovo.com/ibmdl/pub/pc/pccbbs/mobiles/6hku06ww.zip
    Good luck!
    Mats
    Thinkpad T400s, X61s, X41, 600

  • Lenovo power manager for windows 8 - installation freezes

    I installed Lenovo Power Management Driver (file: 7xua14ww.exe) and I would like to install also Power Manager utility  (file: 7xua14ww.exe) but I always get this message:
    "A more recent version of the program has been detected in the destination you have selected. If you continue, your previous installation will be overwritten. Do you want to continue?"
    When I press yes installation bar opens but does not move and installation freezes.
    Can somebody help me? Thanks a lot.
    P.S.. I´m using Thinkpad E530 with Windows 8 Home (64)
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    Why do you want to install that on your ThinkPad?  It's for ThinkCentre desktop computers, not ThinkPad laptops.
    I have Power Manager running fine on my X220, as I mentioned above.
    jason404 - X220 (my sixth ThinkPad)

  • Installing Lenovo Power Management

    I was wondering if anyone knew if it was possible to install Lenovo Power Management that comes with the U400. I was on the phone with technical support and they recommended me to uninstall that software in order to fix another issue I was having. To no avail the problem still exists but I lost out on the power management software. Does anyone know where/if I can find this software? I have looked everywhere for it.
    Thanks
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    Hi Pacman,
    please download  Lenovo Energy Management Driver  for Power Management
    from IdeaPad U400 Drivers & Downloads...
    http://consumersupport.lenovo.com/us/en/DriversDownloads/drivers_list.aspx?CategoryID=301264
    Zehn

  • Lenovo Power Manager Software - MDT Task Sequence

    I'm working in an environment which does Operating System Deployment via SCCM 2007 SP2 R2 with MDT 2010 Update 1 Integration.  I have an MDT Task Sequence that deploys my captured Windows 7 WIM file to predominantly Lenovo laptops (98% Lenovo fleet too).  Part of this Task Sequence uses rules to specifically target drivers and applications to individual models.  I'm am having GREAT difficulty in getting the Lenono Power Manager software (V3.31) to install as part of the Task Sequence.
    The summary of the story is as follows:
    Lenovo Bluetooth software is installing OK (msiexec /i Win32\BTW.msi /t 1033.mst /qb-)
    Lenovo Hotkey software is installing OK (SETUP.EXE /S)
    I've put logs for the Power Manager installation, and there are no errors i.e. it "seems" to install OK (SETUP.EXE /S)
    I can advertise the Power Manager software POST image and it installs and works OK
    Applications in the Task Sequence run in the order of Power Manager, Bluetooth, Hotkeys.
    That hopefully provides the information for someone to maybe shed some light.  It's a little frustrating given that the package actually will successfully install.  I'm almost to the point where I want to try and create a collection with rules to populate it with Lenovo laptops and then mandatory install it.  It's not a critical application - it would just be nice to have.
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    I did some more searching and found this method to do it - http://www.windows-noob.com/forums/index.php?/topic/1231-os-deployment-and-lenovo-computers/.  I used the idea of creating a Task Sequence step to copy the files locally, followed by a step to install it from the local files. It worked fine for this.  If anyone has a "cleaner" method though, let me know.

  • Password Settings bug in Lenovo Power Manager ?

      On my w530 I created a new power profile in Lenovo Power Manager, but no matter how many times I change it to NOT require a password on wakeup from sleep, the settings keep reverting from 'No' to 'Yes' (as in Yes, require password).
      I open Power Man as admin, change 'Yes' to 'No', click apply and verify that it says 'No'. Then i close power manager and reopen it, and it once again says 'Yes'.
      What is going on?
    Moderator Note; subject edited to better reflect subject

    There's a stickied thread at the top of this board which explains / discusses ThinkPad software for Windows 8, hopefully the information you are looking for is there.
    Andy  ______________________________________
    Please remember to come back and mark the post that you feel solved your question as the solution, it earns the member + points
    Did you find a post helpfull? You can thank the member by clicking on the star to the left awarding them Kudos Please add your type, model number and OS to your signature, it helps to help you. Forum Search Option T430 2347-G7U W8 x64, Yoga 10 HD+, Tablet 1838-2BG, T61p 6460-67G W7 x64, T43p 2668-G2G XP, T23 2647-9LG XP, plus a few more. FYI Unsolicited Personal Messages will be ignored.
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