My laptop’s battery has clearly aged over the years (like milk, not wine) and it’s starting to become a problem in everyday use. When normally I can easily get through the day with maybe 20-30% remaining, Now my laptop always dies around 3:00, give or take an hour depending on usage. (And I’m not doing many heavy tasks either - mainly web browsing, doing schoolwork, occasionally watching a few internet videos, that sort of thing. I don’t play many games, and the ones I do play aren’t that intensive, stuff like Minecraft. I don’t play any “AAA” games - who came with that anyways? It’s a really stupid label. What gives a game 3 As, and why isn’t there too many “AA”, “A”, or “B-E” games? Why not just call them corporate games or similar, since many indie games are just as good, if not better, without using over a hundred gigabytes of storage and being super inefficient…)
When I ran upower, these are the statistics that were produced:
native-path: BAT0 vendor: ASUSTeK model: UP3404VA serial: 123456789 power supply: yes has history: yes has statistics: yes battery present: yes rechargeable: yes state: discharging warning-level: none energy: 28.2173 Wh energy-empty: 0 Wh energy-full: 48.655 Wh energy-full-design: 75.0868 Wh voltage-min-design: 7.971 V capacity-level: Normal energy-rate: 6.95868 W voltage: 7.971 V charge-cycles: 823 time to empty: 4.1 hours percentage: 58% capacity: 64.7983% technology: lithium-polymer icon-name: 'battery-good-symbolic'
The battery capacity is 64.8% of original capacity, which obviously is bad. You can also see that it has sustained over 800 charge cycles (which I assume is a lot. A quick search online shows that someone with around 600 cycles on their laptop being told to replace the battery). Interestingly, the serial is “123456789”, which is probably some placeholder and the actual serial number couldn’t be found. I wonder why.
My search for the specific battery model that my laptop requires led me to a random teardown article, where they briefly shows the battery with the model #, which is C22N2107, a 75Wh pack. I can find a bunch of third-party replacements online, but no Asus-branded ones.
Given that my battery has clearly aged, should I get an aftermarket battery replacement? Are third-party batteries safe to use? Asus doesn’t seem to sell the battery on their e-store, and there’s no chance that Asus will offer to replace it for a reasonable amount of money (plus, my warranty is expired by now).
Are third-party batteries any good, and are they safe to use?
stoy@lemmy.zip 1 day ago
The most important question about if you should replace the battery doesn’t concern the battery stats, it concerns the physical health of the battery:
Has it started swelling?
If it has, then yes, it is important to replace the battery, if it hasn’t, now you can consider the stats.
I am a professional IT technician, and this is professional advice.
sbeak@sopuli.xyz 1 day ago
Fortunately, the battery is not puffy and swollen up. No protruding bumps can be seen.
FartsWithAnAccent@fedia.io 14 hours ago
Does it still hold a charge? If so, keep using it. If not, get a third party battery that has good reviews on multiple known good vendors (like microcenter, ifixit, or even CDW). Check pricing on OEM batteries too, sometimes they're really not that much more expensive.
LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Are we going to tell him to crack open the pack and replace the individual cells that go bad, it’s safe with decent soldering, and an average volt/ohm meter to verify
stoy@lemmy.zip 1 day ago
No.
solrize@lemmy.ml 1 day ago
Laptops nowadays almost always use pouch cells.