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Optimising your battery on a new Mac Notebook
Hi guys, came across on my travels some info on getting the best out of your Mac notebooks battery: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1490
Products Affected iBook, MacBook Pro, MacBook, PowerBook, MacBook Air |
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There's a good dashboard widget, iStat pro that will monitor the health of your battery. It also monitor fans, temperatures, network, disks, memory and cpu usage. It's a free app and you can get from the main apple store. My battery health check is telling me that my batteries health is 98%, that after 250 cycles. I believe thats pretty good. Anyway MadGamer how are you liking your new Mac. |
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Not true Looper, it depends on the battery type. A full discharge can hurt some types of batteries in fact.
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On a side note you should not buy a backup lithium ion as they start to degrade straight after manufacturing. You could buy not use it for years and then find it won't work. The apple website is more to do with claibrating the battery with the OS so it shows a true representation of remaining power. JJ |
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Unfortunately the new Unibody Macs has a non-user replaceable battery so when its gone it could be costly to replace, though apparently they will be good for at least 5 years...
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The memory effect is the battery only using those cells that are fully discharged and charged on a regular basis. If there's only a partial charge then the battery will only remember those cells. Lithium-ion: In the first instance may suffer from the memory effect. Fully charge the battery and allow it to fully discharge. The device using the battery will shut down when that point is reached in order to protect the battery. NiMH: also susceptible to the memory effect. Same thing fully recharge and fully discharge. NiCd: the oldest of all the rechargeable technologies are extremely susceptible to the memory effect. The only batteries I can think of that dont let you fully discharge them are the lead acid type, lot older technology from the 70s. Big and bulky, these batteries are mainly used in security and fire alarm systems, they are permanently connected to a power supply. |
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Good old Apple, you can have anything; as long as you do it our way, when we tell you and how we tell you. JJ |
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It's a piece of consumer electronics Jamie and is sold as such. Most people who buy Apple products are happy with that proposition. Nobody moans that there are no user-serviceable parts inside a DVD player or a TV. ;)
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The memory effect, even on NiCd batteries, is a bit of a myth. It only affects cells that are charged and discharged to exactly the same point many times. That's not something that happens with any typical use pattern of a laptop battery.
Provided you don't leave a rechargeable battery in a discharged state for a long time, your likely to get just as much lifespan out of a battery by topping up as you would by fully discharging and recharging every time. In other words - don't worry about... just use it as is convenient. It'll wear out whatever you do. |
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There is only one real reason for Apple to do this. I just get anoyed with the whole 'apple we love our users image' at times. :D JJ |
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Under similar amounts of use (and with similar charge/discharge patterns), the Sony lasted about 13months before the battery could not hold enough charge to be useful. The Macbook still averages about 3-4 hours normal use on a full charge and is nearly 30 months old. |
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Is there on of those widgets that works on a XP PC
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I've also got XP Installed via BootCamp now (wasn't working before but a trip to Apples Support forums helped loads), so my games aren't an issue :) |
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Thing is I cant justify £75 for another copy of Vista, so when I get the money I may buy a copy of Cross Over
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I was lucky, my copy of XP is an old copy of XP Pro that I had before I got Vista.
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Or if your a student with a .ac.uk email address its only £25/£30 :)
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