2017年8月31日星期四

C4500BAT-6 hög kapacitet batteri, 11.1V 5600mAh CLEVO C4500BAT-6 laptop batterier

CLEVO C4500BAT-6 batteri, 11.1V 5600mAh 62.16Wh original laptop batterier

Pris: 471SEK Spara: 29% mindre (Inkludera de skatter)
Batteri Brand: äkta CLEVO
Spänning: 11.1V
Kapacitet: 5600mAh (62.16Wh)
Batterityp: litium-jon
Färg: svart
Batteri Fit: CLEVO C4500BAT-6
Garanti: 9 månad
CLEVO C4500BAT-6 batteri

CLEVO C4500BAT-6 batteri
CLEVO C4500BAT-6 batteri är kompatibel med CLEVO netbook för skrivbordet:
W170HR
W170ER
NP5175
W251HU
W150ER
NP5125
NP5135
T5100
W150HN
W255
W251HPQ
NP5165
W251HUQ
W150HR
W150HNM
W150HNQ
W150HRQ
W170HN
W150HRM
W150ERQ
W251HSQ
W150DAQ

CLEVO C4500BAT-6 batteri ska bytas ut med CLEVO artikelnummer
6-87-E412S-4Y4A
6-87-E412S-4D7A
6-87-E412S-4D7
6-87-E412-4D7
6-87-C480S-4P43
6-87-C480S-4P42
6-87-C480S-4P41
6-87-C480S-4P4
6-87-C480S-4G48
6-87-C480S-4G41
6-87-C450S-4R4

2017年8月1日星期二

stuck at "0% - plugged in, charging"? Here tells you why and how to solve it

ASUS ux303l batteri, 11.31V 4400mAh 50Wh original laptop batterier

ASUS ux303l batteri detaljer:                                       
Batteri Brand: äkta ASUS
Spänning: 11.31V
Kapacitet: 4400mAh (50Wh)
Batterityp: litium polymer
Färg: svart
Batteri Fit: ASUS ux303l
Garanti: 9 månad  
ASUS ux303l batteri
ASUS ux303l batteri
Testa varje batteri innan leverans för att säkerställa varje del av batteriet är OK
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Here's a solution that's worked for me to bring back a half dozen batteries - but all in the same model of laptop - that appeared to be stuck at "0% - plugged in, charging". No doubt there can be more than one cause for this problem, and this method may not work for all.

This describes a solution that's worked for me for laptops running Windows XP. Windows 7 has an additional driver for the battery, and I haven't confirmed that this works for Win7 machines as well.

1- with battery installed and AC adapter plugged in, boot up laptop. Go to the Power Options control panel (may also be accessible by right-cling the battery status icon in the System Tray). Set the System Standby option when plugged in to Never. I also chose the Always On Power Scheme, but I don't know if this aspect is crucial, whereas I'm pretty sure the long or Never sleep/standby option is. It should be OK to let the monitor and HDD have a timer setting for turn-off, but if in doubt, put them to Never as well, esp the HDD. I also had the Running on Batteries System Standby set to Never, but I wouldn't think that applied in this case, as the AC adapter is being used. However, just to be sure, set it to Never!

I suspect that the reason most people think their laptops are stuck at "0%-charging", is because the laptops go to sleep before the battery finally builds up enough initial charge to get going. I don't understand why a 0% battery doesn't charge or show charge improvement immediately, but that seems to be the case, at least for the laptops I've been working with. Frankly, I don't even know for sure that the following driver trick is necessary, but it's often recommended for battery charging issues, so I've been doing that piece as well.

2- go to the Device Manager and find the Batteries>Microsoft ACPI-Compliant Control Method Battery, right click, and uninstall the driver. Go to the Action menu at the top of Device Manager, and Scan for Hardware Changes. This will reinstall the driver (as will logging off and on, or re-booting).

3- wait one to two hours. The battery should start to show increased % charge level. If not, try uninstalling and re-installing the driver again, and waiting another hour or two. If that doesn't work, try the method where you boot w/o the battery, uninstall the driver, shut down, and re-boot with the battery. At the moment I don't think that adds anything to the simpler method, but who knows. This is voodoo after all.

One note of caution. The laptops I've been using this on are sold with 65W AC adapters, and normally idle at 20W with the screen on, but I notice when the battery starts charging, and until it gets to nearly full, it is drawing 90W!! This will likely burn out an adapter of lower rating, so if your laptop has the 65W adapter that's common for recent vintage laptops, find a higher rated one to do this process with. A 90W adapter is not hard to find for most laptops, and up to 120W is usually out there. I use a Kill-A-Watt P3 to monitor wattage, so I just watch the display to see when the battery finally starts charging, instead of constantly checking the System Tray status indicator.

Note for Windows 7 users: Win7 has second battery device listed in Device Manager, and it can't be uninstalled unless you're in Safe Mode. I'm fairly sure that I used Win7 versions of my laptop model to bring back some 0% batteries awhile ago, but I can't recall for sure. If this method above doesn't work for you, you could try it while booted into Safe Mode, so that both battery drivers can be put through the uninstall/install cycle.

Source from Internet.