Although lithium-ion is memory-free in terms of performance deterioration, batteries with fuel gauges exhibit what engineers refer to as "digital memory". Here is the reason: Short discharges with subsequent recharges do not provide the periodic calibration needed to synchronize the fuel gauge with the battery's state-of-charge. A deliberate full discharge and recharge every 30 charges corrects this problem. Letting the battery run down to the cut-off point in the equipment will do this. If ignored, the fuel gauge will become increasingly less accurate. (Read more in 'Choosing the right battery for portable computing', Part Two.)
Thanks for the help guys.
Bullzbill, I was just this article from from Battery University.
I believe your laptop is suffereing from a digital memory problem.
If you let your laptop run down completely, it should correct this problem. When I say run down completely, I mean that you should let computer keep running despite when its a 3% or 5%. Most PCs automatically turn off at that point, therefore you have to go to
Control Panel>Power Options> Advance tab
Here you should be able to stop the computer from automatically turning off. When I did this, my older laptop ran for around 20 minutes on 0%!
Hope that helps,
-Beaver_2
P.S. Make sure to have all your work saved on your laptop before running it down so you don't lose anything.
Exactly what I am doing. I let it run, batttery only, even when warning came on and meter said 5% (one minute remaining). It ran for one hour at 5%, I upped cpu's and it dropped to 0%, but still running. I took off all turn off controls, including hibernating and it is still running, almost two hours since earlier post. I am waiting for protection circuit to cut it off. Then I will recharge.
Bill
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I ran the battery down till it shut the laptop down, a total of 2 1/2 hours, two hours with scale saying 5%, then 0%. I recharged and now up to 99% but not going higher. I will run it for awhile without cord and see if it drops like a rock, as before. Running 15 minutes with battery pack and % scale says 26% and 3 minutes remaining. Still lying to me. Now 11% and Low Battery warning. How to reset remaining battery time? As I stated, I have run the battery down till protection circuit shut down computer and recharged back to 99%.
Bill
I've also noticed that my laptop's life indicator drops quickly, and can sit on 0% or something very low for quite a while. But laptop batteries do eventually die, and if that's the case you measuring a non-loaded battery won't give accurate results.I just removed pack and tested it. Reads 16.50 volts, so 8.25 X2, I replaced battery pack leaving AC attached and box reads 90%. Removed cord quilckly and box reads 100%. Now letting in run on battery only, Two minutes= 87%. 15min= 45%. 23min= 14% and warning. Pulled battery pack and read voltage quickly =15.87V. Let rest and it now reads 16.08V. Well, it appears my little % box is reading wrong and I have plenty of life left in my pack. How to correct my laptops battery info?
Bill
Maybe HP have a battery reset utility available somewhere on their website. Failing that, I'd try to reset the CMOS which may well reset the "fuel gauge". How you do this, varies from laptop to laptop. I know that Apple do provide just such a program for theirs. The fundamental problem is that voltage isn't a hugely reliable guide to the state of lithium battery packs as the cells age, though this shouldn't apply to new packs.
For a "fuel gauge" to do any good, it must contain some non-volatile memory and this is not terribly likely to be stored in the battery pack, though it could be, hence my recommendation to reset the CMOS.