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Did you buy a new laptop and are now wondering if you should discharge the battery before you charge it? While fully draining and recharging a nickel (NiCD or NiMH) laptop battery can result in better battery performance and longer battery life, doing the same on many modern laptops (like Chromebooks, Windows, and MacBooks) with lithium-ion batteries will actually damage the battery. This wikiHow article shows you two ways to discharge your nickel-based battery on a laptop.

Section 1 of 4:

Is it ok to drain the battery in my laptop?

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  1. The older batteries would start to remember where you would start to charge them and consider that reading as a 0% charge. In essence, if you would charge the battery whenever it reached 65%, that would become the new 0%, thus shortening the lifespan. However, discharging and charging it would help eliminate that memory effect.
  2. This includes Chromebooks, most PCs, and MacBooks.[1] Many of these batteries might have fail-safes in place to prevent you from draining the battery below a certain percentage since a low power state can cause harm to their lifespan.[3]
    • If possible, try keeping your battery charge between 90% and 10% at all times.
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  3. Your battery usually has a sticker on it that will let you know if it is a Ni-Cd/NiMH or Lithium-Ion battery. If you can't see your battery's information there, try looking up your laptop's model online for results on the kind of battery you have.
    • Only if you have a Ni-Cd or NiMH battery, continue to the next methods to discharge your battery.
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Section 2 of 4:

Using a High-Power Plan (Windows Only)

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  1. You'll find the battery icon in your taskbar on the right side of your screen and clicking Power Options will prompt a new window to open.[3]
  2. It's in the panel on the left side of the window. Since you're creating a new power plan, you can just pick the original from the list whenever you want to turn off this power plan.[4]
  3. Name it something you'll easily recognize so you'll be able to disable and enable it whenever you want.
    • Click Next to continue.
  4. Since you want to drain your battery, this option will never allow your laptop to go sleep or turn off the display to conserve power.
    • Click Create to continue.
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Section 3 of 4:

Turning Your Screen Brightness Up

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  1. You can click the Start menu logo or press the Win + I keys to open Settings. If you're using a MacBook, open System Settings.[5]
    • A bright screen will drain your battery.
  2. It's usually the first item in the menu next to an icon of a laptop.[6]
    • For a Mac, click Displays instead.[7]
  3. If you drag the slider all the way to the right, you should also see it display "100" on the dial, indicating that your brightness is all the way up.
    • There are also keyboard shortcuts you can use, which vary between manufacturers. Some laptops have the brightness up and down shortcuts on the row of F keys while others require you to press Fn and the Up arrow.
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Section 4 of 4:

Turning On Bluetooth and Wireless Settings

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  1. To do this, click the speech bubble in the far right corner of your taskbar.[8]
  2. On Windows 10, enable Nearby Sharing.[9]
    • These settings will require your laptop to continuously search for connections available and will drain your battery.
    • If you're using an older Mac, go to System Preferences > Bluetooth.[10]
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  • Question
    Why won't my laptop charge?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    The battery is probably dead or damaged. You will need to replace it. Find your model's serial number and search for a new battery online, or contact the computer's manufacturer.
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About This Article

Garnik Ovsepyan
Co-authored by:
Computer Specialist
This article was co-authored by Garnik Ovsepyan and by wikiHow staff writer, Darlene Antonelli, MA. Garnik Ovsepyan is a Computer Specialist and the Owner of HeliX PC based in Burbank, California. With over 25 years of experience, Garnik specializes in custom computer builds, computer repairs, virus removal, computer tune-ups, hardware and software troubleshooting and installations, diagnostics, and data backup and recovery. This article has been viewed 248,463 times.
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Co-authors: 14
Updated: July 29, 2024
Views: 248,463
Categories: Laptop Batteries
Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 248,463 times.

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  • Anonymous

    Anonymous

    Apr 16, 2018

    "I have a bug, so I want to try to discharge my computer to see if it helps. Once, I had a big problem and I..." more
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