1
I was wondering if it was possible to force a laptop running Windows to use its battery as the power source even when a charger is plugged in? If so, is it possible to switch between power sources programmatically?
1
I was wondering if it was possible to force a laptop running Windows to use its battery as the power source even when a charger is plugged in? If so, is it possible to switch between power sources programmatically?
1
Good question but the answer is very simple.
Few laptops
are designed to use the battery
only and few can also power on with AC charger
.
Example:
1) AC Charger
--> Battery
--> Laptop motherboard
2) AC Charger
--> Battery
and Laptop motherboard
You can do a simple test:
Remove the Laptop Battery
and only connect AC Charger
and try to power on, see if it works. You can repeat this experiment with couple of Laptop models to get to know.
I believe there's a bit more to the original question, b/c in your example 1), the battery will only be discharged a little bit and then charged again. I'm not so sure that's what the OP intended. Maybe the Q was more about being able to have a full discharging cycle while the charger is connected. – Run CMD – 2016-04-25T12:07:47.970
1@ClassStacker, this questions is more of opinion based and have no specific answer as this differs from vendor to vendor. – manjesh23 – 2016-04-25T12:10:36.920
Not meaning to nit-pick but questions with opinion based answers should be closed instead of answered, and if you ask me, with only a limited number of meaningful hardware variants, there's nothing opinion based in sight here. – Run CMD – 2016-04-25T13:03:05.277
-1
Windows does not support this natively. There are some laptops where software powermanagement software is shipped along with the laptop that offers control to do exactly what you request. It'll run from the battery disregarding the charger until a certain percentage has been met and then charges the battery again.
One brand I know that does this is Lenovo. I don't know if all their laptops have this function, but I've seen it on one and played with it. The biggest concern with this feature was, that when it switches to battery power, it also wants to do power management functions, such as: not use the CPU and GPU fully, so playing fast games was not practical. In the end, we decided to not use this functionality for the following reason:
If you want to wear down the battery less because you will mostly be running on AC power, simply consider removing the battery altogether and only use it with AC power.
If you want to be able to have the luxury of continuing to work while there is a power outage, you will need to have the battery inserted all the time. You might want to consider purchasing a 2nd battery and just let the current one wear out. You can change batteries if you want to actually use the battery on its fullest.
Note that I always use my laptop with charger and my battery has worn out a bit, and still I have over an hour of battery usage on a full charge.
A bit more related to your question: Windows cannot do it, but there might be software available that can do it. I don't know software that offers this though, and SuperUser is not about requesting software packages either, so I can't help you on that part, but google might help you find a suitable software package. You would want to look for Powermanagement download battery
something along these lines.
2 downvotes? Anyone care to explain why? – LPChip – 2016-04-27T15:23:27.023
Just out of curiosity, why? – Carcigenicate – 2016-04-25T15:32:41.787