Storing a laptop for a month

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I won't be using my laptop for a month. I remember I let a laptop sit all summer and the battery failed.

How do I store a laptop and battery properly?

xcross

Posted 2011-07-25T19:56:13.877

Reputation: 153

1

related: Is it better to use a laptop on battery or on AC power?

– slhck – 2011-07-25T20:01:21.650

1well, for better answer, you must inform us the "technology" of your battery, if it is NiMH, Li-Ion / Li-Polymer etc. (probably Li-Polymer). – kokbira – 2011-07-25T20:36:43.507

Answers

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Discharge the battery to 40-60%, and then simply put it in a cool dry location. You really don't need to do this, but you can also remove the battery just in case.

Related: Control charging and discharging of laptop battery

KCotreau

Posted 2011-07-25T19:56:13.877

Reputation: 24 985

1A month is not really a long time. If you previous battery failed, it was probably not due to letting it sit. It was probably on its way out anyway. – KCotreau – 2011-07-25T20:02:21.293

1Do you happen to know if it would be better to leave the battery uncharged, at medium charge, or fully charged? – slhck – 2011-07-25T20:02:29.140

5Definitely remove the battery. Store it in a cool dry place. Laptop should be OK in any place so long as it is protected from the elements. Laptops will slowly drain their batteries even if they are turned off. – music2myear – 2011-07-25T20:15:43.283

My thought - there's probably a reason why laptops start complaining when the battery is down to around 50%. If your laptop isn't complaining, you're probably safe to store the battery at that charge level for fairly long periods. The exact charge level probably doesn't matter much. My laptop is eight years old, the battery is still good - if I'm not using it for a while I disconnect the battery, but I don't discharge it first - it's mostly run on the mains and kept at 100%. Occasionally I run it on batteries and discharge until it complains for probably no good reason. – Steve314 – 2011-07-25T20:24:32.437