- Your battery is dying, and it needs to be replaced
- Windows 7 cannot properly detect how much power is in the battery
To determine what's wrong,
- click start
- In the box that says "search programs and files", Type in CMD
- You should see a "cmd.exe" show up in the top of the start menu
- Right click the cmd icon, run as administrator
- type in powercfg -energy
- This will test your battery, and produce a report in C:\Windows\System32\energy-report.html
- You can open this file in a regular browser or Word
- If it is able to read the battery, and produce a report, look at the line that says "design capacity" and "last full charge"
- This will show how much the battery should hold, and how much it's actually holding
- If you run the test over a few days or weeks, and this number is steadily decreasing over time, it means your battery is dying, and you need a new one eventually
- You can always untick the "warn me if my battery needs replacing" if you just want to get rid of the annoying message
- If it is unable to read the battery and produce a report, then windows is not communicating with the battery.
- This is a BIOS issue, and it means that Windows 7 just isn't going to read your battery properly.
- You can try updating your BIOS, but it probably won't work.
- Long story short, there's nothing you can do about the warning.
- in your cmd box, run powercfg -setdcvalueindex SCHEME_CURRENT SUB_BATTERY BATACTIONCRIT 0
- This will just let windows run until the battery hits 0, regardless of how much power it "thinks" it has
- Other users recommend charging the battery to full, then letting it run down to below 10%, then recharging it again to "reset" the battery
- I have not had any personal success with this method
Original article
Other techniques you can try
what do you mean click the CMD icon? There is no icon?
ReplyDeletePress window icon+ r then write cmd the dialogue box will open
DeleteUpdated the description to be more clear
ReplyDeleteTried but didn't work for me so looks like its a new battery :/
ReplyDeletehmmmm
DeleteMy laptop has generated the following information:
ReplyDeleteDesign Capacity 47520
Last Full Charge 16664
Last Full Charge (%) 35
What is the next step to improve the battery situation?
Design Capacity 45360
ReplyDeleteLast Full Charge 17120
Last Full Charge (%) 37
When opening the report it defaults to opening with Firefox, but opens to a 404 not found page. When opening with Word, word immediately closes. I've reattempted the previous steps to get it to work, but it does the same thing. Is this what you meant by not creating a report or is there a different issue occurring?
ReplyDeleteFixed own issue. If this occurs, simply right click on energy-report, click on properties, under general change where it says opens with from Firefox to Word.
Delete