'Bring Back the Replaceable Laptop Battery'

numike

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Nov 1, 2018
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I undervolted my ugly desktop's cpu because I live in an ancient building with older wiring plus I was tired of seeing 1.4 or more volts at a brief 4.2 GHz (this is wasteful). It now boosts to 4.2 GHz using 1.28 volts and is quite stable. Undervolting seems more appropriate for laptops' batteries, though and it seems this can also help with some heat reduction, depending on circumstances.

There are plenty of guides online, and it takes some time and patience adjusting and testing the stability. I used Intel's Extreme Tuning Utility but didn't run any stress tests or benchmarks, just some cpu intensive gaming and other regular use. No guarantees, though.
 
it is the same as phone batteries, no more replaceable, they realized people are more incline to buy new laptops than sending the laptop to the care service and pay for a new battery + work, which cost almost half the price of the laptop.
 
my laptop is 2 years old, the battery died........had it under warranty so they shipped me a new one and I snapped it in and ready to go
 
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My Acer Predator laptop doesn't include a "replaceable battery". Nevertheless when I unscrewed it to clean it I saw the battery and its connections, and it's just literally connecting two wires. Replaceable stands for plug and play? In that case I would understand, but they're still totally replaceable.
 
indeed, i bought a car battery and transport it on a backpack , it replaced perfectly my laptop battery and its duration is way longer :ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO:
Nice but isn't it heavy?
I prefer the power efficiency.
Can't wait till the new MediaTek arm CPUs get to laptops hopefully with 72WH.
And none soldered components is a thing of the past,one of the invention I really hope just die .