I have 91 % battery health after 129 cycles. How much cycles should it take to get to 91 %. Also is it safe to charge through usb c hubs? Using m1 Macbook Air
No, it's pretty bad. The battery can take 1,000 cycles under ideal conditions. But it's lost 9/20% and the replacement threshold is 80%. This means 9/20 = 45% gone.
The notebook was probably plugged and kept at 100% for a long time.
There are other chargers that supply both USB-C PD and 5W USB-A. It's possible to slow charge the M1 Air overnight using a normal 5W USB charger.Mine started dropping about 1% health per charge cycle at around 40 charge cycles until I switched to slow charging with Ikea Askstorm dual 5W (overnight when laptop is powered off) and 18W (while laptop in use) charger. Too bad Ikea stopped selling it.
Also amount of time spent plugged in and charged up to 100%. At 100% charge the cell voltages are at their highest and the chemical deterioration maximum. That is why Apple have been introducing OBC (Optimised Battery Charging) and third party apps (like AlDente and Energiza) have become popular ...to reduce time spent at high charge level.Age is just as important as the number of cycles.
I have an old MBP which has been plugged in most of its now ten year life, only 227 cycles. Health is 95 %. A newer MBA should do much better.
To clarify: I meant during the time span OP declared. Don't you agree? In ten years time OP's MBA will have 10% left, with the same rate of decline.You can't really say that.
The health number isn’t very scientific and comparing numbers between different sources (macOS’s built in vs coconutBattery’s health estimates) doesn’t really make sense.To clarify: I meant during the time span OP declared. Don't you agree? In ten years time OP's MBA will have 10% left, with the same rate of decline.
So, OP's MBA is fine?The health number isn’t very scientific and comparing numbers between different sources (macOS’s built in vs coconutBattery’s health estimates) doesn’t really make sense.
Could be, can’t extrapolate 10 years ahead based on a single datapoint.So, OP's MBA is fine?
My previous MacBook Pro’s battery degraded very quickly because it was always plugged into the socket. The battery dropped below 80% with about 250 cycles. Since I bought the new MacBook Pro 16 inch 2021 back in October of that year I use it more often on battery and less time plugged into the socket over long periods of time and the battery health is still phenomenal after 3 years and 722 cycles.
I would definitely try to get Apple to either replace the battery or the unit itself. I don't care how much battery that would've been left ten years from now. 91% after 129 load cycles is rubbish. You are entitled to the opposite opinion, of course.Could be, can’t extrapolate 10 years ahead based on a single datapoint.
That would be a waste of time. Apple as a general rule will not perform warranty replacements for a battery until it falls below 80%.I would definitely try to get Apple to either replace the battery or the unit itself. I don't care how much battery that would've been left ten years from now. 91% after 129 load cycles is rubbish. You are entitled to the opposite opinion, of course.
So, OP's MBA is fine?
It depends on what those cycles were. =Did you let it go to "dead" and then recharge to 100%? Doing the 129 times will use up more battery life than if you cycled from 40% to 80% 129 times.I have 91 % battery health after 129 cycles. How much cycles should it take to get to 91 %. Also is it safe to charge through usb c hubs? Using m1 Macbook Air
Apple will not replace a battery that still has 91%. That would be nuts. The battery is still good. But if it falls below 80% then they will replace it.I would definitely try to get Apple to either replace the battery or the unit itself. I don't care how much battery that would've been left ten years from now. 91% after 129 load cycles is rubbish. You are entitled to the opposite opinion, of course.
My memory is that in the very early days of Silicon Macs with Big Sur there was a problem (can't recall what it was) with certain pass through USB hubs. It was fixed in a dot release of macOS 11 and has not been heard of since.Is it safe to charge m1 Macbook Air through usb c hub?