Have you checked out the NewerTech NuPower batteries? They are sold out on OWC/macsales at the moment but people have at least reviewed them last year. Also, Apple did sell official replacement batteries in-box back in 2008, there are some that float around eBay sometimes.
Edit: Here's an image I found of them:
Secondly, every battery official or not will probably bulge at some point.
I don't know where you live, but in Germany my only choice would be this:
Apple MacBook Pro 17" Early 2008 EMC2137 (A1229) Akku (3 Zellen)
Apple MacBook Pro 17www.duracelldirect.de
In fact I am using it right now.
So far so good.
That battery looks and feels legit at least.
It has a metal encasing from the outside.
Sorry to hear that mate.I’ve seen (and read) a steady series of generally favourable reviews for Duracell laptop batteries and have long wanted to try one myself, but they are sold strictly in the continental European (EU) market. The last time I visited the Duracell site, it was located in the Netherlands.
For North America, I think our best available alternative are the NuPower NewerTech line of laptop batteries.
Update: Indeed, it appears Duracell Direct doesn’t have an outlet for Canada, while the U.S. market only has batteries shown for select Asus and Toshiba models only.
One observation: this is not true of newer Apple OEM batteries. I've had two Apple batteries swell in my now-traded-in mid-2014 retina 15"; my mom had one swell in her late-2013 retina 15". Worth noting that these were laptops rarely used on battery; the battery life was still I think quite reasonable at the time of the swelling.In another thread, I brought up a question about Apple-OEM batteries for laptops seeming to not bulge the way so many aftermarket ones do, even when they’re nearly completely exhausted.
Since I posted that, I got the chance to look through and inspect a few old unibody-era white MacBook and MacBook Pro OEM batteries alongside unibody aftermarket variants.
All of these — OEM and aftermarket — were plenty used, and some were destined for the battery recycling drop-off. For reasons about which I’m still not clear, the Apple-OEM batteries were, by and large, all just completely exhausted (or very much on their way out), yet nearly none presented swelling issues. Nearly all the aftermarket batteries, meanwhile, were either beginning to swell or had swelled to comically bad proportions. (Note: none originated from Newertech, so I can’t speak to how an exhausted Newertech battery fares).
One observation: this is not true of newer Apple OEM batteries. I've had two Apple batteries swell in my now-traded-in mid-2014 retina 15"; my mom had one swell in her late-2013 retina 15". Worth noting that these were laptops rarely used on battery; the battery life was still I think quite reasonable at the time of the swelling.
My sense is that there's something about the built-in batteries vs the removable ones enclosed in plastic that makes the built-in ones more likely to swell, or at least to visibly swell...
My observation at a laptop battery recycling shop is: The removable batteries were built based on multi 18650 cells, which are less likely to detect the swell because if only 1 cell busted, the whole battery would fail. They normally popped out 1 end and leaked inside the plastic case.
In your experience, how often did you see, specifically, PowerBook 17-inch batteries which expanded/bloated like this? I ask this, specifically, of the 17-inch variant, as those were, to my knowledge, the very first lithium-polymer-based batteries — in lieu of a series of 18650 cells — to reach a Mac product.
Ancient? Lenovo was still using those (in combination with a built-in battery Apple-style) in some ThinkPad models in 2015... that's not that old, is it?My original post was meant to reply to the comment about user removable batteries with plastic cases in ancient windows laptop, not the non-removable flat lithium polymer batteries in modern laptops and Macbook computers.
Ancient? Lenovo was still using those (in combination with a built-in battery Apple-style) in some ThinkPad models in 2015... that's not that old, is it?
OWC Macsales batteries are fine, I always buy mine from them and never had an issue. Just replaced the battery in a 2020 Macbook Air M1 I bought from them no problem.Cheers to all! So another replacement batt from a "legit" source for my beloved 2007 17 MBP bulged. Do legit non-bulging variants still exist? Many thanks in advance.
Do not generalize.OWC Macsales batteries are fine, I always buy mine from them and never had an issue. Just replaced the battery in a 2020 Macbook Air M1 I bought from them no problem.
I’ve bought batteries for everything from my G4 powerbook all the way up to my new M1 Macbook Air. All no problem.Do not generalize.
You compare recent battery technology with that from at least 14 years ago.
Back then batteries were not that sophisticated with respect to power management and also didn’t last that long as the cells were not that efficient.
So you compare apples with oranges.
And OWC also don’t make them themselves but buy from a China manufacturer.
I can provide my own experience with regards to this. My 2006 17" MBP battery is the original, and it is swollen. The plastic case has been separated for years due to the expansion of the battery. I have never had any other laptop batteries swell like this. Only times I've seen battery swelling in my own devices would be cell phone type batteries which I have to toss regularly.In another thread, I brought up a question about Apple-OEM batteries for laptops seeming to not bulge the way so many aftermarket ones do, even when they’re nearly completely exhausted.
And I would respond that I've had two swelling batteries in a mid-2014 retina MacBook Pro, my mom had swelling batteries in a late-2013 retina MacBook Pro, and I also had... two?... Lenovo T550s at work where the built-in batteries swelled (the T550 was an interesting transitional machine, combining both an Apple-style built-in battery and a traditional removable Lenovo battery).I can provide my own experience with regards to this. My 2006 17" MBP battery is the original, and it is swollen. The plastic case has been separated for years due to the expansion of the battery. I have never had any other laptop batteries swell like this. Only times I've seen battery swelling in my own devices would be cell phone type batteries which I have to toss regularly.