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razamataz

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jan 29, 2011
23
0
Edmonton
I have a 11" air and try to baby the heck out of it and this has been bugging me......

I have calibrated battery mt battery and i cant get the health over 97% (according to coconut battery and istat) I have taken it in to the apple store and they have run there tests and tell me the battery if fine.

To be clear, Im not talking about the battery showing 100% charged, I'm referring to the amount of battery capacity my battery has out of what it should have (currently 4515mah out of 4680mah)

I have about 21 cycles on the battery and feel a little frustrated that it has never charged to 100% since new.

Am I being silly or is there something else I should do?
 

Psilocybin

macrumors 6502a
Jan 16, 2011
592
0
Ontario, Canada
Reporting error I have 25 cycles on mine at 97% health. My MacBook has 275 charges and is at 95% health on istat pro. I kind of find it pointless to dwell over the health, just worry about the cycles
 

Mr. Savage

macrumors regular
Jun 11, 2010
248
0
Toronto
I've learned to stop obsessing over all the details of my battery condition. Now, every so often I just option click the battery icon in the menu bar and as long as it says "normal" I know everything is okay and can just get on with what I'm doing.
 

2IS

macrumors 68030
Jan 9, 2011
2,938
433
A third yes.

Reminds me of the days when I first started getting into building my own computers and I was obsessed with temps and cold cathode lights. My computers sounded like jet engines and looked like a rave party when I powered them on. I've since been able to curb my OCD and i've been much happier. :D
 

GGJstudios

macrumors Westmere
May 16, 2008
44,556
950
I have about 21 cycles on the battery and feel a little frustrated that it has never charged to 100% since new.
Batteries begin dying a slow (or quick) death from the time you start using them. How you treat the battery will affect how quickly it dies, but all batteries will ultimately die. That's why they're considered "consumable" and aren't covered by warranty or AppleCare, except in the case of manufacturing defect.

Don't expect the health to be at 100%. The health will fluctuate up and down, but is only an estimate and will ultimately decline over time. Calibration makes that reading as accurate as possible.

This should answer most, if not all, of your battery questions:
 

razamataz

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jan 29, 2011
23
0
Edmonton
Batteries begin dying a slow (or quick) death from the time you start using them. How you treat the battery will affect how quickly it dies, but all batteries will ultimately die. That's why they're considered "consumable" and aren't covered by warranty or AppleCare, except in the case of manufacturing defect.

Don't expect the health to be at 100%. The health will fluctuate up and down, but is only an estimate and will ultimately decline over time. Calibration makes that reading as accurate as possible.

This should answer most, if not all, of your battery questions:


WOW.

A very overwhelming response. thank you all for your input. was just a little concerned about having a wonky battery is all, Just wanna keep my unit prime :D
 
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