On 2012-10-27 23:26, $heikh el $hah wrote:
> Akurat baterie Li-ion wolÄ
doĹadowywanie, choÄby z 90% od Ĺadowania ze
> stanu ~0%. Co innego przy Ni-Cd bÄ
dĹş Ni-Mh.
Ale nie w ten sposob i nie w tych warunkach, w ktorych pracuja
zazwyczaj w laptopach:
"Lithium-ion suffers from stress when exposed to heat, so does keeping
a cell at a high charge voltage. A battery dwelling above 30°C (86°F)
is considered elevated temperature and for most Li-ion, a voltage above
4.10V/cell is deemed as high voltage. Exposing the battery to high
temperature and dwelling in a full state-of-charge for an extended time
can be more stressful than cycling. (..)
Besides selecting the best-suited voltage thresholds for a given
application, Li-ion should not remain at the high-voltage ceiling of
4.20V/cell for an extended time. When fully charged, remove the battery
and allow to voltage to revert to a more natural level like relaxing
after exercise. Although a properly functioning Li-ion charger will
terminate charge when the battery is full, some chargers apply a
topping charge if the battery terminal voltage drops to a given level."
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/how_to_prolong_lithium_based_batteries
A przy tym wszystkim trzeba przeciez miec na uwadze, ze bicie rekordow
w trwalosci oryginalnych baterii nie jest w interesie producentow
laptopow i wiekszosc z nich nie specjalnie gorliwa w tworzeniu
zabezpieczen, bo w koncu zarabiaja tez na sprzedazy nowych baterii.
Dlatego trzeba zatroszczyc sie samemu.
-- memento lorem ipsumReceived on Tue 30 Oct 2012 - 14:15:03 MET
To archiwum zostało wygenerowane przez hypermail 2.2.0 : Tue 30 Oct 2012 - 14:51:05 MET