Battery? what battery? No power even though fully chaged.
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Anybody else had this problem?
One of my laptops is a very expensive gaming laptop.
After about a year, the charger failed, and I got a replacement.
A couple months later, the battery wasn't holding a full charge, and I replaced that also.
A couple of months later, the Laptop was still charging the battery, but would instantly turn OFF when unplugged, even though the battery was fully charged.
I researched this, and one guy said to go to the CONTROL PANEL, DEVICE MANAGER, BATTERIES.. and disable ACPI then re-enable it. That fixed the problem for several days. Then the problem returned. After a few attempts, it fixed the problem again. A couple of weeks later, the problem has returned, and this time it won't go away.
It's not a huge deal, because the computer runs slow when not plugged in, and I almost always have it plugged in. It is ANNOYING though.
I would like to know how to fix this.. and what CAUSES it. -
Your battery is already bad and weak or leaky battery ... [a leak is a term for faulty or damaged battery, a real leaking battery is a dead battery] ...
So it can no longer power-up your PC regardless of being fully charged ...
This means it has already reach its full service destination by means of overuse and the time is over ...
You need a new battery replacement or disconnect the battery from your laptop and use AC power source instead ...
[reset or update your BIOS settings] ... https://www.minitool.com/news/how-to-reset-bios.html
To reset the BIOS, you'll need to launch the BIOS. Turn on your computer and press and hold the Setup key at startup.
Depending on your PC this may be the F2 or the F10 key. During a restart, the correct key is usually displayed on screen.
This will prevent your PC malfunctioning from power source and overheating or [buy a new PC ] ...
To Start device manager : Open the “Run” dialog box by pressing and holding the Windows key, then press the R key (“Run”).
or Type devmgmt.msc. from start menu [dialogue box] ... Click OK .
problem solve ... -
@john32123666 I think you were right about the battery being bad.
I bought a 2nd battery because the 1st one was behaving strangely.
I was charging up BOTH batteries and flipping between the two - which worked for a few weeks.
Now it seems the bad battery is useless, and I sticking with the new battery.With the new battery, I still had to disable and re-enable the ACPI... but only had to do that once, and the setting stuck after rebooting.
I think the problem is fixed.
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Next problem is a hopeless one.. the camera and touchscreen of my other laptop which in an HP stopped working 6 months ago.. just weeks after I bought it. Since I very rarely use the laptop's camera nor touchscreen, I don't care. From my research, it seems this is a common problem with HP laptops.