I've seen the function somewhere on my laptop that I can leave my laptop on the power supply and it automatically stops charging when 70% is reached. This function is used to save the battery.
I just searched for the function to activate it but can't find it anymore. Does anyone know where exactly I can find them? Or what I have to enter in the Windows bar to find them. Have already searched all battery settings
Think about it;
You limit yourself to 30-70%, just to prevent your battery after only a few years from 95% of its actual capacity. To limit myself therefore to 40%, I consider completely unnecessary, that makes absolutely no sense.
I also do not know that Windows itself has built something like that, at least have never seen it.
It is true that a battery that is moving slower in the range between 30 - 70% ages than a battery which is always used by 100 - 0%.
However, the difference is so small that this amounts to only a few% on 500 charging cycles.
However, I would new that the laptop can limit the charge at 70%. At 30%, he can simply turn off, but that's how he wants to break the store?
This is only possible if he can communicate with the charger or interrupts the charging connection. And that, to my knowledge, currently no laptop.
Search for "Battery Life Extender". Of course you can load such a program on it, if your computer does not have it. Do I have Made on my Windows 7 Home Edition.
I just found it. The feature is offered by Lenovo Vantage, not by Windows. So it works.
Lenovo Vantage offers something like that! The function is intended for laptops, which are mainly used on the power cable, so they do not constantly 100% eggs, which should not be so good.