My brand new Asus gaming laptop discharges the battery while playing, even though it is on line. But only when playing. Can it be that the supplied power supply provides too little power and the laptop has to take the missing power from the battery? And the battery does not break much faster, if after an hour playing between 90-95% battery are available and then he always immediately recharges everything? Should I change something in the energy settings? And no, I did not set the graphics in the game too high.
I would take the battery out if you operate the laptop via the power adapter. Since you do not need the battery.
Does the laptop still get enough power through the power supply?
If not, either the power supply is undersized or something is wrong with the charging electronics.
Question Were you getting enough power through the PSU? -> try another header
Exchanged cables? -> There could be a defect on the cable.
When you use the laptop in network mode, it does not draw any energy from the battery.
I do not know if I get enough power from the power supply, I would have to try it out by playing without a battery. He unloads the battery so only when playing, so under a full load, in normal operation without great load, it does not discharge, because it even recharges. But can't be good for the battery when he constantly recharges from 90% -95% back to 100% when I'm done with games.
I have not replaced a cable, I use the included.
No that is not really sexy for the battery:, D
This is not good for the battery. People, a battery suffers most when it's lying around with 100 percent charge. A 50-percent battery feels most comfortable, so they should also be stored. These minimal fluctuations, that is pillspalle.
The life of a battery fades with each charge. So the battery does not celebrate when it is recharged at 95%.
This 10% of the battery charge, which you mentioned, is pupsegal, it does not hurt the battery. It is probably based on a design flaw of the device, because normally the battery should remain at its charge level. It is very easily discharged via the charging electronics at full load. The power adapter provides the notebook with the gambling, but can't really separate the battery, but it also no longer provide adequate charging voltage.
Lithium batteries age the most, now, by age, not by use. With rechargeable batteries made of multimedia products, the recharging rate is very low, so that the rechargeable battery bears virtually no damage due to discharging / charging. Damage only overcharges and discharges under a certain voltage, which should prevent the electronics.
The supplied power supply has a nominal value of 120W, which is probably too little for an i-7 Intel and 1050Ti Nvidia graphics card under full load, so he gets extra power from the battery, I think. Could you solve this problem with a more powerful power supply than 120W?