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Version actuelle par : Ben

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Ok so at number 3, leave the battery disconnected. It is actually unsafe for the laptop to be on and have the battery installed while it is on.
This can damage the charging / power management circuit in the laptop as most laptops do not support hot swapping batteries. Only ones that have dual batteries or high-end workstation / business models support this.
-When removing and installing batteries, firstly make sure the device is powered off and not plugged in to a charger, that way there is no potential risk of damaging the said circuits.
+When removing and installing batteries, firstly make sure the device is powered off and not plugged in to a charger, that way there is no potential risk of damaging said circuits.
While having the laptop turned on, plugged into charger and no battery installed try turning it off normally and see if you can turn it on again with just the power button. If you can still I would consider replacing the battery first and see how that goes.
Sometimes batteries go faulty in unexpected ways like yours for example, usually a faulty battery most of the time will still let it turn on with it installed into the laptop but only with the AC laptop charger adapter attached. Once that gets detached while it is on the laptop should immediately shut off.

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Modifié par : Ben

Texte:

Ok so at number 3, leave the battery disconnected. It is actually unsafe for the laptop to be on and have the battery installed while it is on.
This can damage the charging / power management circuit in the laptop as most laptops do not support hot swapping batteries. Only ones that have dual batteries or high-end workstation / business models support this.
-When removing and installing batteries make sure the device is powered off and not plugged in to a charger, that way there is no potential risk of damaging the said circuits.
+When removing and installing batteries, firstly make sure the device is powered off and not plugged in to a charger, that way there is no potential risk of damaging the said circuits.
While having the laptop turned on, plugged into charger and no battery installed try turning it off normally and see if you can turn it on again with just the power button. If you can still I would consider replacing the battery first and see how that goes.
Sometimes batteries go faulty in unexpected ways like yours for example, usually a faulty battery most of the time will still let it turn on with it installed into the laptop but only with the AC laptop charger adapter attached. Once that gets detached while it is on the laptop should immediately shut off.

Statut:

open

Modifié par : Ben

Texte:

Ok so at number 3, leave the battery disconnected. It is actually unsafe for the laptop to be on and have the battery installed while it is on.
This can damage the charging / power management circuit in the laptop as most laptops do not support hot swapping batteries. Only ones that have dual batteries or high-end workstation / business models support this.
+
+When removing and installing batteries make sure the device is powered off and not plugged in to a charger, that way there is no potential risk of damaging the said circuits.
While having the laptop turned on, plugged into charger and no battery installed try turning it off normally and see if you can turn it on again with just the power button. If you can still I would consider replacing the battery first and see how that goes.
Sometimes batteries go faulty in unexpected ways like yours for example, usually a faulty battery most of the time will still let it turn on with it installed into the laptop but only with the AC laptop charger adapter attached. Once that gets detached while it is on the laptop should immediately shut off.

Statut:

open

Contribution d'origine par : Ben

Texte:

Ok so at number 3, leave the battery disconnected. It is actually unsafe for the laptop to be on and have the battery installed while it is on.

This can damage the charging / power management circuit in the laptop as most laptops do not support hot swapping batteries. Only ones that have dual batteries or high-end workstation / business models support this.

While having the laptop turned on, plugged into charger and no battery installed try turning it off normally and see if you can turn it on again with just the power button. If you can still I would consider replacing the battery first and see how that goes.

Sometimes batteries go faulty in unexpected ways like yours for example, usually a faulty battery most of the time will still let it turn on with it installed into the laptop but only with the AC laptop charger adapter attached. Once that gets detached while it is on the laptop should immediately shut off.

Statut:

open