![]() |
Do not leave a fully charged battery connected?
From the User Guide...
"Do not leave a fully charged battery connected...overcharging may shorten its lifetime." Well, so may unnecessary* discharge cycles. So should we plug it in for use? * 90% of use will be next to an AC outlet |
Re: Do not leave a fully charged battery connected?
I always leave mine plugged in - no problems yet, and I never had any problems with my 770 which I would leave plugged in when fully charged before being replaced after about 16 months of sterling service by a N800.
|
Re: Do not leave a fully charged battery connected?
Quote:
Lithium batteries cannot be allowed to overcharge: They explode! They burn. Very very dangerous. That's why devices using lithium batteries have internal charging circuitry which will switch off the charging when the battery voltage reaches a certain limit. My Palm T3 switches off at 4.24 volts, some other devices will switch off at 4.10 volts. A lithium battery must never go above 4.30 volts. This is so critical that there is an _additional_ over-voltage circuit inside the battery itself, in case the built-in one in the device fails (except for the batteries you can buy in bulk for RC purposes, for hobbyists). Unlike with NiMH batteries there is no trickle-charging. Instead the charger won't start up again until the voltage of the battery has dropped a good bit. Don't discharge the battery. The discharge cycling is again a leftover from NiMH (and in particular NiCd) batteries. Charge it when you get the chance. Deep-discharge a lithium battery and you will see reduced capacity right away (been there, done that). Lastly, it _is_ some truth in that a lithium battery that stays at 100% charged at all times will get a somewhat reduced lifetime. But this is much more of a problem if the battery is warm too, so in laptops this is a much bigger problem: Keep your laptop on the mains at all times and after a year your battery is pretty much spent. Much less of a problem with phones and devices like the N800 (as long as it doesn't get warm). |
All times are GMT. The time now is 20:23. |
vBulletin® Version 3.8.8