Since it's my only laptop, and I require it for my studies, I need to use it normally, and it has behaved the same way, charging up to 86%-88%. We are again in the exact same situation. When the battery will lose even more capacity, I will change it by myself, it can be found on asusparts. Luckily, it seems to have no problem with power cord plugged in, no loss of performance or strange behaviors.
#Asus g751jt ch71 remove battery Pc
I'm almost sure that the problem is a faulty battery, but I need the PC for studying and gaming, so I don't like the idea of sending it ro RMA for several weeks. Sometimes the led starts blinking orange, and the battery level stucks at 90%, even if I unplugged the power cord, so I have not idea of the remaining charge, until it shutdown by itself It started to charge at only 92-93%, now it stops at 87-88%, saying "Plugged in, charging", with led steady orange. My model is a G751JY - T7134H (italian model), I bought it in February 2015, and battery warranty is only 1 year. However, I have the same problem since about 3-4 months.
#Asus g751jt ch71 remove battery series
The cells are in series by four, so they have to be a multiplier of 4. You can't just remove one cell, because the battery pack is a 4s2p configuration, something like this I'm just trying to figure out if it's worth the hassle of sending it in and losing my work machine for a week or more if it's just a battery issue and nothing else is affected. As long as this doesn't hurt anything internal, is it ok to keep using the laptop as is? Or would it be better to send it in and have Asus replace the battery (it's under warranty)? Now, this leads me to a question (for JustinThyme).does running on only 7 cells instead of 8 make any difference other than the obviously shorter battery life, my charging LED light always staying orange, and the Win battery meter always saying it's still charging even when it's not? I use my laptop mostly plugged in, never moving it from my work space. Weird that a handful of us had it happen on the same model at about the same time.quite a big coincidence. So, it does indeed seem like it's a dead cell. That 12.5% then subtracted from the 100% equals 87.5%.the amount my battery stops charging at. I have no idea how charge distribution within the cells is done, but if it's distributed equally, then 100% divided among 8 cells is 12.5%. These are the stats as of right now (after leaving the ac plugged in all day): I downloaded a battery app from the Win store today, so I can see exactly how much is charged and what the usage is. Both days, the battery will get up to about 88% but no higher. So, for the past two days, I've not messed with the battery.just used my laptop as I normally would.