Question:
HP laptop shuts down when battery is at 50%?
Angry Girl
2010-06-20 02:12:29 UTC
I have HP dv5 for 18 months now. I regularly run it on battery (uncharge-charge)

Yesterday it shut down when battery got to 50% and won't turn back on until I plugged it in.

I tried again today and it's the same. Battery 50% - shut down.

HELP ???
Five answers:
Soulja
2010-06-20 02:16:12 UTC
ur battery is died it dont charge its just gonna say it 50 then turn of after a min or 3
fracier
2016-10-22 06:50:17 UTC
there's a calibration technique between the laptop and the battery. The technique is somewhat to run your laptop battery thoroughly out of ability by ability of putting the domicile windows vehicle shutdown/ hibernate thresholds to 0 p.c. or disabling. yet that reported it sound like the character of your issue is inflicting it to try this besides. So its maximum probable a foul battery. each and every laptop battery has a small laptop in it dedicated to charging the battery and monitoring the cells to be certain that they function wisely. The battery will close itself down if it think of the cells are undesirable with the intention to dodge a fireplace or worse. To me it feels like the battery packs risk-free practices circuitry is the two enticing or malfunctioning.
anonymous
2010-06-20 02:35:08 UTC
You can set your computer to shut down or hibernate at a specific amount of battery charge

yours has been set to turn of at 50 % charge



1. Open Power Options by clicking the Start button clicking Control Panel, clicking System and Security, and then clicking Power Options.



2. On the Select a power plan page, next to the plan you want to change, click Change plan settings.



3. On the Change settings for the plan page, click Change advanced power settings.



4. On the Advanced settings tab, expand Battery, expand Low battery level, Reserve battery level, and Critical battery level. Change the percentage of battery remaining that you want for each level, and then click OK.



Source: http://www.thewindowsclub.com/how-to-change-battery-notifications-in-windows-7#ixzz0rNtDctgu
?
2014-09-09 13:58:33 UTC
This may be worth trying.







First of all, shutdown the notebook, unplug the AC Adapter unplugged, remove the battery, and then hold down the Power button for a full minute.







Now, plug in the AC Adapter and start the PC without the battery inserted, start the notebook, open windows Control Panel, open Device Manager, expand the entry for Batteries, right click on and theMicrosoft ACPI Compliant Control Method Battery and selectUninstall - do not uninstall anything else here. When the uninstall is complete, shut the PC down, unplug the AC Adapter, re-insert the battery and then start the PC on just the battery. Windows will automatically reinstall the driver - leave Windows running for a few minutes. Shutdown the PC again. Now plug in the AC Adapter ( with the battery still inserted ) and start the notebook to see if this has helped the issue at all.
Moo
2010-06-20 02:14:23 UTC
Defective battery, take it back to the store and use your warranty to get a new one.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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