Is my calculation right?

Agera One

Estimable
Apr 11, 2014
230
0
4,910
CPUID HW Monitor says my laptop battery has 42180 mWh capacity. So, my laptop consumes (or the battery delivers) 42.18 W per hour right?
 
Solution
ARGH. A watt is a measure of POWER, not ENERGY. Energy is measured in JOULES (or watt-hours, 1 W·h = 3600J).

Power is defined as a rate of energy consumption, that is energy consumed each second. One watt is one joule each second.

42.18 watt-hours used across two hours would be a continuous draw of 21.09 watts.
Watt-hours is the amount of energy the battery can supply for one hour. If memory serves it's not a limit on how much can be pulled at once, at least not strictly, though you'll rarely see your laptop pull that much power in an hour.
 


I think I said the same. The battery delivers 42.18 W per hour (it will be drained to 0% when I use this much power from it for an hour)
 
Oh, I used wrong terms, right? my laptop battery (old model battery) is rated for a time of 2-hours of average usage. So, 42.18 watt-hour for 2 hours means 84.36 Watts of energy in 2 hours?
 


This is a common misconception. You cannot multiple/divide Wh to give a different time period, especially with batteries which cannot discharge at a constant rate.
 
ARGH. A watt is a measure of POWER, not ENERGY. Energy is measured in JOULES (or watt-hours, 1 W·h = 3600J).

Power is defined as a rate of energy consumption, that is energy consumed each second. One watt is one joule each second.

42.18 watt-hours used across two hours would be a continuous draw of 21.09 watts.
 
Solution
You're re-phrasing what you were suggesting. A battery which can supply 42.18W for one hour (as that is what it is rated at) cannot necessarily supply 84.36W for 30 minutes; it may only last 25 minutes, it may last less. I'm not arguing that 41.18 watt-hours used across two hours is 21.09 watts, i'm saying that you cannot divide/multiply what a battery can do over a given time period because they don't discharge perfectly linearly.