Okay, so a friend wants me to resurrect her old laptop. All in all it seemed to be in fair shape except the keyboard (missing a few keys) and the battery (wouldn't hold a charge). Got a new keyboard and a new battery (on eBay, which made me wary, but it was from a very well-rated seller who specializes specifically in batteries, so I figured it's worth a try).
Keyboard installation went okay, and of course, swapping the battery was a piece of cake. According to the battery's instructions, it's supposed to charge 10 hours before the first use (which I'm sure is probably way more than it needs, but I was a good boy and played along). After leaving the laptop plugged in with the new battery for 10 hours, I turned it on and checked battery status. ~60% charge. I figured this was a bit low, but I've also heard new batteries might need to go through one or two charge cycles before they can charge to their full capacity.
In line with that thinking, I unplugged the laptop and allowed it to drain the battery (which worked). In a couple hours the battery had drained completely and I plugged in the laptop to AC again to charge it.
Came back a few hours later. Battery charge status: 0%, charging. "That's no good," I thought. Unplugged the laptop to see if there was really no juice at all in the battery and sure enough, the laptop immediately lost power. At this point I suspected that I had never charged the battery at all, and that the initial 60% charge that I had was probably from the factory. The laptop has two module bays, so I tried putting the battery in the other one, but it made no difference.
I've heard of the AC adapter being the problem in cases like these, and since the old one was a little worn, I figured we might as well try a new one. Got a new AC adapter, but it made no difference.
Though I'm more than willing to consider that this could be a problem with the new battery (which I can still return), I'd think even a crappy battery (that obviously held some charge) would be able to charge at least a little. Likewise, I'd think the old battery, would probably be able to hold a little bit of charge too. I'm just sort of suspicious that something might be wrong inside of the laptop that's preventing it from being able to charge its batteries.
Anyway, then I came to THG Forums hoping to find an insightful soul to suggest what my next course of action should be.
Keyboard installation went okay, and of course, swapping the battery was a piece of cake. According to the battery's instructions, it's supposed to charge 10 hours before the first use (which I'm sure is probably way more than it needs, but I was a good boy and played along). After leaving the laptop plugged in with the new battery for 10 hours, I turned it on and checked battery status. ~60% charge. I figured this was a bit low, but I've also heard new batteries might need to go through one or two charge cycles before they can charge to their full capacity.
In line with that thinking, I unplugged the laptop and allowed it to drain the battery (which worked). In a couple hours the battery had drained completely and I plugged in the laptop to AC again to charge it.
Came back a few hours later. Battery charge status: 0%, charging. "That's no good," I thought. Unplugged the laptop to see if there was really no juice at all in the battery and sure enough, the laptop immediately lost power. At this point I suspected that I had never charged the battery at all, and that the initial 60% charge that I had was probably from the factory. The laptop has two module bays, so I tried putting the battery in the other one, but it made no difference.
I've heard of the AC adapter being the problem in cases like these, and since the old one was a little worn, I figured we might as well try a new one. Got a new AC adapter, but it made no difference.
Though I'm more than willing to consider that this could be a problem with the new battery (which I can still return), I'd think even a crappy battery (that obviously held some charge) would be able to charge at least a little. Likewise, I'd think the old battery, would probably be able to hold a little bit of charge too. I'm just sort of suspicious that something might be wrong inside of the laptop that's preventing it from being able to charge its batteries.
Anyway, then I came to THG Forums hoping to find an insightful soul to suggest what my next course of action should be.