Why should you never charge a battery to full?

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For that matter what is it with batteries that make them so fickle?

You can’t charge them to full, but at the same time you can’t let them die, but at the same time you should wait for them to die before you charge since constant charging is bad, but at the same time not charging enough is also bad like what’s the real deal with batteries T_T

In: Technology

18 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Even the most dodgy chinese powerbank now comes with a charging module that handles the overcharge / cycles / voltages et cetera.

So don’t overthink it.

Do not leave big batteries charged to 100% for a long time and don’t leave empty batteries for storage and you’ll be fine.

Anonymous 0 Comments

There’s a lot of wrong or old info online. Generally follow these rules and you’re good to go:

– Not too full, especially if it’s hot out
– Not too empty, especially if it’s cold out
– Try to keep it near 50% as much as possible
– Ignore everything above. It’s such a minor difference the “savings” isn’t usually worth the effort. If it doesn’t inconvenient you in **ANY** way, then it might be worth your effort implementing those suggestions. Otherwise, ignore it.

These suggestions are for modern li-ion batteries. There’s a lot of other contradicting info because of different, older battery technologies.

Anonymous 0 Comments

They aren’t that fickle; a lot of the advice around charging and battery maintenance is extreme — it caters to people who are trying to _optimize_ the longevity of their batteries. But it shouldn’t be a concern for most people.

It’s a bit like trying to optimize everything about your diet: that only makes sense for people already performing at a very high level — for most people, “eat food, not too much, a decent variety” is good enough.

Batteries work on chemistry; applying power to a rechargeable battery sort of “reverses” the reaction that lets you draw power from it. What batteries don’t like is extremes — avoid extreme heat or cold, and extreme states of charge or discharge on a regular basis, and you’ll be fine. The charge controller takes care of everything else for you. Unless you have particular need to optimize the longevity or performance of a battery, you don’t have to worry about anything beyond that.

Anonymous 0 Comments

> Why should you never charge a battery to full?

So that people who gave you this wrong advice have a sense of accomplishment. /s

Go ahead and charge the battery until full. Modern batteries, installed in modern devices, are designed to work that way. The secret is that, on average, they will be around 80% charged, which is indeed optimum for their life span.

In other words, you charge it until full, you unplug the device and use it until it’s down to something like 60%, then charge it again – the odds are that in the long run it will all average out around something like 80%.

If you never charge it until full, then it will average to a value lower than 80%, which is not optimal.

Many smartphones will charge it to 80%, hold it there most of the night, then in the morning shortly before waking you up, they will quickly charge it to 100%. This, again, is best for the battery in the long run.

TLDR: Charge it until full. You’re not smarter than the manufacturers.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Take a look at this video from Engineering Explained. It is about fast charging cars, but it explains really well how batteries work.

Anonymous 0 Comments

A beam that can take 100 lbs is now yours. You then bounce 100 lbs on it every night as you go to sleep. How long do you think that beam is going to last?

Anonymous 0 Comments

Surely this topic won’t be full of people speaking confidently about shit that hasn’t been true for almost _twenty years now._

Anonymous 0 Comments

Should I not be using a trickle charger on my car when i store it? Isn’t that maintaining the battery more or less at full?