On Windows 7
Open an elevated Command Prompt and enter the following command;
powercfg/energy
The command will take a little time to fully execute and when it does, it will tell you where it’s saved the energy report. Open the report in your browser and look for the Battery Information section. The information you need to tell you how well your battery is doing is the value of the Design Capacity and the value of the Full Charge.
You can see in the screenshot below that the full charge is higher than the design capacity on the system we ran this command on. The battery in question isn’t the original one that came with the laptop and is instead a replacement which charges more than the intended capacity for a battery that should be used with the system.
If your full charge value is significantly lower than the design capacity then your battery is depleting. If it’s gotten very low you might want to think about replacing it. A battery might still last as long as one hour and suddenly stop charging.
On Windows 8 & 10
On Windows 8 and 10, open an elevated Command Prompt and enter the following command;
powercfg/batteryreport
Wait a few seconds for the report to generate and then open it in your browser. Windows 8 & 10 give you a much easier to read and better formatted report. Look for the ‘Battery life estimates’ section and compare the full charge with the design capacity. If the full charge has fallen very low you might need to look into getting a new battery for your system. The report pictured below shows what you see when the battery is dead and no longer charging.
If you ever stop using a laptop and need to store it for an extended period, you should take the battery out and before packing it away.
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