![]() ![]() Turns out that he only put the 87 watt there from his older 2016 MacBook Pro that he got rid off back several months ago which explains pretty much why that was still there.Īnyways, from this deduction and what I told him. I asked him why are you using this 87 watt charger? You should have used the 96 watt charging brick that came with your laptop. It's the 87 watt charger!! And then it all made sense now. I almost actually gave up until I started to look at the charger and then looking at the brick, I was shocked. ![]() I was dumbfounded of why the battery wear was reporting around 10% via BatteryBar (Windows) or 90.6% via coconutBattery (macOS) once I started to check it out physically and take a look. ![]() Why the hell would Apple ever make a laptop that would ruin the battery performance under heavy load? That doesn't make sense. So I started asking what they used their laptop for which they told me that they used Bootcamp and occasionally they would do some gaming on it.Īfter I asked them the specs and whatever it was to determine why the battery was degrading fast, I just thought that the laptop just got too hot and so the battery itself would degrade from the heat.except that is actually a dumb reason. TL DR version of this CS story: Stick with the charger shipped with your MacBookĪ while ago, I was diagnosing a client's MacBook Pro which was the 16 inch model with the Intel processor and they said that the battery wear was degrading fast.
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