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You can control the battery % at which a device will begin and stop charging - so there's no need for this. Idk what all this misinformation is about.


Sure, but the battery gets heated when left plugged in, which is not good for its health.


Why would the battery be heated if it's not charging? You can set a gap - e.g. 80-100% where the battery won't start charging until it drops below 80%. Look at the documentation for your relevant power-management module.


>Why would the battery be heated if it's not charging?

Heat transfer from the device it's plugged into.


I'm not a hardware/electronics guy, but I'm rather skeptical that this is any kind of notable amount - do you have a reference?


Put the back of your hand (or your bare leg skin) against a laptop that's been in use. My Macbook is noticeably warm (maybe 15*F delta) in normal, non-charging, operation. That's with the benefit of conduction to the free air; I assume the inside delta-T is higher.


That's not answering my skepticism to GGP's post - what he is saying is: a non-charging plugged in device has a significantly hotter battery than a non-plugged in device because of thermal-conduction across a non-charging wire?




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