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2.3GHz, 2.6GHz, or 2.7GHz quad-core Intel Core i7 processor (Turbo Boost up to 3.7GHz) with 6MB shared L3 cache.

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Not able to charge battery after replacement - battery stays dead

Replaced old battery with ifixit battery last night. Everything went well, all connections made, everything secure. Only thing that went a bit poorly was getting all the old battery residue off the metal frame with the adhesive remover…. some strips were really too on there and, after a certain point, seeing how much force and mess it would take to get even a little off, I figured I could get by with the amount I already had taken off. Didn’t seem like a problem but now upon reflecting I’m thinking maybe (very small chance I did get it pretty clean and waited more than 40 minutes for the adhesive to evaporate) some adhesive remover could have been absorbed into the strips and that could be whats giving my new battery trouble.

Anyway…

New battery worked immediately, and I tried to calibrate it. (Shutdown, charge til mag goes green, leave for 2 hours, then drain til dead, leave dead for 5 hours then full recharge.)

I got to my second step (mag goes green) and waited two hours. I then tried to use the computer and drain the battery sans charger but found it in the following state:

  • Battery essentially registering as dead
  • Unplugged from charger and power button pushed, display lights up with “connect and charge battery” icon
  • Plugged in to charger and power button pushed, display lights up with “connected to charger but in need of enough battery to start up” icon it just stays in this state perpetually
  • Unplugged, computer makes no noise
  • Plugged in, (even without power button pushed), fans make repetitive whooshing sound on a low speed. It’s like the computer is trying to start again every 2 seconds, it can’t, then the fans stop, then it trys to start again with the fans coming on, etc… it sound like breathing. On/off, on/off, on/off, ever 2 seconds or so. This also occurs while the “connected to charger but in need of enough battery to start up” icon is showing after the power button is pushed. An hour goes by and it still shows the same icon after being plugged in.

In the unplugged from charger state, nothing has worked to get a response from the computer (did SMC & PRAM reset)

In the plugged in to charger state… nothing has worked to get a response from the computer (did SMC & PRAM reset)

THE ONLY THING THAT DOES ANYTHING AT THIS POINT IS IF:

  • I remove the bottom
  • Unplug the battery connection
  • Hold down the power button for 10 seconds
  • Plug in the charger while I’m holding the power button for another 10 seconds
  • Then when the computer turns on and at this point I can use it, disregarding it is in a bottomless state and the fans run very fast
  • I also followed pram and smc reset instructions when I had just turned the computer on in this state

I then introduced the battery again after all this and a shut down with no luck… same issues as before with charger plugged in and charger unplugged.

Someone please help! Did I get a bad battery? Is there something I’m not thinking about doing that I should.

I’m at the point of attempting to do something I read I could do but would be “dangerous”. Essentially repeat the same thing I did with the unplugged battery and power bottom held, charger goes in, computer starts, but then I plug in the battery as the computer starts. Seems risky but if anyone can attest to something like this working for them I might try it.

Any help appreciated! Thank you in advance!

Beantwoord deze vraag Dit probleem heb ik ook

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Lets get a better view of things, install this gem of an app! CoconutBattery take a snapshot of the apps main window and post it here for us to see Voeg afbeeldingen toe aan een bestaande vraag

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You should’ve tested the battery before gluing it down

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Ian Iversen ... do as @danj has suggested to see what the os is reading if anything. a little bit if background would be helpful as well. what made you change the battery in the first place? could be the circuit and not the battery. start with the previous suggestion.

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Re: testing battery before glueing @ifixiphone … noted for next time. Good advice for anyone to follow if they are trying to replace the battery on this model.

I ended up surrendering and heading to a computer repair shop on Thursday. Before I left my computer there the employee noticed I had been using the wrong charger (which I brought in). I was using a 45 watt when I should have been using an (I think it ended up being) 85 watt. We plugged it into my computer and immediately my computer started to boot up. I felt very silly but relieved, you live and you learn. I must’ve gotten my charger mixed up with someone else’s at some point or another. At this point I thought all problems were solved.

I took the new charger home and charged my computer for ~3 hours while the computer was shut down. When I checked on it my battery percentage had remained at 1%, and after running the rounds of resets, no luck. I decided I’m just gonna give my money to the repair shop. I didn’t even bother to check up on any analytics apps. The battery icon when I clicked on it displayed “replace immediately”. I reasoned I was out of my depth and was willing to give my money up to just get this thing working and back in my hands.

Thank you for the comments folks! Any idea if I can get a refund/store-credit, not a replacement, on this battery I bought from ifixit? If my 45 watt battery didn’t somehow do any damage, then I agree with what the computer repair people who told me I must’ve been sold a defective battery.

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Contact the store to find out Contact iFixit Customer Support

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Ian Iversen zal eeuwig dankbaar zijn.
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