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johnkree

macrumors 6502
Original poster
Jun 23, 2015
296
295
Austria
Hello!

I just got my new MacBook this Monday and I was wondering if I should calibrate the battery or does it come calibrated? I usually charge a battery when it hits the 40% mark, so I was wondering if I should empty it the first time till it shuts down?
And should I charge it longer for the first few times?

I read somewhere that I should keep it connected for about 2 hours when it hits 100% of charge?
 
Hello!

I just got my new MacBook this Monday and I was wondering if I should calibrate the battery or does it come calibrated? I usually charge a battery when it hits the 40% mark, so I was wondering if I should empty it the first time till it shuts down?
And should I charge it longer for the first few times?

I read somewhere that I should keep it connected for about 2 hours when it hits 100% of charge?
Please don't do that. Avoids fully charged and empty charged for a long period of time.
 
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Please don't do that. Avoids fully charged and empty charged for a long period of time.
Thank you. Do you think that it's even safe to charge the battery to 100%? Considering that the M1 Doesn't need a lot of power and the device will stay at over 80% for a day with just sporadic uses?
 
Do you think there is a reason to do it when you get charge your first cycles... I'm confused. The article says no, some people claim that they do it...
There is no need to do it at all. It serves no benefit and can be detrimental (even in a small way) to the battery. Apple has built battery optimization into Big Sur and the M1.

The people you may read doing such online are those who got used to doing it years ago with Macs and iPhones and never stopped. And just because said people continue to advocate an archaic method that serves no purpose, that doesn't mean the repeated admonition has merit.

If you want to waste time calibrating something that doesn't need it, you can do that.
 
There is no need to do it at all. It serves no benefit and can be detrimental (even in a small way) to the battery. Apple has built battery optimization into Big Sur and the M1.

The people you may read doing such online are those who got used to doing it years ago with Macs and iPhones and never stopped. And just because said people continue to advocate an archaic method that serves no purpose, that doesn't mean the repeated admonition has merit.

If you want to waste time calibrating something that doesn't need it, you can do that.
Thank you for the clarification. I see...
 
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