You can with most laptops, but then the battery will not be charged. Try it - if the screen goes blank when you pull the battery out then it's off. For most laptops, you only get 1 battery pack out of the box and in order to maximize the battery's life time, once u have a fully charged battery u can remove it when u have an AC power on, so that the battery wont keeps on charging. Cant the laptop detects if the battery is full and cut off the charging? Yes, in most of the cases, but it is still a myth if hooking on both AC and battery together will shorten the battery's life time.
a simple battery charger only charges the battery and having no feedback from the battery status, it can cause overcharging, increase temperature, and can damage the battery or in worst case can blow up the battery, also mitigates the life time of the battery. whether intelligent battery charger charges the battery and get feedback from the battery , when the battery gets fully charged it Cut off the charging circuit itself, also maintain the charging at its trickling current to control the temperature. simply it shows the status of the battery. i hope its the Good answer. thanks although the intelligent battery charger charges the battery and get feedback from the battery,the batteries have different charge characteristics. For example ,some intelligent battery charger detect △V and △T to control charge. However when batteries has been charged fully,they will show different characteristics. some battery has show the voltage dropped,but in fact they has not been charged fully,even charged a little just because the wave input voltage.some batteries has show the voltage dropped,but the batteries has charged fully for a long time.So acccording to the △V not to determine the fully charged.△T has the same problem and when the same battery charged fully will come different temperature,if the charging current is different. So △T is worse than the △V. Finally,although the intelligent battery charger can get feedback,now the battery charge characteristic is unsure.So it is no sense. I think battery charge should be distinction by constants current or constants voltage.they will produce obvious different effect of charge.
That depends on the laptop you are using. Find the total battery capacity. Then charge the battery to full. Then turn it on and let it run out of juice. Record the time it takes to run out. If you have a wireless card, keep it turned OFF. Divide the battery capacity by the run time to get your energy usage in volts/hour or volts/second or whatever your units were.
You cannot decrypt the administrator password in BIOS. What you can do is to reset the BIOS by finding the correct jumper on your motherboard. This should be shown in your motherboard manual. If you do not have the manual, you should be able to download one from the internet. If you cannot locate the reset BIOS jumper, simply remove the battery from the motherboard (on almost all modern boards this is a CR2032, battery which is silver, round and quite flat). Leave the battery out for a while. The next time you power up the computer the password should have been cleared, along with all other BIOS settings including the date and time.
turning an ordinary PSP battery into a so-called "service mode trigger battery''
A standard AA battery contains approximately 25 milligrams of silver in the form of silver oxide. Silver oxide is a component of the battery's positive electrode, which helps to conduct electricity during its operation.
40g
With a battery charger!
There must be a difference between the electrodes. If both are silver metal the voltage will be zero. I don't know if it works with silver like it does with lead, but oxidizing the metal of one electrode might make a workable battery (a silver/silver oxide battery like the lead/lead oxide of the lead acid battery).
There must be a difference between the electrodes. If both are silver metal the voltage will be zero. I don't know if it works with silver like it does with lead, but oxidizing the metal of one electrode might make a workable battery (a silver/silver oxide battery like the lead/lead oxide of the lead acid battery).
If it is an automobile battery then of course it can be recharged. It would we worthless as an auto battery if it was not rechargeable.
Silver is far too expensive to be using for battery electrodes.
no
Yes, because silver is good conductor of heat.
it's for you to find out.. sorry haha
The only watch like battery on the motherboard. Its silver colored and sits in a liitle Pod
if i sold silver how much would i get an ounce how much is silver an ounce