| Battery Overvoltage! | 
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| Dane Non-Elite Member
 
      
 
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 | | O.P.  Battery Overvoltage! Hey everyone,
 Been a whole long time since I posted, but I got a question.  I have just gotten a new AC Adapter for my laptop (Universal 70W Home Charger), and using the right limiter thingy for the power.  Well, for some reason the battery light turned red.  Upon investigating in the BIOS, it informed me that there was an Battery Overvoltage. It had a picture of the AC Adapter Plug and an X going through it, and it turned off the AC Adapter on its own.  However, im using the correct tip to be compatible with my notebook, so I'm wondering what that means and how to resolve it and get my battery to work again without it exploding.
 
 Dane
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| 11-12-2006 11:18 PM |  | 
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| RaceProUK Elite Member
 
      
 
  
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 | | RE: Battery Overvoltage! Does the brick itself have a voltage/current/power adjuster? Usually with universal adaptors, it's not just the right connector, it's also the right voltage/current settings. Laptops usually have a label underneath with information about what voltage and current the mains lead can supply without causing trouble. It's usually accompanied by a symbol that's two horizontal lines, like a long =, but the bottom line is dashed. Either that, or one like this image .
 
Edit: In fact, not just laptops: any electric/electronic device has this info.This post was edited on 11-13-2006 at 12:02 AM by RaceProUK.
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| 11-13-2006 12:01 AM |  | 
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| Dane Non-Elite Member
 
      
 
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 | | O.P.  RE: Battery Overvoltage! Nope.  The only directions on the AC Adapter were to install the correct tip, which I did.  However, even with the AC Adapter unplugged, the battery still says overvoltage. | 
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| 11-13-2006 12:19 AM |  | 
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| Voldemort Veteran Member
 
      
 
  
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 | | RE: Battery Overvoltage! did you ever see what happened with the old charger?is this the first time it happens?
  *All posts are a purely speculative hypothesis based on abstract reasoning.  
Not my daughter, you bitch!
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| 11-13-2006 12:33 AM |  | 
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| Dane Non-Elite Member
 
      
 
  Dont ask to ask, just ASK!
 
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 | | O.P.  RE: Battery Overvoltage! Yeah, this is the first time its happened.  The old charger had a tear in the wire and no longer functioned and a replacement was really really expensive so I opted for the Universal one that wasnt as expensive.  Everything else works fine but the battery. | 
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| 11-13-2006 12:37 AM |  | 
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| TheSteve Full Member
 
    
 
  The Man from Japan
 
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 | | RE: Battery Overvoltage! On your old power adapter, does it have an Input and Output listing? Make sure that output matches the one set on the new one.
 Example: My power adapter says
 Input: AC 100-240V~1.5A(1,5A)
 Output: DC 19.5V(19,5V) 3.34A(3,34A)
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| 11-13-2006 02:03 AM |  | 
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| Dane Non-Elite Member
 
      
 
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 | | O.P.  RE: Battery Overvoltage! quote:Originally posted by Old Adapter
 
 Input: 100 - 240V~ 1.6A (1.6A)  50-60Hz
 Output: 19 V == 3.42A (3.42A)
 
 
 quote:Originally posted by New Adapter
 
 Input: 100 - 230V~ 2A   50-60Hz
 Output: 15 - 24V == 65W Max
 
 
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| 11-13-2006 02:17 AM |  | 
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| RaceProUK Elite Member
 
      
 
  
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 | | RE: Battery Overvoltage! The newer adaptor runs at a higher current, and has a variable voltage. Both of these can cause problems. The new adaptor should have a voltage setting on it at least though. Since you're getting 'overvoltage' errors, you've probably got it set too high. | 
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| 11-16-2006 05:30 PM |  | 
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| Adeptus Senior Member
 
     
 
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 | | RE: Battery Overvoltage! The voltage setting on most universal laptop power supplies is determined by the plug adapter being used.
 I suspect there is no solution to this problem, other than returning the not-so-universal  power supply to the store and getting the more expensive proper replacement for your laptop.
 
 You may want to check on eBay, too.
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| 11-16-2006 08:55 PM |  | 
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| Dane Non-Elite Member
 
      
 
  Dont ask to ask, just ASK!
 
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 | | O.P.  RE: Battery Overvoltage! lol, theres no setting thing, the only thing I can actually change is the tip that the adapter uses and thats supposed to control the current flow or something like that.  I'm using the tip number it said for my laptop model, so idk. | 
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| 11-16-2006 09:00 PM |  | 
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