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Hardware

Notebook Battery Chargers? 29

Nilatir asks: "Here at the University where I work we're checking out Dell notebooks to the students in the library and our main lab. While this is proven to be good for the students I'm having a hard time managing the batteries for the notebooks. By eliminating the floppy drives and using wireless APs to access network shares we were using two Li-Ion batteries in every Latitude and getting almost 8 hours of life a day from them. But, due to some students undying dependence on floppy disks, we were forced to drop down to one battery which will only last half the day at best. We now have an extra battery for each notebook with no way to charge them (even Dell's docking station has no charging bay). Have any slashdotters run into a problem like this and how you all resolve it? Does anyone know of external battery charging station for notebook batteries?" Will laptop makers ever learn that this is one of those accessories that would sell like hotcakes?
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Notebook Battery Chargers?

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  • spare laptops (Score:5, Interesting)

    by dnight ( 153296 ) <dnight@lakkaCHEETAHdoo.com minus cat> on Tuesday October 22, 2002 @08:27AM (#4503149)
    I have the same problem, and we actually try to use one of the laptops that hasn't been checked out yet to top off the batteries. It's a pain in the ass, but at least the Latitudes have the LED battery indicator on the battery, and stop flashing the laptop power light when the tthings are charged.

    It's one of the most damned expensive external chargers I've ever seen, though.
    • Actually not a bad idea,
      I guess the only solution would be to get some dockingstations, they can probably load the battery without a laptop.

      Even that solution would be better off with a laptop with two extra slots in it.

      Personally I can't imagine a lab without power, the weight of the laptops with just weight-savers actually makes it portable.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    You didn't say what _kind_ of Latitude but the Latitude X200 comes with an optional charger



    Optional External Battery Charger: While both the standard 20 WHr and optional 58 WHr batteries will charge when the X200 is connected to AC power, some customers appreciate the flexibility of a separate battery charger with AC adapter, priced at $79.

  • by JLester ( 9518 ) on Tuesday October 22, 2002 @08:56AM (#4503370)
    I know Compaq, HP, and some specialty educational "mobile lab" companies make laptop charging stations. They have a space for the laptop and one extra battery for each. The one I looked at even had a spare power plug so the student can go to the station, plug in the laptop, swap the batteries, and unplug the laptop without shutting down or losing their work. I'm not as familiar with Dell, but at least call their education department and check with them. If they sell mobile labs, it's a good bet that they have something similar.

    Jason
  • EE Department? (Score:5, Informative)

    by mary_will_grow ( 466638 ) on Tuesday October 22, 2002 @09:17AM (#4503533)
    I will assume this college of yours has an electrical engineering department. Ask one of us! We are friendly especially when project ideas are accompanied by a case of beer!

  • I just, and I mean just, got email from local faculty who has misplaced his "dell laptop charger" and wants to know if anyone has seen it. So clearly, this thing you want exists. Talk to Dell.
    • For many people "AC Adapter" = "Charger"

      In fact, automotive power adapters for laptops are often marketed as "chargers", even though they're just a power supply for the laptop.

      I had an NEC laptop that had an external charger. Haven't seen one for Dell or Acer/TI though.
  • by joshuac ( 53492 ) on Tuesday October 22, 2002 @10:40AM (#4504188) Journal
    why not an external USB floppy, and keep the dual internal batteries? Check out the floppy drive as a seperate item only for the students who feel they need it. That also buys you the ability to check out drives capable of handling different media beyond what the modular drive sold with the laptop (1.44MB floppy?) could handle.
  • why don't you get an external usb floppy drive. they aren't nearly as expensive as an additional battery or a power supply, i think they're around $50.
    • Alternatively, you could request that anyone that wants to use a 'built in' (ie installed in the multi-bay) floppy drive takes the AC power adaptor with them and plugs into a wall outlet.

      I'm assuming of course that the Library is located inside and in a location that has continuous AC power. For the Lab you could buy extra chargers and have the AC power supplies always available at the work stations.

      If this becomes the norm in the Lab it would also provide surplus batteries to be made available in the Library.

      Any solution that involves the continuous partial discharging of the batteries will eventually result in dead batteries. Forget the so-called memory free battery claims for Li-Ion batteries, yes they were an improvement but I have never had a DELL notebook that hasn't lost at least 20% of its battery capacity within 6 months and 50% within a year.


      --
      DC SlashDot MeetUp at Dr. Dremos 10/24/02 [dc-geeks.org]

  • see if you can get some ls-120 drives from dell to use in the cd-bay (its called the multibay on a compaq, i dunno what they call it on a dell), if it has a removable optical drive.

    Don't tell students its an ls-120 drive though, cause you don't need them to get addicted to yet another futile media.... they read and write regular floppy disks quickly and more better than typical floppy drives, and they don't take up a usual battery spot.

    • On my Latitude C640, you have one battery-only bay, and one that you can swap between battery, floppy, and CD/DVD. There are only two bays, so you have no option for two batteries and an internal floppy.

      However, there is a cable that will plug into the docking station port and connect to a drive that you would normally use in the bay. So it can be done, but hanging a drive off of a cable is a pain.
  • a Google question (Score:3, Informative)

    by extra88 ( 1003 ) on Tuesday October 22, 2002 @11:20AM (#4504527)
    It's clear from a Google search "dell battery charger" that they've offered chargers for at least some models of Dell laptops. I gues you'd be helping yourself if you specified which Dell models you had.

    Dell Documents - Battery Charger [dell.com] Note this page is from their Asia Pacific site.

    Dell Introduces Thinnest, Lightest Latitude Notebook Ever [dell.com]

  • by ngoy ( 551435 )
    Well, I guess you don't have a choice, but the other two manufacturers that I am familiar with (Toshiba and IBM) have always had external battery pack chargers available. Toshiba had (and may still) a charger that had spots for two batteries to charge at once.

    In your situation, I would recommend checking other departments for a non-repairable laptop that still charges (like a cracked lcd or something that the school will not pay to fix) and use that to charge batteries with. Or check eBay for a laptop that has similar damage but boots.

    ngoy
  • A tiny five-minute battery built in so when I switch in this charged-externally battery I can do it without having to plug myself into the wall. Otherwise the feature wouldn't actually increase my mobility...

    • The Dells already do this to some extent, although to be safe you probably would want to (need to?) temporarily suspend the computer to do it. I can attest that my Dell Inspiron 8200 has an internal capacitor that is at least powerful enough to allow me to suspend (not "hibernate"; I mean a real "everything-is-still-in-RAM" suspend, not suspend-to-disk) the computer, swap batteries, and pick back up at whatever I was doing 10 seconds ago.

  • UCLA has the same setup, sans Wi-Fi in the library. In the laptop pods they have row upon row of external battery chargers and even a semi-automated checkout system. Last year they had Dells but this year they moved to Compaq. At any rate, both manufacturers make the external charger.

    Remember that Li-Ion prefers to be shallow discharged then immediately recharged.
  • Looks like there is a patent filed in the space (covered in Slashdot in 1999), however a quick reference to the patent database gives us USPTO [uspto.gov]

    So let the users frantically taking notes charge the batteries for them (I wonder if I should file a follow-up patent to use the USB mouse movements to charge the USB bus). Of course Compaq (now HP) owns this patent, so it looks like you will have to change vendors for you laptops.

    (mod -1 Troll)

  • Dell Makes a cable to attach the floppy to the Printer Port on the laptop...it usually comes in the box with the laptop, it least with all the Dell laptops I have ever seen.
    Why not use that..
  • Use the special cable Dell has to connect the floppy to the floppy-connector on the back of the Latitude.

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