The chap told me, if the diagnostics found it 80% for some hardware reason, it may be possible to replace the battery. I was in Apple Store today for another matter, and raised the battery question (didn't have it with me). Is 79.7% capacity enough to explain what, experientially, is sometimes a poor battery drop-off? I have put it on Coconut Battery, which says.Ĭharging with: 3.81 Watts (whilst on iMac USB) Probably faster when moving iOS 12 to 12, and then faster again last month when I had to have my second consumer-rights replacement of the defective Smart Keyboard. Looking for anyone to provide feedback and ideally an answer to the questions aforementioned above.Įxamine my iPad Pro battery health details, why the drain? For the last year/few months, it seems my 2017 iPad Pro 10.5in battery drains faster and faster. It's kind of annoying with the different values and making trips to the Apple Store only to find that I need to wait for another few months. Why such a huge discrepancy? So, I can get a battery replacement for the 10.5in iPad Pro, but not the 12.9in iPad Pro until it is at or below 80% battery health. Secondly, the value of the Maximum Capacity Health from CoconutBattery significantly differs from the Apple Diagnostic results.ĭevice CoconutBattery Apple Diagnostic Difference For the purpose of this question, let's use the Maximum Capacity health value to compare with the Apple Diagnostic Tool results. Since the Design Capacity value and the Maximum Capacity value differ for the same device and date evaluated, I'm not sure which one to actually use when comparing with the Apple Diagnostic health value. The Design Capacity mAh value is seem from the iOS Device Menu, but the Maximum Capacity mAh value is shown in the History. as shown below:įirst, CoconutBattery is a confusing as it has two health percentages, one calculated from the Design Capacity and the other from the Maximum Capacity values. Note: Apple plans on increasing the price in effective March 1st, 2023.ĬoconutBattery battery health was significantly different than Apple diagnostics battery health. If the battery health is <= 80%, they will replace each iPad at a cost of $99 as of. I used CoconutBattery on two of my iPads and also brought them into the Apple Store with an appointment to assess the battery health. So I purchased coconutBattery plus version 3.9.10, which is the latest version as of to assess the current battery capacity of my devices. Since the iPad iOS does not report battery health like iPhone iOS, you need to use a third party tool because Apple does not give out their diagnostic tool to end users.
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