Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 Battery Died Right After Warranty Ended – Coincidence?

mbodla
mbodla Member Posts: 2 New User

It's interesting how some things seem to happen at just the right time. I purchased an Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 (i7 HX 13th Gen, RTX 4060, 16GB RAM) in October 2023, and it performed well—until recently. Right after the warranty expired, the battery health took a dramatic turn, leaving the laptop barely usable without being plugged in.

  • Original Battery Capacity: 90,614 mWh
  • Current Full Charge Capacity: 8,978 mWh (a fraction of what it once was)
  • Cycle Count: 165 (not exactly excessive use)

Attached are battery reports and a timelapse video showing just how quickly the battery drains. A premium gaming laptop should last longer, but it seems like this is not an isolated

incident.

Strange how these things tend to happen just when support is no longer an option. Would be great if reliability extended beyond the warranty period. Has anyone else experienced this? How did you handle it?

#Acer #Predator #BatteryFail #WarrantyTiming #PlannedObsolescence?

Answers

  • Puraw
    Puraw ACE, Member Posts: 15,136 Trailblazer

    Not seen that happening before and I have the PHN16-71, post the complete battery report, I suspect something else is amiss: Open the battery report with your Edge browser, press Ctrl+P or right click and select "Print to Microsoft PDF", attach the report to your reply, type @Puraw or use "Quote" when you reply so I will get an alert. You should not disconnect the power adapter but leave the battery charged 100% at all times, this system will lock Predator Sense once the battery <40%. My estimate is that you will get 30 minutes battery backup with a new battery while playing games and the power adapter is disconnected. Are you perhaps using Acer Care and Acer Sense "Battery Calibration", "Optimization" or "Battery 80% charge limiting"? even when uninstalled these services keep running. I don't see 100% charged, are you using a USB-C charger?

  • mbodla
    mbodla Member Posts: 2 New User

    Thanks for your response.

     @Puraw

    I’ve been very careful with my battery usage:

    • I always kept the charging limit at 80% for better battery health.
    • I never used a USB-C charger.
    • I frequently kept my charger plugged in to avoid unnecessary cycles and to focus on my work without interruptions.
    • I used Acer Care Center and Predator Sense for monitoring and optimization.

    Despite all this, my battery health dropped from ~90,000 mWh to less than 9,000 mWh overnight. This is not normal. My cycle count is only 165, which isn’t excessive.

    I’ve attached my complete battery report (PDF) as requested. Let me know what you think. Could this be a firmware issue? Or am I just expected to replace the battery so soon?

  • Puraw
    Puraw ACE, Member Posts: 15,136 Trailblazer
    edited 2:26AM

    Hi, you are doing everything wrong with your battery, you should never limit the charging to 80%, stop the battery monitoring and battery "Optimizing" nonsense (a myth) and you should disable accSvc in Windows Services. Always leave the power adapter plugged in 24/7. That battery has not been registered in the new BIOS version 1.18 and by MSACPI. Boot to BIOS with F2 and press F9 (reset) and F10 (Save changes). Boot to Windows and in Device Manager uninstall the 2 battery drivers on the picture below. Just reboot and disable Fast Startup and Hibernate in "Change what closing the lid does" and "Change settings currently unavailable" and reset the Power plan in "Reset Power Plan", reboot and perform the mandatory Full Charge Cycle:
    Charge the battery to 100%, check that the battery meter on the taskbar reads 100% and wait an extra 5 minutes, unplug the power adapter and work till the system shuts down automatically, do not touch the power button just close the lid. Plug in the power adapter and charge till the amber battery LED turns blue and wait 5 minutes, open the lid and boot to Windows, that's it.

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 13,061 Trailblazer
    edited 5:28AM

    If you kept your PHN16-7x whichever model you have plugged into the adapter 24/7 then there is NO way that your battery would be so depleted unless its a faulty battery., as having 8978mWh power left of a battery that has a design capacity of 90,674mWh there must be something going on with such a new high end Acer laptop

    This is the same exact battery that you have in my PHN16-71 model laptop, this laptop is 3 months old and its Full Charge is even better than its Design Charge and only has 19 Cycles Counts, my laptop is always plugged in 24/7 but once a month I let the battery discharge overnight and then recharge it at 20% power. I know that its not 12 months old but your battery should not be so depleted after 12months as these batteries should last at least 3-4 years before you need to replace them. Get a technician to check your laptops main power rail and its charging rail if they are operating 100%, Good luck.

    These are the batteries that both the PHN16-71 and 72 models use, so buy a genuine Acer new battery to replace the old battery'

    My PHN16-71 battery report

    If this answers your question and solved your query please "Click on Yes" or "Click on Like" if you find my answer useful👍