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Macbook Pro 16 losing battery when plugged in

I just got the new machine. I had a 2013 before this and never had this problem. When I am working in After effects or Cinema 4D and am rendering, My battery levels will go down. I'm plugged directly in to the macbook, and I'm using the new power supply that came with the machine.


So now, this morning I can't do any more renders because I only have 7% battery. Does this have something to do with the USB C power specifications? My magsafe powered macbook never ever did this. Is there a way to get more power to the macbook so that it stays at full power? I really need this machine to be able to do overnight renders and longer. This render was estimated at 40 hours and now I can't finish the job.


Dave


MacBook Pro 16", macOS 10.15

Posted on Dec 21, 2019 8:29 AM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Dec 23, 2019 2:20 PM

Hi,


I just wanted to follow up with everyone. I just did the 10.15.2 update and currently, my power is staying at right around 100%. Not sure if it was that, or just maybe a few reboots, because my computer did crash earlier?


Dave


18 replies

Dec 21, 2019 10:02 AM in response to Dave Taylor

Advanced power/temperature management in the newest MacBook Pro is designed so that If you are requesting intensive operations, your Mac can use the entire power supplied by the Power Adapter and freely "borrow" power from the battery on a moment-by-moment basis. That is the way it was intended to work.


Make sure the Power Adapter is showing connected (typically shows the lighting bolt inside the battery symbol on the menubar).


If an all-night render depleted that battery too low, you may need to give it time doing nothing or sleeping with no Apps running and power adapter connected to re-charge.


If you have not connected the power adapter and left it doing nothing all night long, read the suggested procedure in this recent article, developed after an Engineering investigation into problems with a related MacBook Pro model:


If your MacBook Pro (13-inch, 2019, Two Thunderbolt 3 ports) keeps shutting down - Apple Support


This likely applies to more models as well, but the investigation has not issued procedures for more than the model listed.


.

Dec 21, 2019 12:11 PM in response to Grant Bennet-Alder

Grant Bennet-Alder wrote:
Advanced power/temperature management in the newest MacBook Pro is designed so that If you are requesting intensive operations, your Mac can use the entire power supplied by the Power Adapter and freely "borrow" power from the battery on a moment-by-moment basis. That is the way it was intended to work.


Hasn't that been the case for all MacBook Pros even as far back as the original ones? No power adapter that Apple has included can supply peak power to a notebook computer. The battery has always been integral to operating at maximum power. I seem to recall that when they operated with a bad battery or even the battery removed, they would throttle the CPU clock to half the frequency to keep the system from overwhelming the external power supply.

Dec 22, 2019 9:20 AM in response to steve359

steve359 wrote:
Unless the design has changed since my 2011 model, the battery is allowed to draw down. At 100% it stops charging, then allows the battery to drop to gently 95% instead of always forcing a charge. At 95% it recharges to 100%. This has kept my batteries healthy for 8 years.


Sure. However, it shouldn't be drawing from the battery unless the power needs are more than the power adapter can supply. The charge level is normally going to be dropping from self-discharge as well as from whatever supplemental current is needed.


However, I re-read the OP's situation, and if it's doing a high power operation for hours on end, it probably isn't going to be drawing down on the battery. I would also expect something like that to cause the fans to to run fast enough to notice.

Dec 22, 2019 10:32 AM in response to Dave Taylor

Not sure what the deal is, but earlier I didn't proofread and I would expect that it would draw down on the battery.


You can look up the specs though. The available processors are rated for a max 45 watts, although constantly using that amount of power could cause some serious overheating. The GPU would draw quite a bit of power too. There should also be other components drawing power Add conversion losses.


For the most part I wouldn't expect that any Mac notebook computer should be operating at high power for more than just brief spurts. It should back off before destroying itself or going into thermal shutdown (which I've seen before).

Macbook Pro 16 losing battery when plugged in

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