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Lion is draining battery twice as fast as snow leopard

I just installed Lion on my mac book pro that i purcahsed less than a month ago and the battery has gone down from over 8 hours estimated to less than 4. I'm a college student and a good battery life is possibly the most important function of my computer. Will there be a patch to adress this issue anythime soon?


for now i may revert to snow leapoard, at least until this issue is adressed. Lion is nice, but it's not worth sacrificing my valuble battery life.

MacBook Pro

Posted on Jul 22, 2011 10:45 AM

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39 replies

Jul 22, 2011 11:05 AM in response to JoeyR

I really want to believe that, but i didn't have very much information on my hard drive to begin with, less than 400 photos, less than 50 documents and just over 2000 songs, i find it hard to beleive that there is that much information to process. I will give it a day to see how it works, but i'm very nervous about this battery having issues when i start college this fall.

Jul 22, 2011 11:45 AM in response to PhangirloftheOpera

Back to Snow Leopard from Lion install method



Read and print out these instructions, your computer is going to be offline and you wil be cutoff from help until your machine is restored.


Clear the Desktop, Downloads and Trash of anything you wish to keep by placing their files in the respective Documents, Music, Pictures, Movie folders.


If you have a TimeMachine drive, update it and disconnect for the duration of this restore time. It will be your second backup system and will have to be wiped and setup again after successfully going back to Snow Leopard if it was connected to the OS X 10.7 boot drive. If it wasn't, then leave it disconnected without updating to Lion. (note: I'm not a TimeMachine user, so I don't know how to restore 10.6 from this medium)


Backup ALL your Users folders (Documents, Pictures, Movies, Music etc) manually (drag and drop methods) to a (not TimeMachine) external powered drive (HFS+ journaled formatted in Disk Utility) and disconnect, your going to be wiping the entire disk of ALL DATA. (warning, everything will be gone and not recovered, OS, programs, files, Windows etc all gone.)



Here we go!


Hold c and boot off the 10.6 installer disk that comes with your computer and second screen in just STOP.


Look at the Utilities Menu for Disk Utility.


On the left is the name of your hard drive maker, click it and Erase (format HFS+ Journaled), give it the same name as before, and click Erase...


This should wipe the drive of ALL partitions (GUID, OS X and 10.7 Recovery, Windows if present)


When it's done, quit and install OS X 10.6. Then install all your programs from fresh sources and validate/update.



When you setup a first account, use the same user name as before, this way you can simply drag and drop the content of your previous Users folders from the external drive right back into the new Users folders and everything should work peachy. Links in iTunes to music, playlists and iPhoto links especially.


Update OS X to 10.6.8 using the Combo Update for best results.


http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1399


(Note: If your original machine had 10.5 and you want the free iLife that comes with the disks with the computer, then you'll have to install 10.5 first using the same c boot/erase/format methods as above, then update to 10.6 via the disk, then Combo Update 10.6.8)



Final step optional but highly receommended.


A lot of people use a Carbon Copy Clone of their boot drive to a HFS+Journaled external drive as a "hold the option key" bootable backup in case something goes wrong with their boot drive or need to restore to a previous OS X version.. (in addition to TimeMachine drive for more immediate backups.)


It's not advised to have a Bootable Clone and a TimeMachine partition on the same external drive, as two drives gives hardware protection in case one fails.

Jul 22, 2011 12:39 PM in response to Tony Corasaniti

I just called Apple support and they talked me through resetting the power manager, the battery now seems to be fine. I can give you the steps the gentleman over the phone gave me, it might just help.


1. Turn off the computer.


2. Hold down Ctrl+Option+shift


3. While holding down these button, press and hold the power button as well.


4. Hold all buttons for at least ten seconds.


5. power back on the computer.


For me that worked, i don't know how it will work for everyone else but immediately my power estimation jumped up to around 9:30 and 10 hours. 🙂 Which is two hours more than i started with.

Jul 22, 2011 1:03 PM in response to jmsfmtex

I've noticed that the battery life estimate dips if it refreshes while i post things on the internet or while mail is loading and then jumps back up, i'm assming it's just calculating in the high wireless usage at that moment. as long as it reads within an hour (or significantly higher) of what you were getting before on a full charge 80% of the time, i wouldn't be too concerned.

Lion is draining battery twice as fast as snow leopard

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