The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsAnyone ever had a swollen laptop battery?
I dropped my laptop on the floor today. First time I've ever had that happen.
Picked it up and the trackpad popped out at the bottom left corner. I spent a while trying to snap it back into place. It just would not reinsert in that corner.
So I Googled it and I saw warnings that it's the battery underneath the trackpad that's damaged. It's known as "swollen" or "spicy" battery.
You're supposed to stop using the laptop and get a replacement battery ASAP because the damaged one can be a fire hazard.
Oh joy!
I'm lucky to have my old laptop still kicking around and still functioning, although it's a tad slow.
SonOfNebanaube
(151 posts)The battery you find is reconditioned and in almost no better state...
Thomas Hurt
(13,995 posts)Definitely time for a new laptop unless the repair is reasonable.
Marie Marie
(11,556 posts)on the log holder in my fireplace just in case, until I could get a new phone Battery was so swollen it bent the metal casing. I handled it just enough to transfer the data to my new phone, praying it wouldn't burst into flames. Asked the man at a electronics and phone repair shop if he would take it in for recycling and he looked at it and said "NOPE!", which I understood. Took it to Best Buy, showed them and asked them if they would take and they said "SURE". Go figure.
Tetrachloride
(9,715 posts)either as a main or as alternative/backup
LearnedHand
(5,625 posts)You should unplug it but dont try to fix it yourself. Take it to a repair shop to have them remove the old one and get a replacement battery. Srsly, its a fire and/or explosion danger.
niyad
(134,104 posts)took it to a repair shop. The tech showed me the swollen battery, which was pretty scary. She explained what could happen with it. I ended up buying a reconditioned phone that worked well until I upgraded to a 5g.
Tasmanian Devil
(228 posts)Not worth panicking about, but replace them before their expansion into the other components causes them to break. In my ancient laptops that would be risk of damage to the trackpad.
So .. don't panic, but consider them a source of ignition and fire until you get rid of them. I.e. store them someplace where they won't burn your house down if it ignites!