Perhaps the most useful item in the rawlog display is the current consumption:Īn abnormal current draw may suggest a system issue otoh, a "normal" current draw may suggest the battery itself is the issue. I found some batteries on sites like Amazon, Ebay, but I don't really know which one to choose.
I am from Romania, and I am looking for a place from Europe to buy, since I don't want to spend a lot on shipping. InternalBattery-0 (id=4391011) 61% discharging 3:27 remaining present: true I am looking for a new battery for my 17'' mid 2010 Macbook Pro. Your output may look something like this (from my system, a 2016 MacBook Pro): $ pmset -g batt To get the longest running time from your battery, calibrate it sometime during the first week you have your MacBook Pro and repeat these steps. MacBook Pro 17-inch, Mid 2010 (Hard Drive Replacement) MacBook Pro 2007 15 MacBook Pro 2008 16.
$ pmset -g rawlog # monitor log use ^C to stop & return to cmd prompt A-Tech 8GB DDR3 1600MHz RAM for Apple MacBook Pro (Mid 2012), iMac (Late 2012, Early/Late 2013, Late 2014, Mid 2015), Mac Mini (Late 2012) PC3-12800 SO-DIMM 204-Pin Memory Upgrade Module 4. Core Mhz/13.3'/1280x800/4096Mb/250.0Gb/DVD-RW/W i-Fi/Bluetooth/MacOS X) : cbookpro/stats/macbook-pro-core-2-duo-2.4. View and Download Apple MACBOOK PRO 15 INCH instruction manual online. To get right to viewing the output, you might want to first check the battery status, then watch the raw log for a bit: $ pmset -g batt # battery status You can peruse the pmset manual as follows: $ man pmset The MacBook 'Core 2 Duo' 2.4 13-Inch (White Polycarbonate 'Unibody' - Mid-2010) features a 2.4 GHz Intel 'Core 2 Duo' processor (P8600) - with two independent processor 'cores' on a single silicon chip - a 3 MB shared 'on chip' level 2 cache, a 1066 MHz frontside bus, 2 GB of 1066 MHz DDR3 SDRAM (PC3-8500) installed in pairs (two 1 GB modules. You can run pmset from a terminal window it has a number of options, and they are documented in the system manuals.
There may or may not be something useful in there, but it's free and easy to do - so why not? You might want to have a look at the power management system's logs.