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Kirby64 3 hours ago

100% and 0% are essentially arbitrary, though. That’s the point. What is 100% for a battery? 4.1V? 4.4V? What’s 0%? 3.0V? 2.5V? Lower?

drfloyd51 an hour ago | parent [-]

And to add to the confusion, the display reads 100% of the current capacity. 100% of 80%.

Kirby64 an hour ago | parent [-]

Irrelevant for state of charge, though. My point is you can define 0 and 100 as specific voltages and arbitrarily make the capacity larger or smaller. LG was notorious for having the top level charge be unusually high for the time (4.45V or something) which meant they had amazing battery life when new, but quickly fell off a cliff as they aged rapidly.