What is the impact of leaving a laptop in "sleep" mode (while on battery power)?
Solution 1
I asked almost the same question here.
As for the shutting down completely thing - Windows needs to be rebooted once in a while to complete certain scheduled tasks. I would say to at least attempt to reboot once per day, but other than that, you should just sleep it for a quick launch back into the computer.
You can easily leave the thing overnight on sleep mode and it won't drain much battery at all.
Solution 2
It depends on your system.
Most people I know using modern laptops use sleep as the most common method of leaving the machine. For laptops I have had, I always let it sleep overnight or even over the weekend. From a max battery, it may last several days.
However, I know others who rarely use the laptop so they hibernate instead of sleep. For them, the laptop is used maybe once every couple of weeks.
Solution 3
I leave laptop regularly at sleep overnight. Consumption is low enough to last for more than a week on my model.
While consumption does depend on motherboard and other components, you should be able to get few days of sleep without problems.
Throwing laptop to sleep is very easy to get used to and I don't even recall when last actual reset occurred on my computer.
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Elazar Leibovich
Updated on September 17, 2022Comments
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Elazar Leibovich over 1 year
How much battery would leaving my laptop at "sleep" mode consume? is the consumption low enough so that it would be safe to leave the laptop sleeping at nights regularily and using it tommorow?
What's the recommended period of time for which I should not turn it off, but let it sleep. (for example, if I'll use the computer in a minute - turning it off instead of making it to sleep will definitely not save battery due to the overhead of turning your computer on and off).
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Admin over 14 yearsBy "sleep", do you mean suspended-to-ram (also known as S3 in ACPI lingo)?
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Admin over 14 yearsI don't think so. Isn't "suspend to ram" called hibernate?
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Admin over 14 yearsMy bad. I ment suspend to RAM indeed.
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Ivo Flipse over 14 years+1 I put my laptop to sleep every night, never had a problem with the battery being drained. They only time it might be a problem is if it was already (really) low. But new laptops manage just fine.
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Breakthrough over 14 years"Laptops really aren't intended to be left on all the time." - Leaving a laptop on is NOT the same as sleep mode. Using enough battery power to save the contents of the RAM is quite marginal, drawing VERY little current.
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Joel Coehoorn over 14 yearsIt's not the same as shutting it off, either.
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Rocket04 over 14 yearsIt's like a battery that saves the time in your watch or your PC when it is FULLY shut off. You're just providing enough voltage to keep contents available.
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Brian Knoblauch over 14 yearsReboot once a day is overkill. I use hibernate and don't typically need to reboot other than patch Tuesday and an occasional BSoD.
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Breakthrough over 14 yearsRebooting once a day is "overkill"? I shut my desktop OFF every night, and that's overkill compared to putting it to sleep mode?!
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Malabarba over 14 yearsI think he meant overkill in the sense that windows doesn't have scheduled tasks that would need you to reboot every day. I turn my desktop off every night, but it's certainly not necessary.
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Malabarba over 14 yearsNewer windows version will do the same, when suspending to RAM they also suspend to disk.
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Breakthrough over 14 yearsD Connors - I don't think most consumer desktop PSU's are meant for a constant duty cycle... They need to be cycled once in a while (e.g. at night).