How to Use MacBook in Clamshell Mode without a Power Adapter

Dec. 1, 2020



One of the things that the Coronavirus induced lockdown has made me appreciate is the advantages of a big monitor on your home office desk. That, and a laptop that actually has an HDMI port for it. If you’re a Mac user like I am, stuck at home trying to work on an external monitor with your laptop, chances are you don’t want to have your laptop’s screen shining on the periphery of your vision. That’s very distracting. So you probably want to close the lid of your laptop and use the external display as the main monitor, right. Plus you wanna do that without connecting a power adapter all the time. So here’s how you can use a MacBook in clamshell mode without a power adapter.

Use MacBook in Clamshell Mode without a Power Adapter

Use MacBook in Clamshell Mode without a Power Adapter

Why do we need an entire article on how to do this? Well, turns out, Apple will not let you do that unless you have a power adapter connected to your MacBook. Take a look at the company’sofficial help documentabout this. Now when I was getting started with this whole set up, I took Apple’s word for it and kept using my MacBook with the charger connected to it at all times, knowing full well that it will destroy mybattery’s health. It did just that, and my battery doesn’t charge anymore. Now I’m stuck using my laptop as a glorified desktop, and with an impossibly throttled CPU to boot.

Fortunately for you, this made me look for ways to use a MacBook in clamshell mode without keeping the charger always connected to it, and I found the solution.

MacBooks handle power in ways that are not very obvious. You know, unless you do what I did and lose yourself in forum discussions talking about the ‘hibernatemode’ command and the various power states of a MacBook. I’ll give you the long and the short of it.

Basically, when you close the lid of your MacBook, it sleeps. That means it stops giving power to external displays, drives, even the ethernet port (if it has one). Now a user normally expects the laptop to be intelligent enough to know that an external display is connected to it. That obviously means I want to use it as a primary screen. But, our overlord Apple knows what we want better than we do, and doesn’t allow this particular set up to work.

There are a bunch of terminal commands you can use to disable sleep, and we will discuss those in a later section, but chances are you don’t want to mess with terminal commands and a simple one-click solution is really all you’re looking for.

Now that we know that the issue is that the MacBook goes to sleep on closing the lid even if we have an external display connected to it, the solution is simple. We need to prevent that sleep from happening. But you can’t just use a simple Caffeine-type app to solve this problem. That’s because the hall sensor on your MacBook detects when the lid is closed and just puts it to sleep regardless of everything else.

You must have heard of the app ‘Amphetamine’ which is a hugelypopular Mac appthat controls sleep states for the Mac based on triggers and what not. While the app originally did not have the capability to solve our problem, it has since been updated and actually can help us get out of this pickle.

That’s it, you can now use your MacBook in clamshell mode without having to connect your AC power adapter to it.

If you don’t want to use a third party app to get this done, or you just want to play around withTerminal commandsand figure things out for yourself, there are some commands that can achieve similar results.

Note: I have not tested these commands because Apple recommends not changing the hibernatemode using the pmset command, and these commands do just that. However, these commands will disable your laptop’s sleep on lid-close trigger, so they should also solve the problem of being unable to use your laptop in clamshell mode without the power adapter. That said, use them at your own risk.

With that warning out of the way, here’s what you need to do.

These commands will disable sleep on your MacBook, and youshouldbe able to use your Mac in clamshell mode without an AC adapter connected.

You can always revert the changes by running the following commands in the terminal

I may have knowingly caused my MacBook Pro’s battery to become completely unusable to the point where it doesn’t even charge anymore, but you don’t have to follow in my footsteps. Now that you know how you can use an external display with your MacBook and not have to keep an adapter connected to it all the time, go ahead and set up your work from home desk with your brand new monitor and enjoy working on a bigger screen with more real estate. Oh, and whatever you do, don’t take Apple’s word on things like this. Meanwhile, I’ll go and try to figure out if I should buy theM1 MacBook Air or the M1 MacBook Pro.