[BLU] Re: What do bios batteries look like?
David Kramer
david at thekramers.net
Mon Sep 24 00:21:51 EDT 2001
On Sun, 23 Sep 2001, Derek D. Martin wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 23, 2001 at 10:27:17PM -0400, Duane Morin wrote:
> > I have an old AST/Premmia GX P/90 that a guy donated to me to use as a simple
> > server at home. But sometimes when I turn it on I get a message about not
> > being able to detect hard drive format. Several folks have suggested that it
> > could be a dead bios battery. Ok, so I'll try replacing that.
>
> It can look like a watch battery, but a big one (large diameter).
> Also some boards have capacitors instead of CMOS batteries. If you
> have a capacitor and leave the system off too long, your CMOS info
> will be lost.
Some use a CR-2032, which is a large watch battery about 3/4" in diameter
parallel to the motherboard, as Derek said. Some of the very old
motherboards used several button batteries soldered together and
heat-shrink-tube wrapped with pins coming down to be soldered into the
motherboard. It looks like a brown or blue keg about 1/2" long.
I did a search on that computer, and all I could find is places selling
memory for it, as it seems to take proprietary memory.
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