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#1
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soldered batteries
Is it best to leave a dead soldered battery on a D1000 board ( it has ~ 1/4
inch clearance above the board) or snip it off in attempting to solder in a coin holder? mc |
#2
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soldered batteries
On May 3, 8:24*am, "AWM" wrote:
Is it best to leave a dead soldered battery on a D1000 board ( it has ~ 1/4 inch clearance above the board) or snip it off in attempting to solder in a coin holder? mc If you have the proper skills and knowledge you would know not to snip any leads if possible when soldering. Your question is how to de solder the battery. I would actually need a blow up of the area where he battery lies. If you properly heat sink the area the desolder should be easy A lithium Ion battery that has gone to heaven presents a high resistance therefor a battery can be placed in parallel with the old one. I would just solder in a on board battery pack from Radio Shack |
#3
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soldered batteries
"metronid" wrote in message ... On May 3, 8:24 am, "AWM" wrote: Is it best to leave a dead soldered battery on a D1000 board ( it has ~ 1/4 inch clearance above the board) or snip it off in attempting to solder in a coin holder? mc If you have the proper skills and knowledge you would know not to snip any leads if possible when soldering. Your question is how to de solder the battery. I would actually need a blow up of the area where he battery lies. If you properly heat sink the area the desolder should be easy A lithium Ion battery that has gone to heaven presents a high resistance therefor a battery can be placed in parallel with the old one. I would just solder in a on board battery pack from Radio Shack Except I'd be worried about it leaking... so I'd try to carefully remove it |
#4
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soldered batteries
I'll send you a jpg hopefully later today...I do not have a heat sink so
I'll get one, and I'm not sure yet which lead is + or -. This is one of smaller size bateries ( smaller than a dime I think), so I'm only guessing it is a 3V at this point. mc "AWM" wrote in message news:QPYSj.508$Ve.468@trnddc08... Is it best to leave a dead soldered battery on a D1000 board ( it has ~ 1/4 inch clearance above the board) or snip it off in attempting to solder in a coin holder? mc |
#5
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soldered batteries
I had not thought about leaking, I was wondering if putting it in parallel
with the dead battery would shorten the life of the new one? mc "philo" wrote in message ... "metronid" wrote in message ... On May 3, 8:24 am, "AWM" wrote: Is it best to leave a dead soldered battery on a D1000 board ( it has ~ 1/4 inch clearance above the board) or snip it off in attempting to solder in a coin holder? mc If you have the proper skills and knowledge you would know not to snip any leads if possible when soldering. Your question is how to de solder the battery. I would actually need a blow up of the area where he battery lies. If you properly heat sink the area the desolder should be easy A lithium Ion battery that has gone to heaven presents a high resistance therefor a battery can be placed in parallel with the old one. I would just solder in a on board battery pack from Radio Shack Except I'd be worried about it leaking... so I'd try to carefully remove it |
#6
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soldered batteries
On May 4, 8:27*am, "AWM" wrote:
I had not thought about leaking, I was wondering if putting it in parallel with the dead battery would shorten the life of the new one? mc"philo" wrote in message ... "metronid" wrote in message ... On May 3, 8:24 am, "AWM" wrote: Is it best to leave a dead soldered battery on a D1000 board ( it has ~ 1/4 inch clearance above the board) or snip it off in attempting to solder in a coin holder? mc If you have the proper skills and knowledge you would know not to snip any leads *if possible when soldering. Your question is how to de solder the battery. I would actually need a blow up of the area where he battery lies. If you properly heat sink the area the desolder should be easy A lithium Ion battery that has gone to heaven presents a high resistance therefor a battery can be placed in parallel with the old one. I would just solder in a on board battery pack from Radio Shack Except I'd be worried about it leaking... so I'd try to carefully remove it- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Parallel is an option Leaking. Ben would have more experience with his knowledge of seeing older systems. Lithium batteries are not big leakers and were chosen for their long life and stability to not leak for years. You can possibly desolder the battery from the other side of the board. That is most likely how it was originally installed. I assuime that the battery before board manufacture already had the leads attached. I could be wrong Then the component was inserted and the drip solder process for board production was used. Using this method will assure you do not heat or accidentally touch an associated component. You can |
#7
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soldered batteries
"AWM" wrote in message
news:QPYSj.508$Ve.468@trnddc08... Is it best to leave a dead soldered battery on a D1000 board ( it has ~ 1/4 inch clearance above the board) or snip it off in attempting to solder in a coin holder? mc One other option, if you can find one, is to simply plug in a third party replacement CMOS batttery. This used to be the quick and easy alternative to desoldering and resoldering the battery before boards came with their present easily replaceable system. |
#8
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soldered batteries
On May 5, 10:16*am, "Kevin Childers" wrote:
"AWM" wrote in message news:QPYSj.508$Ve.468@trnddc08... Is it best to leave a dead soldered battery on a D1000 board ( it has ~ 1/4 inch clearance above the board) or snip it off in attempting to solder in a coin holder? mc One other option, if you can find one, is to simply plug in a third party replacement CMOS batttery. *This used to be the quick and easy alternative to desoldering and resoldering the battery before boards came with their present easily replaceable system. To the best of my limited knowledge. This board does not accept the onboard battery as there is no plug for an external cmos battery. I can not even find a manual for this board. If anyone has the .MVB file from the master CD that would be great. I do have a picture of the board from AWM and it also shows no such adapter as far as my eye can tell. I also checked google and a few other sites and it has none. It appears to have a flat tab soldered to the top that goes to the board and one beneath that i can not see I would think it was dropped in to the board than driop soldered from other side. Can not see the other side of board either. It could be a bilayer board at this point but i doubt it. PB would not put out the extra cash for this type of board. : : : |
#9
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soldered batteries
"metronid" wrote in message ... On May 5, 10:16 am, "Kevin Childers" wrote: "AWM" wrote in message news:QPYSj.508$Ve.468@trnddc08... Is it best to leave a dead soldered battery on a D1000 board ( it has ~ 1/4 inch clearance above the board) or snip it off in attempting to solder in a coin holder? mc One other option, if you can find one, is to simply plug in a third party replacement CMOS batttery. This used to be the quick and easy alternative to desoldering and resoldering the battery before boards came with their present easily replaceable system. To the best of my limited knowledge. This board does not accept the onboard battery as there is no plug for an external cmos battery. I can not even find a manual for this board. If anyone has the .MVB file from the master CD that would be great. I do have a picture of the board from AWM and it also shows no such adapter as far as my eye can tell. I also checked google and a few other sites and it has none. It appears to have a flat tab soldered to the top that goes to the board and one beneath that i can not see I would think it was dropped in to the board than driop soldered from other side. Can not see the other side of board either. It could be a bilayer board at this point but i doubt it. PB would not put out the extra cash for this type of board. I don't know what the chances af leakage are... but I would not feel comfortable to leave it |
#10
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soldered batteries
On May 5, 6:56*pm, "philo" wrote:
"metronid" wrote in message ... On May 5, 10:16 am, "Kevin Childers" wrote: "AWM" wrote in message news:QPYSj.508$Ve.468@trnddc08... Is it best to leave a dead soldered battery on a D1000 board ( it has ~ 1/4 inch clearance above the board) or snip it off in attempting to solder in a coin holder? mc One other option, if you can find one, is to simply plug in a third party replacement CMOS batttery. This used to be the quick and easy alternative to desoldering and resoldering the battery before boards came with their present easily replaceable system. *To the best of my limited knowledge. *This board does not accept the onboard battery as there is no plug for an external cmos battery. *I can not even find a manual for this board. *If anyone has the *.MVB file from the master CD *that would be great. |
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