Author | Message | Time |
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iago | Wait, no, I meant the CMOS battery! (see rinkworks.com/stupid). Anyway, my grandpa has a really old computer (Intel, made in '95) and his CMOS battery is dead. As hard as I look, I can't find it! Where can it be, besides the front of the motherboard? | January 5, 2004, 11:15 AM |
Adron | [quote author=iago link=board=2;threadid=4607;start=0#msg38433 date=1073301342] Wait, no, I meant the CMOS battery! (see rinkworks.com/stupid). Anyway, my grandpa has a really old computer (Intel, made in '95) and his CMOS battery is dead. As hard as I look, I can't find it! Where can it be, besides the front of the motherboard? [/quote] Some computers have a separate battery pack on a wire from the motherboard. Some computers have a flat silvery mercury battery sitting somewhere on the motherboard. Some computers have a battery that looks like a chip. Look for a black chip that's a bit higher than most. It would probably have 18 to 24 legs. Dallas makes lots of those. | January 5, 2004, 3:59 PM |
Thing | [quote]Some computers have a separate battery pack on a wire from the motherboard.[/quote] I've seen one of those before. I think it was a AA battery in a holder mounted to the case. | January 5, 2004, 9:39 PM |
Adron | I've seen the battery packs on wires on at least two computers. In one of them it was a regular pack of 4 AA batteries, easily changed. I've also seen batteries that look like a 1 cm long, 1.5-2 cm diameter cylinder, lying axially down on the motherboard. Kind of like a very cut off AA battery. Soldered to the motherboard with one connector at each end. | January 5, 2004, 9:48 PM |