Hi so im having a problem whit my laptop turning on but theres no display on screen i checked the ram, hard disk, and the screen display cable. Still not working could that have anything to do whit th e bios battery?
I know this is a little late but HVAC aluminum tape can be bought at any big box store for a few dollars and athough its conductivity is slightly lower than copper's, aluminum tape offers excellent electrical performance and shielding characteristics.
It's not even the money, it's the fact that you can use a battery that you know is fresh, instead of one of those pre-sealed ones that could have been on the shelf and worse than the one you're replacing.
I bought a replacement cmos battery on ebay but the laptop still had the bios error. After days of looking for a solution, I finally took the battery apart and tested with a meter, found out it was dead. I was looking to see if I could salvage the wires by swapping in a battery I could buy in a store, like this video shows....however, reviews of those specific dollar batteries say they're often dead too, so I recommend testing them before doing all the work shown.
The battery will explode if you try to solder the wire directly as shown in another diy video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-5DdAZrTZjEM.html
I have a Asus Vivobook X540MA and would like to know where the CMOS battery is located, I have opened the vivobook but can not locate the CMOS battery. "help"
thanks for showing us a cheaper option , I would not trust the contact that what you just have taped up , I would have solder them for firm contact then tape up
thanks for watching, its been about a year now more or less and its still working, if you solder battery might blow up, please be careful
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Why on earth would you need such a firm contact on a CMOS battery? 😄 You can even cut those tabs off if you want, peel a centimeter of the insulation and use an electrical tape to attach the wires to the battery, just as TTT did, then use a piece of double sided tape to attach the whole thing to where it is supposed to sit in the laptop.
As long as the connection is "tight" / firm , there should be no loss of electrical contact. Taping it securely and pressure from laptop case should keep wire contacts in place fine. Normally these are spot welded with a special spot welder (doesn't overheat the lithium batt).
Thank you for your video. This helped me a lot for my PS3 FAT CMOS battery replacement. So what I want to contribute is to add something that could be helpful to others. I first used a papercutter and bend the metal tabs upwards all around the perimeter. My tabs had 2 placed spot welded. So I them put the tip of the blade onto 1 spot and hammered down a bit. I am lucky my paper cutter has a metal body instead of a plastic one. I did not need to hammer hard. This dislodged the first spot which I could then twist free. I repeated this with every other spot and got the tabs out cleanly. No cuts, breaks, or holes.
Hi guys , i have the only solution weach worked for me on windows 10 ( i am here just for help) My case : - i have 2x 8gb of ram (16gb total) -both detected on bios. -both detected on system but 8 gb usable and 8 gb reserved weach is the main problem. -i tried every software tips like reg edit/boot options in system and bios and nothig worked . The Solution is manually: 1- turn off the pc . 2- remove the rams and change their places ex: ram 1 on the ram 2 slot and ram 2 in the ram 1 slot place, if not worked do next step . 3-run your pc with just one ram (RAM1) , and work with it like open a browser or some thing and shut the pc down . 4-run the pc with just one ram (RAM2) and continue to the system to use it and shut it down again. ( if your pc doesn't run with one of them and the pc restarting automatically many times dont be afraid as this is very normal for the bios to read the new placement of ram ) 5- the final step is to do both rams and turn on your pc with both of rams and , tadaaaa , you should see the full ram usage on the system info and all the softwares infos i found this solutioin my self and i hope this should be work for you too and for every body.good luck
And what if someone have 2 slots like in my case I have B450M gaming motherboard that have 2 slots for ram i am so tired man why it's not fixing ahhhhhhhhhh 😶
Janburn Dayanan: The voltage, the current, and the size all matter. There is a reason for the various battery numbers. I wouldn't be substituting without knowing what I'm doing, as I don't know how sensitive the tolerances for different voltages or currents the laptop components might have. Actually, you should replace whatever your laptop has with the same type of battery, to be safest.
@@TitaniumTronic actually we can...i tried it and made a video about it
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@@TitaniumTronic of course you can. The only difference between CR2032 and CR2025 is capacity. CR2025 being thinner will have lesser capacity, therefore it won't last as long as CR2032.
Alexander Montero: Another video I saw on this mentioned either copper or aluminum tape as examples. The idea is apparently good quality conductive metal tape, to ensure a solid connection that will last.
My repair guy give another solution and it fix my issue. Pull out the ram stick and clean the gold plated part with ordinary eraser maybe it just got dirt. It is so simple I feel dumb.
Yeah, I don't think it's tape; looks like two strips of metal that were spot welded onto the battery. Looks like the guys at Lowes weren't crazy after all lol
Those connectors ARE spot welded on there from the factory but, if you try to solder those contacts on yourself that battery has high chance of exploding. This hack will do the job just fine. Good job on saving the metal strapping. Makes it so much easier. They do sell copper conductive tape for taping down bare wire/metal to the other surface that is conductive. The conductive tape gives you better chances for a solid connection by increasing the total contact surface area. That was probably more info than you needed. Loved the video, man. Thanks!
bubba: That was my initial thought, but other videos, including one that actually show such a battery EXPLODING while trying to weld it say NO. Not using a weld is why the conductive tape (like copper) to give a GOOD and secure connection, AND tightly wrapping in plenty of electrical tape AND heat shrinking the tape a bit is all a good idea. With the pressure of the laptop case on that package, that SHOULD provide a secure connection for years, assuming you're not playing rugby with your laptop.
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When I first dialed *490 it took me to metro app, but then dialed *228 and worked totally fine! Easy automated instructions. Thanks to the video saved myself the trip to the metro store and possible charge!
Harushita: Look for a repair manual for your laptop on the internet. You might just have a bare battery (many older models do). You don't want to get into all this until you know WHAT you need to replace. My Dell E64x0 series laptops (I love them for very easy repair and drive access) makes it easy to find the info on the CMOS battery for replacement, for example. Dell has all such manuals easy to find and download on their site. (Such info is getting to be important re purchase decisions for me, as I like to make things last).