I must admit I was a bit frustrated with the ejection part being blocked. But I suppose I know why (and how) an ejection pin should be used. So I explored a bit and saved myself some money. Nonetheless, thanks for the video!
Thanks for this tutorial saved me money, trip to the watch store and time! Next time be careful with camera placement so your viewers can see the critical parts. Still helpful however.
Sorry about that brother. Please check out my battery replacement video at this link ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-POAoRNaZHyI.html they're almost the same.
When he inserted the new battery, I hope he insulated his twezeers or used plastic ones. Otherwise the battery will become short-circuit while holding them with metal twezeers.
@@gfreaksays bro, you're shorting out the battery when you hold it with tweezers like that. It may be *fine* but it's a needless risk and shortens the battery life. Insulating the tips of your tweezers isn't that hard.
Sorry to hear that. I suggest you bring it to authorise casio service centers near you as they may have the right tools to do it. Once you do, I would love to hear an update from you. Cheers!
@@gfreaksays Ok, the wath arrived! Put a new battery in and it works(old battery was put in upside down...no wondern it didnt worked :)))) ) Everything works except the calculator touch pad. TV remote ect all is working but not the calculator. I had this before on another casio calculator watch, where ive replaced the battery and some kind of "black rubber/plastic" piece flew out of the watch housing. I didnt knewed how or where to place it and from there on the touch pad never responded anymore. Here on tis TV watch i hadnt seen this "black piece"! Should there be one? Or what else could be the problem, that the touch pad dont respond? Ive did the AC reset succesfully and the watch showed 12:00. Thanks
@@gaboaaa23 the black piece could be some kind of spacer to ensure the module fits nicely although im not so sure since I haven't open a casio calculator watch.
@@gfreaksays i see! Its called zebra strip as i found out! It connects the touch pad with the mainboard. drive.google.com/file/d/1Rk-ks46crh6vXIKXlHnnitb3zJpQVLKp/view
As a former CASIO TIMEPIECE TECHNICIAN (Casio Service Center) you can replace the battery that way but it will malfunction later. I don’t see any videos here in youtube that resets the battery after intalling a new battery. There is a reset technique! And the way you install the battery? You shorted it! Don’t use metal tweezers!🤣🤣🤣
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-POAoRNaZHyI.html here's my video for GLX-6900 battery replacement at 2:05 mark. It's the same thing. You need to unhook the battery clip using the eject pin or needle. Sorry for the inconvenience. Pls check out my other videos as well. Thanks.
@@gfreaksays I have a problem I can't unhook the eject pin. I'm not sure how to do it. Is it possible to break the watch if I do it wrong? I'm thinking about having a professional to do it.
Try to use a smaller pin, say a needle, then pry it out. Dont worry, the worst thing that can happen is the battery clip will be bent. You can bend it back afterwards. 👍🏼
Maybe the piece of the battery clip that's supposed to latch inside was overly bent outwards that's why it cannot hook itself inside. Try to slowly bend it back inwards.
When you change the battery and your watch isn't functioning, you have to do an AC reset. Don't throw your watch away. Look at this video ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-x-iit_fEBlc.html
You wonder why I throw furniture around the room when I watch these videos. Wear surgical gloves, clamp the watch down so you can use both hands. Clean the fukn rubber seal and the crevice in which it sits. Clean the case back and do an AC reset. How hard is it mate!