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Old February 24th 16, 07:12 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Woody[_4_]
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Posts: 145
Default Quad FM4 Battery


"Johnny B Good" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 20 Feb 2016 04:40:14 -0800, Phil Allison wrote:

RJH wrote:


Phil is right but I would wait until you have extracted it
before
buying a replacement as it could be Ni-Cad or Ni-MH depending on
the
age of the tuner, and they require slightly different charging
regimes. Equally it could be 3V, 3.6V or 4.8V although I would
admit
that the size suggests the latter.


** AFAIK, Quad FM4s only ever used 4.8V NiCd battery packs with
four
cells specially made for memory back-up. It was trickle charged at
a few
mA whenever the tuner was powered up.

I doubt any re-engineering is needed to employ a four cell NiMH
pack
instead.


Agreed, In fact, when I was looking for a replacement 3 cell NiCd
for a
Potterton 2000 CH program controller, they'd changed to a larger
capacity
NiMH version. Oddly, the tagless drop in batteries used by this
programmer were over twice the price of the solder tagged ones.

Naturally, I bought the cheaper tagged battery and pulled the tags
off
and dressed the 'pips' with a fine file to recreate the plug in
version
at less than half price for less than ten minutes of D-I-Y activity.
:-)

The 4.8 volts seems unusually high for battery backed memory though.
The
more usual with static cmos ram being 3.6 volts. CMOS sram is
guaranteed
to retain data integrity right down to the 2 volt point - and that
includes the RTCs with their 70 8 bit registers 'going spare' as
used by
IBM in their AT PCs first marketed back in August 1984).

--

Quad list it as a 4V battery - quite how they achieve that is another
question altogether!


--
Woody

harrogate3 at ntlworld dot com