First post, by Silent Loon
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I got an old Soyo 4sa2 486/ socket 3 pci motherboard.
The (soldered) battery seemed finished and so I replaced it by soldering a coin-cell holder on the pcb (there are markings for such an holder on the board), later using the common CR2032 lithium coin cell of todays boards.
It worked, but some time later I discovered that the old battery was not a simple battery but a rechargeable 3.6V NiMh (Metal-Hydride Varta V11H - consists of 3x1.2V recharchable NMH button cells: http://images.maplin.co.uk/full/jc85g.jpg ).
In fact, this type seems to be quite common on boards of that era, as I also discovered it on a Gigabyte GA-486VS.
As I had allready soldered the coin cell holder on the board, I replaced the simple lithium battery CR2032 with a rechargable LIR2032 button cell, because I feared that the battery could be (over)charged, explode a.s.o.
The rechargeable lithum battery is 3.7.V (it was allready charged when I bought it - don't know why) and 45mAh. This also works, meaning that the board starts without problems, holding the data in the CMOS, but I read that rechargeable lithium-cells should only be recharged in special chargers, because there is a danger that they overcharge, expolde a.s.o.
Is there a battery specialist out there? Can I use this LIR2032 as a replacement for the NMh accumulator without getting nightmares about an exploding 486 pc?