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- 10-14-2003, 11:21 AM #1albertGuest
I use an Ericsson 289LX with a battery that is old but works OK, but is
showing signs of having less lasting power.
I also have a second almost new 289 as a reserve, with an almost new
battery. It has been sitting in the box for months. When I bought this
second phone as a reserve, its battery worked fine and appeared quite strong
and normal. I recently decided I exhange batteries (move my aging battery
out of my regular phone and start using the one I had reserved). But this
almost new battery was in a deeply discharged state and thus was completely
dead.
The Ericsson manual states that one should leave a deeply discharged battery
connected to the charger (I have the standard charger that connects to the
phone and came with the kit), and that will trickle charge the battery until
it will act normally and take a regular charge cycle.
Well, it doesn't seem to be happening. I have had it connected for almost
48 hours - and my "in reserve" battery still appears dead.
Is there any remedy I can use to get the battery to wake up and accept a
charge? Or is my "almost new" reserve battery forever dead and useless?
TIA
albert
› See More: is my battery toast?
- 10-15-2003, 12:21 AM #2ato_zeeGuest
Re: is my battery toast?
48 hours on charge should be more than enough, I suspect the battery,
or charger, is duff. If the charger charges the other battery ok then
it's probably ok. A cheap 5 quid voltmeter might tell you a bit more
but if the battery is dead there is little you can do to revive it.
On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 17:21:47 GMT, "albert" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I use an Ericsson 289LX with a battery that is old but works OK, but is
>showing signs of having less lasting power.
>
>I also have a second almost new 289 as a reserve, with an almost new
>battery. It has been sitting in the box for months. When I bought this
>second phone as a reserve, its battery worked fine and appeared quite strong
>and normal. I recently decided I exhange batteries (move my aging battery
>out of my regular phone and start using the one I had reserved). But this
>almost new battery was in a deeply discharged state and thus was completely
>dead.
>
>The Ericsson manual states that one should leave a deeply discharged battery
>connected to the charger (I have the standard charger that connects to the
>phone and came with the kit), and that will trickle charge the battery until
>it will act normally and take a regular charge cycle.
>
>Well, it doesn't seem to be happening. I have had it connected for almost
>48 hours - and my "in reserve" battery still appears dead.
>
>Is there any remedy I can use to get the battery to wake up and accept a
>charge? Or is my "almost new" reserve battery forever dead and useless?
>
>TIA
>albert
- 10-16-2003, 06:59 AM #3albertGuest
Re: is my battery toast?
ato_zee
Not what I was hoping, but I kinda figured that battery was history. Thanks
for your help.
albert
"ato_zee" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> 48 hours on charge should be more than enough, I suspect the battery,
> or charger, is duff. If the charger charges the other battery ok then
> it's probably ok. A cheap 5 quid voltmeter might tell you a bit more
> but if the battery is dead there is little you can do to revive it.
>
> On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 17:21:47 GMT, "albert" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> >I use an Ericsson 289LX with a battery that is old but works OK, but is
> >showing signs of having less lasting power.
> >
> >I also have a second almost new 289 as a reserve, with an almost new
> >battery. It has been sitting in the box for months. When I bought this
> >second phone as a reserve, its battery worked fine and appeared quite
strong
> >and normal. I recently decided I exhange batteries (move my aging
battery
> >out of my regular phone and start using the one I had reserved). But
this
> >almost new battery was in a deeply discharged state and thus was
completely
> >dead.
> >
> >The Ericsson manual states that one should leave a deeply discharged
battery
> >connected to the charger (I have the standard charger that connects to
the
> >phone and came with the kit), and that will trickle charge the battery
until
> >it will act normally and take a regular charge cycle.
> >
> >Well, it doesn't seem to be happening. I have had it connected for
almost
> >48 hours - and my "in reserve" battery still appears dead.
> >
> >Is there any remedy I can use to get the battery to wake up and accept a
> >charge? Or is my "almost new" reserve battery forever dead and useless?
> >
> >TIA
> >albert
>
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