kotel wrote on 2025-03-06, 10:17:
I think putting an diode on the positive pin should do the trick. Just make sure to put it correctly
A diode is also my first though .... but ....
Do we know what voltage the "barrel battery" is (I wasn't able to identify it in the linked photo)?
A diode will typically have about a 0.7v drop in the forward direction,
a CR2032 is nominally 3v which is enough for most RTC/CMOS backup
(many boards use a CR2932)
... 3v-0.7v = 2.3v - a CR2032 on it's own is considered effectively dead at this voltage.
Will the RTC/CMOS retain content reliably at 2.3?
In some cases where I've run into this with other equipment, I've used two
CR2032s (6v) and 4 diodes (~2.8v) for ~3.2v which has worked well!
Another option is an LIR2032 (3.6v) - even though this is a "rechargable" cell,
I'd still use a diode as the NiCad recharging circuit is unlikely to be suitable.
3.6-.7 = 2.9 (and you have the added advantage that when it does go flat
every few years, you can pull it out and recharge it!)
On a related note: I've got some Logitech "Solar keyboards" - they have solar cells at
the top which charges an internal 3V ML2032 - these eventually go dead and are
fairly hard to find and pricey - some replace them with CR2032s and tape over the
solar cells - which looks terrible - I did some testing with a SONY CR2032 and a 4.5
digit DVM with a 2ma scale - meaning I would see currents of 0.0001 ma
- never saw any "reverse current" with the CR2032 - even in bright sunlight.
So I *didn't* tape over the cells and have been using them for a few years, changing
the CR2032 as it needs (not very often) and have observed no problems.
(But don't use a CR2032 with out reverse protection in this case - the NiCad charge
circuit is unknown and likely to cause bad problems)
Dave ::: https://dunfield.themindfactory.com ::: "Daves Old Computers"->Personal
Dave ::: https://dunfield.themindfactory.com ::: "Daves Old Computers"->Personal