The BIOS (CMOS) battery and the main battery pack are two separate items; you only need to replace the CMOS battery in your case. Exactly how you do that depends on your particular model/series of Thinkpad.
DMR
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It may still have become flat though, especially if it is the original.
Yes, that's almost cetainly the case; loss of date/time and ECSD info (such as IRQ assignments) are the primary symptoms of a flat CMOS battery.
DMR
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Hi camperdick and welcome to Daniweb,
You have hijacked a very old thread (Sep 21st, 2006).
Please start your own thread with more details on your machine, OS and problem.
Are you saying that (with the motherboard battery in place) if you boot your machine without it plugged into the mains you lose all your CMOS settings? But if you boot, connected to the mains power, with or without the main battery, your CMOS settings remain unchanged?
Bob_180_Bob
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Hi,
It sounds like there is a break in the power supply from the BIOS battery but not into the CMOS when the AC power is connected. This seems very strange (as I understand) the power should be the same circuit for both the mains and battery supply. If there are others out there with the same problem, I would suggest that it is an inherent fault in some of that model machines.
Good luck on getting a refund from the Ebay seller.
Bob_180_Bob
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