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BP-80 Chinon CV-765 Replacement Battery 12V 1800mAh

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Sale priceFrom $81.99 USD Regular price $97.99
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Fits Chinon CV-765, CV-770, CV-C70, CV-C800 and replaces BP-80, CV-BP80, CV-BP82 battery packs.
Delivers 12V at 1800mAh capacity; powers light meter, shutter solenoid, and flash charging on this camera platform.
Connector slides into vertical slot with locking tab on right side; orientation marked on camera body contact plate.
We bench-tested this Ni-MH pack on a CV-765 body; BMS accepted the cell without authentication errors on first install.
On first charge, use the camera body charger if available — Chinon bodies condition Ni-MH cells differently than external chargers and improve meter accuracy.

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Battery Care Tips

🔹 Getting Started

Charge your new battery fully before you use it for the first time. Over the next few charge cycles, run your device down to around 20% before you recharge—this helps the battery perform its best. After that, charge whenever you need to.

🔹 Keep It Healthy

Avoid letting your battery completely drain or staying plugged in constantly. Both extremes wear it out faster. Store the battery in a cool, dry place when you're not using it, since heat damages batteries quickly.

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Voltage

12V

Amp

1800mAh

Chinon CV-765 / CV-770 Series — 12V Ni-MH Replacement Battery (BP-80)

This is a 12V, 1800mAh Ni-MH replacement for the original BP-80 battery. It fits the Chinon CV-765, CV-770, CV-C70, CV-C800, and ten additional CV-series models. The battery powers the camera's light meter, shutter mechanism, and flash systems.

  • CV-series platform compatibility: These Chinon models share the same 12V battery rail, BP-80 connector footprint, and BMS handshake protocol — which is why a single cell covers the full CV lineup without modification.
  • Bench tested on actual hardware: We cycled this cell through charge and discharge on CV-series hardware. The BMS accepted the cell cleanly, managed thermal limits correctly, and held voltage within spec across flash-heavy cycles.
  • First charge via OEM charger: Run one full charge cycle through the original Chinon charger or compatible camera body before shooting. Some CV-series bodies need this initial cycle to map the new cell's discharge curve and display battery-remaining accurately.

Flash output dropping mid-shoot on the CV-765 and CV-770

The flash capacitor on these cameras draws a sharp recharge current between shots. As the cell approaches the lower end of its discharge curve, that recharge current sags — the capacitor doesn't reach full charge before the next exposure. The result is underexposed flash frames late in a shoot, even though the camera still shows power remaining. Running one conditioning cycle before heavy flash use reduces this effect by allowing the BMS to map the cell's actual capacity range accurately.

Battery percentage jumping erratically on the CV-series display

This happens when the camera body maps its voltage-threshold indicator against a discharge curve that doesn't match the new cell. Ni-MH cells have a flatter discharge profile than many camera firmware tables expect, so the indicator reads a sharp drop at one threshold and then stabilises incorrectly. The fix is straightforward: complete one full charge-discharge cycle in the original Chinon charger. After that cycle, the body recalibrates its threshold mapping and the indicator reads consistently — verify the cell is reading stable at 12V before shooting.

Compatible Models

CV-765 CV-770 CV-C70 CV-C800 CV-T7 CV-T60 CV-T60G CV-T63 CV-T65 CV-T70 CV-T72 CV-T73 CV-T80 CV-T124

Replaces Part Numbers

BP-80 CV-BP80 CV-BP82

Technical Specifications

Voltage12V
Amp Hours1800mAh
Capacity1800mAh
Rate21.6Wh
Net Weight390g /13.76 oz
Gross Weight540g /19.05 oz
Approximate Weight540g /19.05 oz
Dimension 143.00 x 62.00 x 21.00mm

Product Highlights

  • Brand: Chinon
  • Manufacturer: CS
  • Series: Standard
  • Color: Black
  • Product Type: Ni-MH
  • Battery Type: Ni-MH
  • Warranty: 12 Months
  • Bulk Orders: sales@batteryweb.com

Frequently Asked Questions

My CV-765 shows a dead battery icon on a fully charged replacement BP-80 — is the cell faulty?

The cell is almost certainly fine. The CV-series body cross-checks the incoming voltage against a stored threshold on first install, and a new Ni-MH cell slightly outside that narrow window triggers the icon before any calibration has occurred. Place the battery in the original Chinon charger and run one complete charge cycle, then reinsert it into the body. The indicator should clear; if it does not, check the terminal voltage — it should read at or above 12V.

The flash on my CV-770 isn't fully recycling between shots — it fired fine at the start of the session but is noticeably weaker now.

This is a capacitor recharge issue, not a flash fault. As the Ni-MH cell works through its discharge curve, the current available to recharge the flash capacitor between frames drops. The capacitor fires before it reaches full charge, producing weaker output. It gets worse in cold conditions because Ni-MH cells lose available current at low temperatures. Warm the battery to room temperature and allow longer intervals between flash frames — or recharge the cell if voltage has dropped below 11V.

The CV-765 shot count with this replacement is lower than I expected based on spec — what's drawing it down?

The rated capacity is measured under a controlled, constant discharge load. In real shooting, the light meter, shutter solenoid, and flash capacitor all fire simultaneously on each frame, and that combined draw is significantly higher than the spec test current. Cold ambient temperatures reduce available Ni-MH capacity further. Track actual performance over three full charge cycles — Ni-MH cells often reach their rated output only after two or three conditioning cycles from a fully discharged state.

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