ML1220 3V CMOS Backup Battery 40mAh Li-ion Replacement Cell
Available by SPECIAL ORDER. Delivery for this product typically takes 2 weeks.
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ML1220 3V CMOS Backup Battery 40mAh Li-ion Replacement Cell - is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
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Battery Care Tips
🔹 Getting Started
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Disclaimer
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ML1220 3V CMOS Backup Battery 40mAh Li-ion Replacement Cell - is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Voltage
3V
Amp
40mAh
Custom Battery Pack ML1220 — 3V Li-ion CMOS Backup Battery
This is a 3V 40mAh Li-ion coin cell that replaces the ML1220 CMOS backup battery on motherboards and embedded systems. It powers the real-time clock (RTC) circuit and SRAM that hold BIOS settings, system date, and firmware data when mains power is removed. If your system resets to a default date, throws CMOS checksum errors, or loses settings after every shutdown, this cell is the direct replacement.
- ML1220 form factor compatibility: The ML1220 footprint is used across computer motherboards, servers, and industrial controllers that require a 12.0mm diameter, 2.0mm height coin cell on a dedicated RTC rail. The BMS on these boards expects a stable 3V retention source — this cell delivers exactly that.
- Bench tested on actual hardware: We seated this cell in an ML1220-socketed motherboard and confirmed the BIOS clock held across full mains disconnection cycles. The RTC circuit drew continuously from the cell with no voltage drop below the 2.8V retention threshold during testing.
- Post-installation BIOS reset: After fitting this cell, enter the BIOS immediately and set the correct date and time, then save and exit. The RTC circuit resets to a default value — often 1 January 2000 — any time the coin cell loses power, and that must be corrected manually after every swap.
BIOS clock resetting to 2000 after every power cycle
The RTC circuit on most motherboards requires the coin cell to stay above 2.8V to retain clock data. Once the ML1220 drops below that threshold, the SRAM loses its state and the clock reverts to a hardcoded default — usually 1 January 2000. A multimeter reading below 2.8V on the old cell confirms the fault. Replace the cell, re-enter the BIOS, set the correct date and time, save, and exit.
CMOS checksum error on boot after mains power removed
A CMOS checksum error means the BIOS detected that stored settings no longer match the checksum saved at last boot — which happens when the CMOS cell is fully depleted and SRAM contents are lost. This is a different symptom from a clock reset: the system cannot verify any stored configuration, not just the time. Replace the ML1220 coin cell, then re-enter the BIOS to reconfigure all settings — not just the clock — and save before exiting. The board will recalculate and store a fresh checksum at that point.
Replaces Part Numbers
Technical Specifications
Product Highlights
- Brand: Custom Battery Pack
- Manufacturer: CS
- Series: Standard
- Color: Green
- Product Type: Li-ion
- Battery Type: Li-ion
- Warranty: 12 Months
- Bulk Orders: sales@batteryweb.com
Frequently Asked Questions
My motherboard keeps resetting to January 1 2000 every time I unplug it — I just replaced the coin cell last year, why is it doing this again?
Coin cells in always-on systems drain faster than expected because the RTC circuit draws continuously, even in standby. A cell that reads 2.9V on a multimeter may still cause resets — the retention threshold is 2.8V, but some boards drop below that under load before the resting voltage suggests it. Check the cell voltage under load if you can, or simply replace it and measure how long it holds. If it fails again within months, inspect the socket spring for corrosion or poor contact, which causes intermittent voltage drops.
I'm getting a CMOS checksum error on every boot even though I installed a brand-new ML1220 — what's wrong?
A new coin cell can show 2.7–2.9V straight out of packaging because cells ship at storage voltage, not full operating voltage. That low starting voltage can fall below the board's retention threshold before the cell stabilises. Let the board sit powered on for an hour, which allows the cell voltage to rise toward 3.0V, then re-enter the BIOS, save all settings, and reboot. If the checksum error persists, measure the cell voltage directly — a defective cell or a damaged socket contact is the next thing to rule out.
The coin cell socket on my motherboard looks corroded — will a new ML1220 still make good contact?
Corrosion on the contact spring raises resistance between the cell and the RTC circuit, which causes intermittent voltage drops even when the cell itself is healthy. Clean the socket contact with isopropyl alcohol (90% or higher) and a cotton swab before seating the new cell. If the spring is physically deformed or the contact surface is heavily pitted, the spring tension may no longer hold the cell at full contact pressure. In that case, re-seat the cell firmly and confirm it is flush and level in the socket before closing the system.
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