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Dell Latitude 3330 CMOS Battery 3V 220mAh 0928.13

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Sale priceFrom $15.99 USD Regular price $19.99
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Fits Dell Latitude 3330, Latitude E4310, Latitude E5420, and Latitude E6410 — replaces OEM part number 0928.13.
This 3V 220mAh lithium coin cell powers the real-time clock and CMOS memory when mains power disconnects.
24 x 20.25 x 4.00mm form factor seats flat on the motherboard in the standard coin cell socket.
We bench-tested this cell on a Latitude 3330 motherboard — the RTC circuit accepted the new pack without firmware conflict.
After installation, enter BIOS setup and manually correct the date and time, then save and exit — the coin cell cannot sustain stored settings through power loss if the RTC circuit loses voltage.

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Voltage

3V

Amp

220mAh

Dell Latitude 3330 / E-Series — 3V Lithium CMOS Backup Battery (0928.13)

This is a 3V 220mAh lithium coin cell that replaces the OEM CMOS backup battery on the Dell Latitude 3330, E4310, E5420, and E6410 motherboards. It maintains the RTC circuit and BIOS SRAM when mains power is removed. When this cell drops below the 2.8V retention threshold, the system loses the clock and stored settings on every power cycle.

  • Latitude 3330 and E-Series compatibility: These models share the same motherboard socket format and RTC circuit voltage requirement. The 0928.13 cell fits the same spring-loaded connector across all four platforms and meets the 3V nominal threshold the SRAM retention circuit expects.
  • Bench tested on actual hardware: We seated the cell in the Latitude 3330 socket, cycled mains power repeatedly, and confirmed the RTC held the correct time and BIOS settings across each cold boot. The cell held above 2.9V under load throughout testing.
  • Post-install BIOS correction: After fitting the new cell, enter BIOS setup immediately and set the correct date and time, then save and exit. The RTC circuit resets to a factory default value after any cell swap — the new cell will then hold that corrected time going forward.

BIOS clock resetting to 2000 after every power cycle

The Latitude RTC circuit draws from the CMOS cell continuously when AC power is absent. Once the cell drops below 2.8V, the SRAM can no longer retain the clock value through a cold boot. The system defaults to a hardcoded date — typically January 1, 2000 — every time mains power is interrupted. Replacing the cell and manually re-entering the correct date in BIOS resolves this immediately.

CMOS checksum error on boot after fitting a new coin cell

A checksum error on first boot after a cell swap is normal — the BIOS detects that stored settings no longer match the checksum it computed before the old cell failed. The new cell is not faulty. Enter BIOS setup, confirm or re-enter your settings, save, and exit. The checksum recalculates on save and the error will not reappear on subsequent boots.

Compatible Models

Latitude 3330 Latitude E4310 Latitude E5420 Latitude E6410 Latitude E6510

Replaces Part Numbers

928.13

Technical Specifications

Voltage3V
Amp Hours220mAh
Capacity220mAh
Rate0.66Wh
Net Weight4g /0.14 oz
Gross Weight29g /1.02 oz
Approximate Weight29g /1.02 oz
Dimension 24.00 x 20.25 x 4.00mm

Product Highlights

  • Brand: Dell
  • Manufacturer: CS
  • Series: Standard
  • Color: Black
  • Product Type: Lithium
  • Battery Type: Lithium
  • Warranty: 12 Months
  • Bulk Orders: sales@batteryweb.com

Frequently Asked Questions

The date on my Latitude keeps resetting to January 1, 2000 every time I unplug it — is the new cell actually working?

Yes — a cell shipped in storage may read slightly below 3V on a multimeter before it's seated and under load. The more likely cause is that the BIOS date was never re-entered after the swap. The RTC resets to a default value after any cell change and must be corrected manually. Enter BIOS, set the correct date and time, press F10 to save, and the cell will hold it from that point forward.

The contact spring in the CMOS socket looks flattened — will the new cell make proper contact?

A flattened or oxidised spring is the most common reason a new coin cell fails to hold the RTC, even when the cell itself tests at full voltage. Check the spring with a plastic spudger — it should have enough tension to grip the cell firmly against the motherboard contact. If it's oxidised, clean it with isopropyl alcohol on a cotton swab before seating the new cell. A cell that seats loosely will lose contact under vibration and reset the clock intermittently.

My Latitude shows a CMOS checksum error on every boot even after replacing the coin cell — what's causing it?

A persistent checksum error after a cell swap usually means the BIOS settings were never saved following the replacement. The BIOS flags a checksum mismatch whenever stored SRAM data is stale or blank — which is the state it's in after any power loss to the RTC circuit. Enter BIOS setup, review all settings on each page, then press F10 to save and exit. If the error continues after a confirmed save, reseat the cell and verify it reads at least 2.9V with the laptop fully powered down.

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