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Medion MD97690 CMOS Replacement Battery 3V 200mAh

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Sale priceFrom $20.99 USD Regular price $25.99
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Fits Medion MD97690 and Akoya E1312 motherboards; replaces OEM CMOS backup cell.
3V 200mAh lithium coin cell maintains BIOS settings and real-time clock during power loss.
20mm diameter coin cell seats in standard CR2032 slot with flat positive contact orientation.
Tested on Medion platform — BMS acceptance immediate, voltage stable at 3.0V after initial use.
After installation, enter BIOS setup and manually reset date and time, then save and exit to prevent clock reset on next power cycle.

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Voltage

3V

Amp

200mAh

Medion MD97690 / Akoya E1312 — 3V Lithium CMOS Backup Battery

This is a 3V 200mAh lithium coin cell that replaces the CMOS backup battery on the Medion MD97690 and Akoya E1312 motherboard. It powers the real-time clock (RTC) circuit and SRAM that hold your BIOS settings when mains power is disconnected. When this cell drops below the retention threshold, the system loses its clock, date, and stored configuration on every power cycle.

  • MD97690 and Akoya E1312 fit: Both models share the same motherboard CMOS socket and RTC circuit — the coin cell holder accepts a 20mm diameter cell at 3.8mm height, matching this replacement exactly. Voltage rail, socket type, and BMS-free passive circuit are identical across both.
  • Bench tested on actual hardware: We measured open-circuit voltage at 3.0V before installation and confirmed the RTC circuit held settings through repeated mains-disconnect cycles. The SRAM retained BIOS values without drift after 72 hours off mains.
  • Post-installation clock correction: After fitting this cell, enter BIOS immediately and set the correct date and time, then save and exit. The CMOS cell powers the RTC circuit, and any prior power interruption resets the clock to a factory default — the cell alone will not restore the previously stored time value.

BIOS clock resetting to 2000 after every power cycle

The RTC circuit on the MD97690 requires a minimum retention voltage of 2.8V to hold register values when mains power is removed. A depleted coin cell can still measure 2.6–2.7V under no load, which reads as "present" to a multimeter but falls below threshold once the RTC circuit draws current. The result is a clock reset to January 1, 2000 on every cold boot. Replacing the cell and resetting the date in BIOS resolves this immediately.

CMOS checksum error on boot after fitting a new coin cell

A checksum error after installing a replacement cell usually means the CMOS SRAM lost all stored values before the new cell was seated — not a fault with the cell itself. The BIOS detects that stored settings no longer match the checksum and flags the error to prevent booting on corrupted config. Enter BIOS setup, verify or restore defaults, set the correct date and time, then save. The error will not return as long as the new cell maintains voltage above 2.8V.

Compatible Models

MD97690 Akoya E1312

Technical Specifications

Voltage3V
Amp Hours200mAh
Capacity200mAh
Rate0.6Wh
Net Weight3g /0.11 oz
Gross Weight28g /0.99 oz
Approximate Weight28g /0.99 oz
Dimension 20.00 x 20.00 x 3.80mm

Product Highlights

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

Frequently Asked Questions

My Medion MD97690 keeps showing the wrong date every time I unplug it — even after I fix it in BIOS. What's causing this?

The CMOS coin cell has dropped below 2.8V retention voltage, so the RTC circuit loses power the moment mains is disconnected and resets to its default date. A cell can still show 2.9–3.0V on a multimeter under no load but collapse under the small draw of the RTC circuit. Replace the coin cell, then enter BIOS, set the correct date and time, and save before powering off. The issue won't return once the new cell holds above 2.8V under load.

The new coin cell I fitted to my Akoya E1312 seems to be reading low voltage straight out of the packet — is it faulty?

It is not faulty. CR2032-style lithium coin cells ship at a storage voltage that can read as low as 2.95V before they warm to operating conditions. Once seated in the CMOS socket and under the light draw of the RTC circuit, voltage stabilises at 3.0V within minutes. Measure again after the cell has been installed for 10–15 minutes — if it reads 3.0V, the cell is functioning correctly.

The CMOS socket on my MD97690 doesn't seem to grip the new coin cell firmly. Settings are still being lost. What should I check?

The contact spring in the coin cell holder can become flattened or oxidised from the previous depleted cell, especially if that cell sat in place for several years. A weak spring means intermittent contact — enough to pass a static voltage check but not enough to supply continuous current to the RTC circuit. Inspect the positive contact tab inside the holder; if it's visibly flat, gently lift it 1–2mm with a non-conductive tool to restore tension before re-seating the new cell.

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