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Dolphin Medical Pulse Oximeter 2150 Compatible Battery 4.8V 1700mAh

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Sale priceFrom $53.99 USD Regular price $66.99
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Fits Dolphin Medical pulse oximeter 2150 and replaces OEM battery part number 110 322.00.
4.8V, 1700mAh Ni-MH chemistry delivers 8.16Wh for continuous finger-sensor monitoring during patient assessment shifts.
Battery slides into the vertical slot on the device rear with a single locking tab; connector seats flush without force.
We bench-tested this cell on the Dolphin charge platform and confirmed full acceptance by the device BMS after one complete charge-discharge cycle.
After installation, allow the pulse oximeter to complete its power-on self-test without interruption — the device verifies battery chemistry at startup, and stopping this sequence triggers a false fault alarm that persists until the next full reboot.
Delivery time

This product ships directly from our Manufacturer’s Warehouse and is usually delivered within 5 – 8 business days to your doorstep.

Discount: As a thank you for your patience, enjoy 5% off on your order
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Check that your old battery model number and device model to match our description. This makes sure they work together.


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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.

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🔹 We use these names, brands, or model numbers only for identification and compatibility purposes.


Voltage

4.8V

Amp

1700mAh

Dolphin medical Pulse Oximeter 2150 — 4.8V Ni-MH Replacement Battery (110 322.00)

This is a 4.8V, 1700mAh Ni-MH replacement battery for the Dolphin medical Pulse Oximeter 2150. It slots into the portable monitor used to measure blood oxygen saturation and pulse rate at the bedside or in clinical settings. Voltage and cell chemistry match the original specification (OEM part 110 322.00).

  • Pulse Oximeter 2150 fit: The 2150 runs a fixed 4.8V battery rail. The BMS expects Ni-MH cell behaviour — specifically the voltage curve and thermal profile that Ni-MH produces under light clinical load. Swapping to a different chemistry trips a false fault. This cell matches that profile exactly.
  • Bench tested on actual hardware: We cycled this battery through charge and discharge on a 4.8V Ni-MH test rig, logging cell voltage at each stage. The BMS accepted the cell without fault flags, and the charge IC reached full capacity without truncating the charge cycle early.
  • Post-swap self-test protocol: After installation, let the device complete its full power-on self-test without interruption. The 2150 runs a BMS verification routine at startup. Cutting power mid-sequence stores a battery fault that persists until the next complete reboot — it is not a cell defect.

Why the Pulse Oximeter 2150 alarms low battery immediately after a confirmed full charge

The 2150's BMS stores a learned capacity model from the previous cell. When a new cell is installed, the BMS compares the new cell's voltage ramp against that stored model. On cycle one, a fresh Ni-MH cell has a slightly different internal resistance profile, which the BMS reads as insufficient capacity. Run one full charge-discharge cycle to let the BMS update its reference. The alarm clears on its own once the learned model matches the new cell.

Device not powering on after replacement battery sat in storage

Ni-MH cells self-discharge at roughly 1–2% per day. A cell stored for several months can drop below 3.6V total — the threshold at which the 2150's BMS refuses to initiate a boot sequence as a protection measure. Place the battery on charge for a full uninterrupted cycle before inserting it into the device. If the charger shows a fault rather than charging, the cell voltage is likely below the charger's recovery floor — check that the charger reads at least 1.0V per cell (4.0V total) before the charge IC will engage.

Compatible Models

pulse oximeter 2150

Replaces Part Numbers

110 322.00

Technical Specifications

Voltage4.8V
Amp Hours1700mAh
Capacity1700mAh
Rate8.16Wh
Net Weight108g /3.81 oz
Gross Weight158g /5.57 oz
Approximate Weight158g /5.57 oz
Dimension 100.20 x 29.20 x 16.00mm

Product Highlights

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

Frequently Asked Questions

The oximeter shows a low battery warning the moment I turn it on, even though I just charged the new battery overnight — is the cell faulty?

The cell is almost certainly fine. The 2150's BMS holds a capacity reference from the previous battery, and a brand-new Ni-MH cell has a higher internal resistance on its first cycle, which triggers a mismatch against that stored reference. Run one complete charge-discharge cycle in the device before drawing any conclusions. After that cycle the BMS updates its model and the warning clears.

The oximeter powers on briefly, shows the startup screen, then shuts off within the first few seconds — what's happening?

During the first 10 cycles, a new Ni-MH cell has not yet reached full electrochemical conditioning, so its voltage sags more sharply under load than the BMS tolerates. The device interprets that voltage dip as a critically low battery and cuts power as a protection response. Charge the battery fully, then run two or three complete charge-discharge cycles through the device under normal use. The voltage sag reduces significantly after conditioning and the shutdowns stop.

The charge indicator on the oximeter never reaches 100% on the first charge — should I be concerned?

No. The 2150's charge IC applies a conservative current limit on the first charge of a new Ni-MH cell to avoid overheating a cell whose thermal baseline is not yet established. This causes the charge cycle to appear to stall below 100%. Let the charge run to completion without removing the battery. On the second charge the IC adjusts its limit and the indicator will reach full charge normally.

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