Motorola QF50 Moto G04 Replacement Battery 3.91V 4850mAh
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Motorola QF50 Moto G04 Replacement Battery 3.91V 4850mAh - is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
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Battery Care Tips
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.
Delivery and Shipping
Delivery and Shipping
🔹 Most orders ship the next day, and we use FedEx, UPS, Purolator and other carriers to get them to you. Lithium batteries have to ship by ground only, not air or USPS. Make sure your address is right before you order, because if we have to send it back, you pay for shipping again.
Disclaimer
Disclaimer
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🔹 We use these names, brands, or model numbers only for identification and compatibility purposes.
Motorola QF50 Moto G04 Replacement Battery 3.91V 4850mAh - is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Voltage
3.91V
Amp
4850mAh
Motorola Moto G04 / XT2421 — 3.91V Li-Polymer Replacement Battery (QF50)
This 3.91V, 4850mAh lithium-polymer cell is a direct swap for the Motorola Moto G04 and Moto G04s NFC 2024 (XT2421, XT2421-10). It replaces OEM part numbers QF50 and SB18D96852. Capacity degrades in original cells after 2–3 years of charge cycling — this cell restores full storage capacity to the device.
- Moto G04 and G04s NFC compatibility: The XT2421 platform uses a shared battery bay geometry (90.20 × 65.00 × 4.30mm) and the same fuel gauge IC across both the standard G04 and the G04s NFC 2024 variant. The BMS handshake and connector pinout are identical across these models, so one cell covers the full XT2421 line.
- Bench tested on actual hardware: We cycled this cell on an XT2421 unit and monitored the BMS across charge and discharge. The protection circuit responded correctly to both over-charge and over-discharge thresholds, and the fuel gauge IC accepted the new cell without triggering error flags after a full calibration cycle.
- First-cycle fast charge behaviour: On first use after installation, disable fast charging and run one complete discharge-to-charge cycle at standard current. This lets the fuel gauge IC recalibrate its coulomb counter against the new cell's discharge curve before high-current charging is applied to an uncalibrated cell.
Why the Moto G04 reports wrong battery percentage after a cell swap
The G04's fuel gauge IC builds a discharge model from the previous cell's impedance and capacity curve. When a new cell goes in, that model is stale — the IC is reading voltage against the wrong reference. Until one full discharge-charge cycle completes, the reported percentage drifts significantly from actual state-of-charge. This is not a fault with the replacement cell. One uninterrupted cycle from 100% down to automatic shutoff, then back to 100%, resets the coulomb counter and aligns the gauge to the new cell.
Sudden shutdown at 20–30% on the replacement cell
This is a voltage cliff, not a software glitch. Under heavy load — modem transmit, display at full brightness, or active GPS — the cell voltage drops faster than the fuel gauge predicts. If the IC's curve is still calibrated to the degraded old cell, it underestimates how quickly voltage falls under load. The result is an abrupt shutdown while the display still shows 20–30% remaining. Run a full calibration cycle first, then check if the shutdown persists. If it continues after calibration, verify resting cell voltage is above 3.7V before reassembly.
Compatible Models
Replaces Part Numbers
Technical Specifications
Product Highlights
- Brand: Motorola
- Manufacturer: CS
- Series: Standard
- Color: Black
- Product Type: Li-Polymer
- Battery Type: Li-Polymer
- Warranty: 12 Months
- Bulk Orders: sales@batteryweb.com
Frequently Asked Questions
The phone won't turn on at all after the replacement battery sat in a drawer for a few months — is it dead?
The BMS locks out the cell when voltage drops below approximately 2.5V per cell during storage. The fuel gauge IC will not initialise, so the phone shows nothing when you press the power button. Connect the phone to a wall charger — not a PC port — and leave it for 20–30 minutes before attempting to power on. If resting voltage recovers above 3.0V, the BMS will release the lockout and the phone will boot normally.
Fast charging stopped working after I installed this battery — the phone only trickle charges now.
On the first charge cycle after a cell swap, the Moto G04's charge IC sometimes refuses to negotiate the fast-charge protocol until the fuel gauge IC has completed one baseline cycle. This is a handshake timing issue between the new BMS and the phone's charge controller, not a fault in the cell or cable. Charge once at standard speed to 100%, discharge naturally to shutoff, then charge again — fast charging typically re-enables on the second cycle. Confirm the wall adapter is rated for the phone's fast-charge standard before assuming a hardware fault.
The battery percentage is jumping around erratically — it jumped from 45% to 12% in two minutes.
The coulomb counter in the G04's fuel gauge IC is recalibrating against the new cell's impedance profile. Until it has logged a full discharge curve, voltage-to-percentage mapping is unstable, especially under variable loads like the modem switching between signal bands. This is expected behaviour on a new cell. Complete one full uninterrupted discharge from 100% to automatic shutoff, then charge back to 100% without interruption — the gauge stabilises once it has a complete reference curve to work from.
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