Sony Ericsson P800 Replacement Battery BST-15 3.7V 1400mAh
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Sony Ericsson P800 Replacement Battery BST-15 3.7V 1400mAh - 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.
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Delivery and Shipping
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Disclaimer
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Sony Ericsson P800 Replacement Battery BST-15 3.7V 1400mAh - is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Voltage
3.7V
Amp
1400mAh
Sony Ericsson P800 Series — 3.7V Li-Polymer Replacement Battery (BST-15)
This is a 3.7V, 1400mAh Li-Polymer cell replacing the BST-15 in the Sony Ericsson P800, P800C, P802, and P900 series smartphones. These were early touchscreen PDA-phones from the early 2000s, and original BST-15 cells are long past their cycle life. This replacement restores full voltage to the handset's calling, PDA, and display functions.
- P800, P800C, P802, and P900 fitment: All four models share the same BST-15 footprint, connector orientation, and 3.7V nominal voltage rail. The physical cell dimensions and contact placement are identical across the series, so one cell covers the full group.
- Bench tested on actual hardware: We cycled this cell through full charge and discharge on a P900 handset. The BMS accepted the new cell without fault flags, charge termination triggered correctly at 4.2V, and cutoff activated cleanly at the low-voltage threshold without hard lockout.
- Fuel gauge recalibration on first use: After installing this cell, run one complete discharge to shutdown before recharging. The P800 series uses a basic coulomb counter that retains calibration data from the old degraded cell — a full cycle forces it to reset against the new cell's actual discharge curve and report percentage accurately.
Why the P800 reports wrong battery percentage after a cell swap
The P800's fuel gauge IC tracks charge by counting current in and out of the cell over time. When the original degraded cell is replaced, the IC still holds the old cell's capacity baseline — often far below 1400mAh. Until recalibrated, the percentage readout is effectively guesswork against the wrong reference. One complete discharge-to-shutdown followed by a full uninterrupted charge resets the baseline. After that single cycle, percentage reporting stabilises against the new cell's actual 1400mAh capacity.
Sudden shutdown at 20–30% on the replacement cell
This happens when the fuel gauge IC has not yet recalibrated and the displayed percentage is ahead of the cell's actual state of charge. The P800's screen and GSM modem together draw enough current to pull cell voltage below the BMS cutoff threshold before the percentage reaches zero. The shutdown is not a faulty cell — it is the gauge reading incorrectly. Run one full discharge cycle as described above, and the cutoff will shift back to the correct low-voltage point near 3.0V per cell.
Compatible Models
Replaces Part Numbers
Technical Specifications
Product Highlights
- Brand: Sony Ericsson
- 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
My P800 powers on but shuts off the moment I make a call — battery shows 40% right before it dies. Is the new cell faulty?
This is a fuel gauge calibration problem, not a faulty cell. The coulomb counter in the P800 is still referencing the old degraded cell's capacity baseline, so the percentage display is inflated. When the GSM modem fires up during a call, it draws a current spike the actual cell state of charge can't sustain, and voltage drops below the BMS cutoff. Run one full discharge to automatic shutdown, then charge uninterrupted to 100% — after that single cycle the gauge recalibrates and the shutdown moves back to the correct threshold near 3.0V.
The P800 won't power on at all after the replacement battery sat in a drawer for six months before I installed it.
Li-Polymer cells self-discharge in storage, and if the BST-15 cell dropped below roughly 2.5V during that time the BMS will have entered a lockout state to prevent damage. The phone will show no sign of life even on charge. Connect the phone to a charger and leave it for 20–30 minutes without pressing anything — the charge IC trickle-charges the cell at low current to bring voltage back above the BMS recovery threshold before normal charging resumes. If the phone still shows nothing after 30 minutes, try a different USB cable and charger to rule out a supply issue.
Battery percentage on my P800 jumps from 60% straight to 15% with no warning — happens randomly throughout the day.
Erratic percentage jumps are a sign the fuel gauge IC is actively recalibrating against the new cell but hasn't completed a full reference cycle yet. The coulomb counter loses confidence in its running total when the cell's actual voltage doesn't match the stored discharge curve, so it snaps to a new estimate. This stabilises after one complete uninterrupted discharge-to-shutdown followed by a full charge — do not interrupt the charge cycle partway through or the recalibration resets. After that cycle, percentage should track smoothly without jumps.
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