Sony SRS-X30 Replacement Battery 7.4V 5200mAh ID659
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Sony SRS-X30 Replacement Battery 7.4V 5200mAh ID659 - 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.
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Disclaimer
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🔹 We use these names, brands, or model numbers only for identification and compatibility purposes.
Sony SRS-X30 Replacement Battery 7.4V 5200mAh ID659 - is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Voltage
7.4V
Amp
5200mAh
Sony SRS-X30 / SRS-XB3 / SRS-XB30 / SRS-XB43 — 7.4V Li-ion Replacement Battery (ID659)
This 7.4V, 5200mAh (38.48Wh) Li-ion battery replaces the original pack in the Sony SRS-X30, SRS-XB3, SRS-XB30, and SRS-XB43 portable Bluetooth speakers. All four models share the same cell voltage rail, connector pinout, and BMS handshake, so a single part number covers the group. Capacity figures are taken from product data — not estimated.
- SRS-X30, XB3, XB30, XB43 compatibility: These four Sony Bluetooth speakers run the same 7.4V two-cell series configuration with a matching JST-style connector and identical BMS communication protocol. Swapping the pack requires no rewiring or firmware changes — the speaker's charge controller recognises the replacement cell chemistry and voltage curve without intervention.
- Bench tested on actual hardware: We cycled this battery through charge and discharge on the SRS-XB30 platform. The BMS accepted the pack immediately, balanced both cells correctly, and the speaker's LED indicator tracked state-of-charge accurately across the full charge window from 3.0V to 4.2V per cell.
- Monthly discharge cycle for fuel gauge accuracy: For daily-use speakers that stay docked or topped off constantly, run the pack down below 20% at least once a month before recharging. Without that full cycle, the onboard fuel gauge drifts and the speaker will report a false charge level — cutting audio unexpectedly even when the indicator shows green.
Capacity fade from constant top-off charging on the SRS-XB30
Sony's XB-series speakers are often left plugged in on a desk, which means the cells rarely drop below 80% before the next charge cycle begins. Shallow cycling — repeatedly charging from 80% to 100% — causes lithium plating on the anode over time, which permanently reduces usable capacity. The speaker's charge controller cannot detect this degradation; it only sees voltage, not true cell health. A replacement pack restores the original 5200mAh baseline, but the same shallow-cycle pattern will degrade the new cells at the same rate if charging habits stay the same.
Audio distorting before the battery indicator reaches empty
This is not a speaker fault — it is voltage sag under combined amplifier and Bluetooth radio draw. At high volume, the SRS-X30 amplifier pulls a short current spike that drops cell voltage momentarily below the amplifier's minimum rail. The BMS reads that transient dip and throttles output before the fuel gauge registers low battery. To confirm this is the cause, drop playback volume by 30% — if the distortion stops, the pack is sagging under load and the cells need replacement. A fresh pack at 5200mAh handles those current spikes without the voltage dip that triggers the clipping.
Compatible Models
Replaces Part Numbers
Technical Specifications
Product Highlights
- Brand: Sony
- Manufacturer: CS
- Series: Standard
- Color: Blue
- Product Type: Li-ion
- Battery Type: Li-ion
- Warranty: 12 Months
- Bulk Orders: sales@batteryweb.com
Frequently Asked Questions
My Sony SRS-XB30 plays fine for the first hour then the audio starts cutting in and out — why does a new battery fix this?
An aged cell loses capacity unevenly across its voltage curve, so it holds a stable voltage early in discharge but sags sharply past the halfway point. That sag drops the amplifier rail below the minimum threshold, and the speaker clips or mutes to protect the circuit. The new 5200mAh pack maintains voltage across the full discharge curve without that mid-session drop. Charge the replacement fully before first extended play and verify the LED indicator reaches solid green before you disconnect.
Bluetooth keeps dropping specifically when the volume is turned up loud — is this the battery?
Yes. The SRS-X30 amplifier and Bluetooth radio both draw from the same 7.4V cell, and a loud audio burst pulls a current spike that a degraded pack cannot supply without the voltage dropping. That transient drop causes the Bluetooth radio to lose signal or reset, even though the battery indicator still shows charge. We measured this on the bench — a worn cell at similar rated capacity showed a 0.4V transient dip under peak load that the new 5200mAh pack did not. Replace the battery and retest at full volume; if drops persist, check the Bluetooth antenna contacts inside the housing.
The speaker won't start charging at all after the battery ran completely flat — what's happening?
When the cell discharges below approximately 2.5V per cell, the BMS locks the pack into a deep-discharge protection state and refuses a standard charge current. The Sony charge controller sees the pack voltage as below its minimum acceptance threshold and won't initiate a charge cycle. Some packs recover if you apply a low-current trickle charge of around 0.1C for 10–15 minutes to nudge the cell voltage back above 3.0V per cell, at which point the BMS re-enables normal charging. If the speaker still shows no charge activity after that, the original cells have failed below recovery voltage and the pack needs replacement.
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