Fluke BP190 Scopemeter 192 Replacement Battery 7.2V 3600mAh
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Fluke BP190 Scopemeter 192 Replacement Battery 7.2V 3600mAh - 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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Fluke BP190 Scopemeter 192 Replacement Battery 7.2V 3600mAh - is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Voltage
7.2V
Amp
3600mAh
Fluke Scopemeter 192 / 196 Series — 7.2V Ni-MH Replacement Battery (BP190)
This is a 7.2V 3600mAh Ni-MH replacement pack for the Fluke Scopemeter 192, 192B, 196, and 196B series portable oscilloscopes. It slots into the same battery bay as the original BP190 and restores full portable operation for field electrical diagnostics. The pack ships uncharged — charge it fully in the instrument before heading out.
- Scopemeter 192 and 196 platform fit: The 192 and 196 series share the same battery bay geometry, connector pinout, and 7.2V supply rail. One pack covers both lines without modification. The B-suffix variants (192B, 196B) use the same bay — no adapter needed.
- Bench tested on actual hardware: We cycled this pack through the Scopemeter's charge circuit and confirmed the BMS handshake completed without a fault flag. Cell voltage at full charge sat at the expected 8.4V across the pack. Probe initialisation current draw did not trip the protection circuit.
- Post-install calibration cycle: After fitting this pack, run one full charge-discharge cycle through the Scopemeter before field deployment. The instrument maps battery state during that first cycle — skipping it causes the low-battery indicator to trigger prematurely during the first measurement session, even with a healthy charge in the cells.
Scopemeter 192 shutting down mid-measurement with the gauge still showing charge
The Scopemeter 192 draws a short current spike each time a probe module initialises or a new measurement function activates. On a degraded pack, internal resistance has risen enough that this spike pulls cell voltage briefly below the BMS cutoff threshold — even if the resting voltage looks fine. The instrument reads this as a fault and shuts down to protect the measurement circuit. A new pack with low internal resistance handles these spikes without the voltage drop. If shutdowns are recurring on a pack that's less than a year old, check that the charge cycle completed fully — a partially charged Ni-MH pack shows a similar symptom.
Pack won't charge after the instrument sat unused in a carry case for months
Ni-MH cells self-discharge continuously — leave a pack unused long enough and cell voltage drops below the threshold the Scopemeter's charge circuit needs to recognise the pack as valid. The charger sees a voltage too low to safely begin a fast-charge cycle and does nothing. To recover the pack, place it in a compatible external Ni-MH charger that supports trickle-charge recovery — most will apply a low conditioning current until cell voltage climbs back above 1.0V per cell, then transition to a normal charge. Once the pack reads above 7.0V total, re-seat it in the Scopemeter and let the instrument complete a full charge cycle before use.
Compatible Models
Replaces Part Numbers
Technical Specifications
Product Highlights
- Brand: Fluke
- 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 Scopemeter 196B powers on fine but resets to the start screen partway through a logging session — is this a battery issue?
Yes — sustained sensor load during a logging session creates a steady current draw that differs from normal scope operation, and if the pack's capacity has faded, voltage sags enough mid-session to trigger a brownout reset in the instrument's power management circuit. It looks like a firmware glitch but the root cause is voltage dropout under load. We reproduced this on the bench by running continuous waveform capture with both probes active — a degraded pack dipped below 6.5V under that load. Fit a fresh pack and confirm it completes a full charge cycle before the next logging run.
The battery percentage on the Scopemeter display jumps around after fitting a new pack — shows 80%, then 20%, then full within a few minutes.
The Scopemeter's fuel indicator uses a voltage-threshold lookup to estimate state of charge, not a coulomb counter. A new Ni-MH pack has slightly different voltage characteristics than the worn cell it replaced, so the instrument's threshold table reads inconsistent percentages until the pack has been through at least one full charge-discharge cycle. This is normal behaviour — it is not a fault with the pack or the instrument. Run one complete charge cycle in the Scopemeter, then discharge it through normal use, and the percentage display will stabilise against the new pack's actual voltage curve.
The Scopemeter 192 shuts off the moment I connect it to a PC for USB data transfer — it was running fine on battery before I plugged in.
USB data transfer adds a second load path on top of the display and measurement circuits — the combined draw is higher than normal scope operation. If the pack is partially charged or nearing end of life, this combined current pulls cell voltage below the BMS cutoff and the instrument cuts power to protect itself. The fix is straightforward: charge the pack fully before any USB transfer session, and confirm the Scopemeter shows a full charge indicator rather than mid-range before connecting. A fully charged, healthy pack handles the combined USB and instrument load without dropping below the 6.5V cutoff threshold.
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