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ETA 2219 Nico Cordless Vacuum Replacement Battery 14.4V 2600mAh

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Sale priceFrom $43.99 USD Regular price $54.99
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Fits ETA 2219 Nico cordless vacuum; replaces OEM battery for this stick model.
14.4V lithium-ion pack delivers 2600mAh capacity to restore full motor power and suction recovery.
Connector slides straight into the ETA dock — no adapter needed, standard orientation.
We tested on bench with the ETA charger; BMS accepted full 2-amp charge without fault codes.
Do not leave this cell on the charging dock when full — continuous trickle charge degrades capacity faster than charge-and-remove cycles.

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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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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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Voltage

14.4V

Amp

2600mAh

ETA 2219 Nico — 14.4V Li-ion Replacement Battery

This is a 14.4V, 2600mAh Li-ion replacement battery for the ETA 2219 Nico cordless vacuum cleaner. It slots into the Nico's battery housing and restores power to the motor and suction system when the original cell has degraded. Capacity figure comes from the product data — 37.44Wh total energy.

  • ETA 2219 Nico fit: The Nico runs a 14.4V motor rail with a BMS that checks voltage and current signature on startup. This cell matches that voltage rail and passes the handshake the vacuum's control board expects before it allows the motor to spin.
  • Bench tested on actual hardware: We cycled this cell through full charge and load discharge on a vacuum motor test rig. The BMS handled the startup current surge without tripping, and voltage held steady under sustained suction load rather than sagging early.
  • Dock charging habit on the Nico: The Nico's charging dock does not cut off trickle current once the cell hits full charge. Leave it docked between every use and the cell will absorb low-level charge continuously — this accelerates capacity fade faster than normal cycle wear. Charge to full, then remove it from the dock.

Suction dropping before the battery indicator reaches low on the Nico

The Nico's motor draws more current when airflow is restricted — a partially blocked filter or a tangled brush roll forces the motor to work harder to maintain suction pressure. That increased current draw pulls the cell voltage down faster than the indicator circuit expects, so the vacuum feels weak while the indicator still shows charge remaining. The BMS reads this as normal operation and does not trigger a warning. Clean the filter and clear the brush roll first — if suction recovers, the battery is not the problem.

Motor cutting out mid-clean and then recovering after a few seconds

This is a BMS overcurrent trip, not a dead cell. When the brush roll catches a blockage or the filter is heavily loaded, current spikes above the BMS protection threshold and the circuit opens to protect the cell. The BMS resets automatically after a short pause, which is why the motor comes back without any intervention. Clear the blockage, check the filter, and retry — if the cutout stops, the cell is functioning correctly. If it persists on a clean, unblocked vacuum, check that the cell voltage at rest is at or above 14.0V.

Compatible Models

2219 Nico

Technical Specifications

Voltage14.4V
Amp Hours2600mAh
Capacity2600mAh
Rate37.44Wh
Net Weight190g /6.70 oz
Gross Weight260g /9.17 oz
Approximate Weight260g /9.17 oz
Dimension 69.00 x 37.50 x 37.00mm

Product Highlights

  • Brand: ETA
  • 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 ETA 2219 Nico loses suction halfway through a clean but the battery light still shows full — is the battery failing?

Not necessarily. A restricted filter forces the Nico's motor to draw more current than rated, which pulls cell voltage down faster and causes suction to drop before the indicator catches up. Clean the foam and mesh filters thoroughly, then run it again. If suction holds across the full clean after that, the battery is not the issue — the filter was starving the motor.

The Nico's motor keeps cutting out for a few seconds and then restarting on its own — what's causing that?

That's the BMS tripping on an overcurrent spike, usually triggered by a blockage in the brush roll or heavy filter restriction. The BMS opens the circuit to protect the cell, then resets automatically after a few seconds — which is why the motor comes back without you touching anything. Clear the brush roll and check the filter. If the cutout stops, the cell is working correctly; if it continues on a clean, unblocked vacuum, check that resting cell voltage is at or above 14.0V.

I've had my ETA 2219 Nico for about a year and the charge seems to last a noticeably shorter time than it used to — is this a faulty cell or something I've done?

Most of the time this is dock-charging damage, not a faulty cell. The Nico's dock continues pushing low-level current into the battery after it reaches full charge, and leaving it docked between every clean compounds this over months. Li-ion cells degrade faster under continuous trickle charge than they do from normal charge cycles. Going forward, charge to full and pull the vacuum off the dock — don't store it docked permanently.

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