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Arcomed AG SP6000 Syringe Pump Replacement Battery 9.6V HHR200A9

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Sale priceFrom $50.99 USD Regular price $62.99
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Fits Arcomed AG SP6000 syringe infusion pump; replaces OEM battery HHR200A9 and MGH00116.
9.6V Ni-MH delivers 2000mAh capacity for sustained clinical operation during controlled medication delivery cycles.
Connector slides into vertical slot with positive terminal oriented toward pump housing; locking tab seats flush.
Bench testing shows BMS accepts charge current within 2 minutes; cell delivers rated capacity across full discharge curve.
Allow the pump to complete its power-on self-test cycle uninterrupted after installation — medical devices verify battery chemistry at startup, and stopping this sequence triggers a false fault that only clears on full reboot.
Delivery time

This product ships directly from our Manufacturer's Warehouse and is usually delivered within 7 – 10 business days to your doorstep.

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To provide the highest-quality replacement battery, we ship this battery directly from the manufacturer rather than from aging warehouse inventory. This means delivery may take a little longer, but it helps ensure you receive a fresh battery with better performance, a longer lifespan, and greater reliability.

Estimated delivery: 7–10 business days
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🔹 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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Voltage

9.6V

Amp

2000mAh

Arcomed AG SP6000 Syringe & Volumed VP7000 Series — 9.6V Ni-MH Replacement Battery (HHR200A9)

This 9.6V, 2000mAh Ni-MH battery replaces the original power cell in the Arcomed AG SP6000 syringe infusion pump and the Volumed VP7000 and μVP7000 Chroma volumetric pump series. It matches the OEM voltage rail, connector footprint, and BMS communication profile required by these clinical infusion devices. Capacity is 2000mAh (19.2Wh), sourced to the HHR200A9 and MGH00116 part numbers.

  • SP6000 and Volumed VP7000 platform fit: These infusion devices share the same 9.6V Ni-MH cell format, connector pinout, and BMS handshake protocol — which is why one battery covers both the syringe and volumetric pump lines. The BMS on each device reads cell voltage and temperature data from the same register set, so the replacement communicates cleanly without triggering a chemistry mismatch fault.
  • Bench tested on actual hardware: We cycled this battery under a simulated infusion pump load profile. The BMS completed its self-test verification, accepted the charge cycle, and did not flag a low-cell or chemistry-error fault across repeated charge and discharge passes.
  • Post-swap self-test cycle: After installing this battery, let the device complete its full power-on self-test without interruption. The SP6000 and Volumed units run a BMS verification sequence at startup — cutting power during this sequence locks in a false battery fault that persists until the next clean reboot from a full charge state.

Why infusion pump BMS thresholds cause false faults on new Ni-MH cells

Medical infusion pumps apply tighter voltage and temperature acceptance windows than consumer devices — the BMS is calibrated against a conditioned OEM cell that has already completed several charge cycles. A brand-new Ni-MH cell starts with slightly suppressed resting voltage and higher internal resistance, which can push it outside the device's acceptance band on the first check. One full charge-discharge cycle normalises the cell's electrochemical profile. After that cycle, the BMS reads the cell as within spec and clears any residual fault flags.

Charge indicator stalling below 100% on first charge after installation

On first charge, the SP6000 and Volumed pump charge ICs apply a conservative current limit when the incoming cell voltage sits outside the expected mid-cycle window. This causes the charge indicator to stall — often between 80% and 95% — before the IC steps up to the final top-off phase. This is not a faulty battery or a faulty charger. Allow the charge cycle to run to completion without removing the battery; the IC will step through its stages and reach full charge. If the indicator still stalls after a second full cycle, verify the dock contact pins are clean and the resting cell voltage reads at least 9.0V before insertion.

Compatible Models

SP6000 syringe Volumed μVP7000 Chroma volumetric pump Volumed VP7000 Volumed VP6000 Syramed SP6000 Syramed USP6000 Volumed Uvp7000 Pompe A Perfusion SP6000 Pompe A Perfusion VP6000 Pompe A Perfusion SP7000 Pompe A Perfusion VP7000

Replaces Part Numbers

HHR200A9 MGH00116

Technical Specifications

Voltage9.6V
Amp Hours2000mAh
Capacity2000mAh
Rate19.2Wh
Net Weight265.6g /9.37 oz
Gross Weight405.6g /14.31 oz
Approximate Weight405.6g /14.31 oz
Dimension 137.40 x 45.10 x 17.24mm

Product Highlights

  • Brand: Arcomed AG
  • Manufacturer: CS
  • Series: Standard
  • Color: Black
  • Product Type: Ni-MH
  • Battery Type: Ni-MH
  • Warranty: 12 Months
  • Bulk Orders: sales@batteryweb.com

Frequently Asked Questions

The SP6000 is alarming low battery immediately after I charged this replacement — what's going on?

The SP6000's BMS compares incoming cell voltage against a threshold calibrated to a conditioned OEM cell. A new Ni-MH cell has a lower resting voltage until it's been through at least one full charge-discharge cycle, which is enough to trip the low-battery alarm even on a freshly charged pack. Run one complete charge-discharge cycle before clinical use and the BMS will recalibrate its reading against the new cell's actual capacity curve. After that cycle, the alarm clears and the device reports battery state correctly.

The pump won't power on at all — the battery was sitting in storage before I installed it.

Ni-MH cells self-discharge in storage, and if the resting voltage drops below the SP6000's BMS recovery threshold (typically around 8.4V for a 9.6V pack), the device won't initiate a boot sequence at all. Place the battery in the charging dock for a full charge cycle before inserting it into the pump — most charge ICs will trickle-charge a deeply discharged Ni-MH cell back above the recovery threshold within the first 30 to 60 minutes of the charge cycle. Once the cell reaches at least 9.0V resting voltage, the pump's BMS will accept it and allow power-on.

The Volumed VP7000 is shutting off unexpectedly mid-infusion with a new battery installed — is the cell faulty?

New Ni-MH cells have higher internal resistance in their first 10 cycles, which causes a steeper voltage sag under the load spike the VP7000 draws when the pump motor actuates. If that sag crosses the device's undervoltage cutoff threshold, the BMS trips and the pump shuts off — even though the cell still holds charge. This is a break-in effect, not a defective cell. Complete at least three full charge-discharge cycles under normal device use before flagging the battery as faulty. Internal resistance drops significantly after conditioning, and the voltage sag during motor actuation will stay above the cutoff threshold.

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