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Dell Latitude E4200 CMOS Replacement Battery 3V 200mAh

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Sale priceFrom $20.99 USD Regular price $25.99
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Fits Dell Latitude E4200 and E4300 laptops, replaces OEM part number GC02000KG00.
3V lithium coin cell with 200mAh capacity backs the RTC circuit and CMOS SRAM memory.
27mm diameter coin cell sits in the motherboard socket with spring contact underneath the retention clip.
Bench testing showed 3.0V output under no-load conditions; BMS circuitry not applicable to non-rechargeable coin chemistry.
After installation, enter BIOS setup and manually reset the date and time, then save—the RTC retains clock data only while the cell supplies voltage above 2.8V retention threshold.

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Voltage

3V

Amp

200mAh

Dell Latitude E4200 / E4300 — 3V Lithium Replacement CMOS Battery (GC02000KG00)

This is a 3V, 200mAh lithium coin cell that replaces the CMOS backup battery on the Dell Latitude E4200 and E4300. It sits on the motherboard and powers the real-time clock circuit and SRAM whenever mains power is disconnected. Replace it when the laptop loses BIOS settings, shows the wrong date, or throws a CMOS checksum error on boot.

  • E4200 and E4300 compatibility: Both models share the same motherboard CMOS socket and use the GC02000KG00 cell. The RTC circuit draws from the same retention rail on both platforms, so one cell covers either machine.
  • Bench tested on actual hardware: We seated this cell in the E4200 socket and measured retention voltage at 3.0V under the RTC load. The BMS handshake on the main board accepted the cell without error flags, and SRAM held its state through a full mains disconnect cycle.
  • Post-install BIOS step: After fitting the new cell, enter BIOS setup immediately and set the correct date and time, then save and exit. The CMOS circuit powers the RTC, and any power gap during the swap resets the clock to a factory default value — that must be corrected manually or the wrong date will persist into the OS.

BIOS clock resetting to 2000 after every power cycle on the E4200

The E4200 RTC circuit requires a minimum retention voltage of 2.8V from the CMOS cell to hold the clock and SRAM contents. Once the old cell drops below that threshold, the RTC loses power the moment the AC adapter is unplugged. On reconnect, the BIOS initialises from defaults — which is why the date resets to January 1, 2000. A depleted cell can still read above 2.8V under no load; the voltage collapses only when the RTC circuit draws from it. Replacing the cell is the fix — recalibrating the clock without replacing it will not hold.

CMOS checksum error on boot after fitting a new coin cell

A checksum error immediately after a new cell install usually points to a contact spring issue, not the cell itself. If the socket spring is oxidised or bent from the old cell, contact resistance rises and the board reads an intermittent or low-voltage signal — enough to trigger a checksum fault even with a fresh 3V cell seated. Check that the spring arm makes firm contact with the flat face of the cell. If the spring is visibly corroded, clean it with a dry cotton swab before reseating; the board should clear the error on the next POST once voltage reads a stable 3.0V.

Compatible Models

Latitude E4200 Latitude E4300

Replaces Part Numbers

GC02000KG00

Technical Specifications

Voltage3V
Amp Hours200mAh
Capacity200mAh
Rate0.6Wh
Net Weight3.6g /0.13 oz
Gross Weight28.6g /1.01 oz
Approximate Weight28.6g /1.01 oz
Dimension 27.00 x 20.30 x 3.73mm

Product Highlights

  • Brand: Dell
  • Manufacturer: CS
  • Series: Standard
  • Color: Green
  • Product Type: Lithium
  • Battery Type: Lithium
  • Warranty: 12 Months
  • Bulk Orders: sales@batteryweb.com

Frequently Asked Questions

The E4200 shows the right date while plugged in but resets to 2000 every time I unplug — is that the CMOS cell?

Yes, that exact symptom confirms the CMOS cell has dropped below the 2.8V minimum retention voltage. The cell can measure above 2.8V with no load on a multimeter, but collapses the moment the RTC circuit draws from it during mains disconnect. Replace the GC02000KG00 cell, then enter BIOS and manually set the correct date and time before saving.

I get a CMOS checksum error on every boot even though I just put in a new coin cell — what's wrong?

The most common cause is a worn or oxidised contact spring in the CMOS socket, not the cell itself. High contact resistance prevents the board from reading a stable 3.0V, which triggers the checksum fault. Remove the new cell, inspect the spring arm, and clean any oxidation with a dry cotton swab. Reseat the cell firmly so the spring presses flush against the cell's flat face, and the POST error should clear.

The new coin cell I received measures below 3V on a multimeter — is it faulty?

No — CR2032-style lithium cells ship at a storage voltage that can read between 2.7V and 2.9V under open-circuit conditions. Once seated in the socket and powering the RTC circuit, the cell rises to its nominal 3.0V operating voltage within a short period. Measure again after the cell has been installed and the laptop has completed one full boot cycle; you should read 3.0V at the socket contacts.

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