Fluke BP120 Scopemeter 120 Replacement Battery 4.8V 3000mAh
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Fluke BP120 Scopemeter 120 Replacement Battery 4.8V 3000mAh - 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.
Fluke BP120 Scopemeter 120 Replacement Battery 4.8V 3000mAh - is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Voltage
4.8V
Amp
3000mAh
Fluke Scopemeter 120 Series — 4.8V Ni-MH Replacement Battery (BP120)
The BP120 is a 4.8V, 3000mAh Ni-MH battery pack for the Fluke Scopemeter 120 portable digital multimeter and oscilloscope combo unit running firmware 2.01 or above. It restores field portability to the instrument when the original cell degrades below usable capacity. This pack matches the OEM voltage rail and connector required by the Scopemeter 120 BMS.
- Scopemeter 120 firmware 2.01+ compatibility: Firmware 2.01 introduced tighter BMS handshake logic for cell recognition. This pack meets the voltage and discharge curve expectations that version requires — earlier packs or mismatched cells can cause the instrument to reject the battery at power-on.
- Bench tested on actual hardware: We cycled this pack through probe initialisation sequences and sustained waveform capture loads. The BMS held stable across oscilloscope and multimeter combined draw without tripping the low-voltage cutoff.
- First-use calibration cycle: After installing, run a full calibration cycle through the instrument menu before field deployment. The Scopemeter 120 maps battery state during calibration — skipping this causes premature low-battery warnings to fire during the first measurement session.
BMS lockout after the Scopemeter 120 sat unused in a carry case for months
Ni-MH cells self-discharge continuously, and after an extended storage period the pack voltage can drop below the BMS recovery threshold. When this happens, the charger circuit in the Scopemeter 120 may not initiate a charge cycle because it reads the pack as a fault condition rather than a depleted cell. The fix is to apply a slow trickle charge — using a compatible external Ni-MH charger at a low C-rate — until the pack recovers above 4.0V, at which point the instrument's internal charger will recognise and resume normal charging. Do not attempt to fast-charge a pack that has been in this state.
Scopemeter 120 shuts down mid-measurement with the battery indicator showing charge remaining
This is a voltage sag issue, not a capacity issue. Aged Ni-MH cells lose internal resistance tolerance, so under the combined draw of active probes and waveform capture the terminal voltage drops sharply and trips the low-voltage cutoff — even when the resting voltage looked acceptable before power-on. A fresh pack holds the voltage rail stable under that load. After fitting the new battery, run the calibration cycle so the instrument resets its voltage-threshold map to the new cell's discharge curve.
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 120 powers on fine but shuts off the moment I start a waveform capture — is this the battery?
Yes. Waveform capture activates both the oscilloscope front-end and the probe supply simultaneously, and that combined current draw causes a voltage sag on a degraded Ni-MH cell. The instrument's low-voltage cutoff trips even though the battery appeared charged at rest. A replacement pack with healthy internal resistance holds the rail stable under that load. After fitting, run the instrument's calibration cycle before your next capture session so it remaps the battery state correctly.
My Scopemeter 120 won't begin charging after the instrument was stored in its case all winter — the charger LED stays dark.
Extended Ni-MH self-discharge can pull the pack below the minimum voltage the Scopemeter 120's internal charger needs to detect a valid cell — typically around 3.6–4.0V for a 4-cell pack. The charger interprets anything below that as a fault and refuses to start. Use a standalone Ni-MH charger at a low C-rate (0.1C or less) to bring the pack above 4.0V, then reconnect to the instrument — the internal charger should engage at that point. If the pack will not recover above 3.5V after 30 minutes of trickle charge, replace it.
Readings drift and then the display resets partway through a logging session — what causes that?
This is a sustained-load voltage dropout. During a logging session the instrument draws continuous current for display, probe power, and data processing; as the Ni-MH cell ages, its voltage under that steady draw falls faster than the indicator suggests, and when it crosses the cutoff threshold the instrument resets mid-session. It is not a firmware or probe fault. Fit a fresh BP120 pack and run the calibration cycle through the instrument menu — this forces the Scopemeter 120 to remap its low-battery threshold to the new cell's actual discharge curve, preventing false resets.
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