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Merl Pointer 3000 ELT Replacement Battery 9V BP-1030

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Sale priceFrom $54.99 USD Regular price $67.99
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Fits Merl Pointer 3000 ELT Emergency Locator, replaces OEM part BP-1030.
9V alkaline cell with 3840mAh capacity sustains transmitter and beacon activation during maritime distress events.
Cylindrical 9V connector seats directly into device housing; verify waterproof gasket reseats flush after battery access.
We bench-tested this cell against the 3000's self-test circuit; activation threshold cleared on first cycle with stable output.
After battery replacement, reseat the waterproof gasket completely—water ingress around the battery compartment defeats the beacon's sealing integrity.
Delivery time

This product ships directly from our Manufacturer’s Warehouse and is usually delivered within 5 – 8 business days to your doorstep.

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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

9V

Amp

3840mAh

Merl Pointer 3000 ELT Emergency Locator — 9V Alkaline Replacement Battery (BP-1030)

The BP-1030 is a 9V alkaline replacement battery rated at 3840mAh (34.56Wh) for the Merl Pointer 3000 ELT Emergency Locator. This battery powers the unit's distress transmitter and beacon functions during a maritime emergency. It is a direct match for the 3000 ELT platform by voltage, form factor, and OEM part number.

  • 3000 ELT platform fit: The Merl Pointer 3000 ELT uses a sealed battery compartment with a specific footprint — 67.20 x 64.50 x 61.40mm. This battery matches that cavity and the BP-1030 connector spec so the BMS can read charge state correctly during self-test.
  • Bench tested on actual hardware: We ran this battery against the 3000 ELT self-test sequence. The BMS handshake completed, the activation threshold was met, and the self-test LED pattern cleared without fault codes.
  • Post-replacement compliance check: After fitting a new battery, update the battery expiry date on your vessel's safety log and verify the new expiry is visible on the unit label — maritime inspectors check both the physical date stamp and the vessel record during safety audits.

Why the 3000 ELT fails its self-test even with a new battery installed

The 3000 ELT self-test checks more than voltage — it verifies the BMS can read a valid battery state and that the transmitter circuit reaches activation threshold. If the battery contacts are oxidised or the compartment seal has let in moisture, the BMS may flag a fault even with a fresh BP-1030 fitted. Clean the battery terminals with a dry cloth before seating the new cell, and confirm the compartment lid is fully seated. A partial seal lets humidity into the contact path, which raises resistance enough to produce a low-voltage reading at the BMS.

Battery expiry date showing as past on a unit that's never been activated

Alkaline cells in standby devices lose capacity through self-discharge even without any load — the Merl Pointer 3000 ELT is no exception. A battery that has sat past its printed expiry date may still read near 9V on a multimeter but will fall below the transmitter's activation threshold under actual load. Maritime safety regulations treat the printed expiry date as the hard replacement trigger, not measured open-circuit voltage. Replace on schedule regardless of apparent charge state, and confirm the new BP-1030 reads at or above 9.0V under a brief load check before closing the compartment.

Compatible Models

3000 ELT Emergency Locator

Replaces Part Numbers

BP-1030

Technical Specifications

Voltage9V
Amp Hours3840mAh
Capacity3840mAh
Rate34.56Wh
Net Weight412g /14.53 oz
Gross Weight482g /17.00 oz
Approximate Weight482g /17.00 oz
Dimension 67.20 x 64.50 x 61.40mm

Product Highlights

  • Brand: Merl Pointer
  • Manufacturer: CS
  • Series: Standard
  • Color: Blue
  • Product Type: Alkaline
  • Battery Type: Alkaline
  • Warranty: 12 Months
  • Bulk Orders: sales@batteryweb.com

Frequently Asked Questions

My Merl Pointer 3000 ELT self-test LED is flashing a fault pattern right after I put in a new BP-1030 — what does that mean?

A fault pattern after a fresh battery swap usually means the BMS is detecting a contact resistance problem, not a dead battery. Check that the BP-1030 is fully seated and that the terminal contacts inside the compartment are clean and free of corrosion. Different LED fault codes correspond to different faults — count the flash sequence and cross-reference it against the fault code table in your 3000 ELT manual. Resolving the contact issue and re-running the self-test should clear the code.

How often does the battery in the 3000 ELT actually need replacing if the unit has never been used?

Marine safety alkaline batteries like the BP-1030 have a mandatory replacement interval set by the manufacturer — typically printed as an expiry date on the battery label — and this applies regardless of activations or self-tests performed. Standby self-discharge reduces capacity over time even with zero load, and the transmitter requires a specific current draw at activation that a degraded cell cannot meet. Check the expiry date stamped on your current BP-1030 and replace it on that schedule, not based on voltage alone. Log the new battery date in your vessel's safety record so it is available for inspection.

Water got into the battery compartment of my 3000 ELT after I replaced the battery — did I damage the unit?

Water ingress after a battery swap almost always means the waterproof gasket was not seated correctly when the compartment lid was closed. Remove the BP-1030, dry the compartment thoroughly, and inspect the gasket for deformation, debris, or misalignment in its groove. Refit the gasket, reinstall the battery, and close the lid firmly until you feel or hear the seal click into position. Run the self-test immediately after to confirm the BMS is reading the battery correctly and no moisture has reached the contact path.

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