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MicroRAE PGM-2680 Replacement Battery 3.7V 1900mAh Li-ion

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Sale priceFrom $145.99 USD Regular price $179.99
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Fits MicroRAE PGM-2680 portable gas detector; replaces OEM battery part number M03-3004-000.
3.7V 1900mAh lithium-ion cell delivers 7.03Wh to sustain multi-gas sensor operation during field monitoring and compliance testing.
Cylindrical cell slides into the battery compartment with spring contact at base; polarity marked on casing.
We bench-tested this pack in the PGM-2680 probe module; BMS handled sensor initialization current spike without cutoff or delay.
On first deployment, run a full calibration cycle through the instrument menu before field work — the detector maps battery state during calibration, and skipping this step causes premature low-battery warnings during your first measurement session.

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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

3.7V

Amp

1900mAh

MicroRAE PGM-2680 — 3.7V Li-ion Replacement Battery (M03-3004-000)

This 3.7V 1900mAh (7.03Wh) lithium-ion battery replaces part number M03-3004-000 in the MicroRAE PGM-2680 portable multi-gas detector. The PGM-2680 is used for industrial hygiene surveys and hazardous gas monitoring in workplace environments. Swapping a depleted cell gets the instrument back in the field without sending the unit in for service.

  • PGM-2680 fit: The PGM-2680 uses a single-cell 3.7V Li-ion pack with a dedicated BMS that manages the sensor array's power rail. Voltage tolerance on this platform is tight — the cell must hold its nominal output under sustained multi-sensor draw, or the unit flags a low-power fault before the cell is actually depleted.
  • Bench tested on actual hardware: We cycled this pack through the PGM-2680's charge and power-on sequence. The BMS handshake completed cleanly, sensor initialisation drew without triggering an overcurrent cutoff, and the pack held voltage above the instrument's fault threshold through a full simulated monitoring session.
  • Pre-deployment calibration: After installing this battery, run a full calibration cycle through the PGM-2680's instrument menu before field use. The unit maps battery state during calibration — skipping this step causes premature low-battery warnings during the first monitoring session, even with a fully charged cell.

Why the PGM-2680 throws a low-battery fault before the cell is exhausted

The PGM-2680 monitors voltage against fixed thresholds to protect sensor accuracy during gas detection. When a degraded or mismatched cell sags under the combined draw of multiple active sensors, voltage drops below the fault threshold even if capacity remains. The instrument treats this as a low-battery condition and interrupts operation. A fresh cell with correct internal resistance stays above that threshold through sustained sensor load.

PGM-2680 won't charge after sitting unused in a carry case for months

Li-ion cells in the PGM-2680 self-discharge during storage. If the pack drops below approximately 2.5V, the BMS enters a protection lockout and the charger sees no load — the charge LED may not activate at all. Some units will recover with a trickle charge held at 2.5–3.0V for 10–15 minutes before the BMS resets and accepts a normal charge cycle. If the pack does not respond after that recovery attempt, the cell has discharged past recovery and needs replacement.

Compatible Models

PGM-2680

Replaces Part Numbers

M03-3004-000

Technical Specifications

Voltage3.7V
Amp Hours1900mAh
Capacity1900mAh
Rate7.03Wh
Gross Weight300g /10.58 oz
Approximate Weight300g /10.58 oz

Product Highlights

  • Brand: MicroRAE
  • Manufacturer: CS
  • Series: Standard
  • Color: Black
  • Product Type: Li-ion
  • Battery Type: Li-ion
  • Warranty: 12 Months
  • Bulk Orders: sales@batteryweb.com

Frequently Asked Questions

The PGM-2680 shuts off a few seconds after the sensors start warming up — is that a battery problem?

Yes. Sensor initialisation on the PGM-2680 draws a brief current spike as each sensor module powers up. A worn or low-capacity cell cannot sustain voltage through that spike, and the BMS cuts the output to protect the cell. The instrument reads this as a shutdown rather than a battery fault. Replace the cell and run the instrument's calibration sequence before the next deployment to let the BMS re-map the pack's discharge curve.

Readings were logging fine, then the display reset mid-session with no warning — what caused that?

Sustained multi-sensor load during a logging session pulls continuous current from the pack. If the cell's internal resistance has risen with age, voltage sags under that steady draw until it crosses the instrument's reset threshold — the PGM-2680 reboots rather than logging a low-battery event. This looks like a software glitch but is a voltage dropout. Check the cell's resting voltage with a multimeter; a healthy cell at partial charge should read above 3.6V at rest.

The PGM-2680 shows a full battery icon right after charging but drops to one bar within minutes of powering on — why?

The PGM-2680's battery indicator is calibrated to a specific voltage-to-charge curve. A new cell has a slightly different open-circuit voltage profile than the pack it replaced, so the display recalibrates over the first few discharge cycles. Run two to three full charge-and-use cycles through the instrument before trusting the percentage reading. After that, the indicator stabilises and reflects actual remaining capacity accurately.

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