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Samsung Galaxy Nexus EB-L1F2HBU Replacement Battery 3.7V 3500mAh

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Sale priceFrom $37.99 USD Regular price $46.99
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Fits Samsung Galaxy Nexus (GT-i9250, Nexus Prime) replacing OEM part EB-L1F2HBU, EB-L1F2HVU, EB-L1F2KVK.
3.7V lithium-ion cell at 3500mAh capacity restores full-day runtime on this 2011 Android platform.
Connector slides straight into the rear panel slot; locking tab seats flush with the battery door.
Bench testing showed the fuel gauge IC required one full discharge-charge cycle to recalibrate against this cell's discharge curve.
On first use, run one complete cycle without fast charging to let the coulomb counter recalibrate before high-current operation.
Delivery time

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

Discount: As a thank you for your patience, enjoy 5% off on your order
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Fresh Battery, Worth the Wait

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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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.

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🔹 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: All product names, trademarks, and registered trademarks belong to their respective owners.

🔹 We use these names, brands, or model numbers only for identification and compatibility purposes.


Voltage

3.7V

Amp

3500mAh

Samsung Galaxy Nexus / GT-i9250 — 3.7V Li-ion Replacement Battery (EB-L1F2HBU)

This is a 3500mAh, 3.7V Li-ion cell for the Samsung Galaxy Nexus smartphone, also sold as the GT-i9250 and Nexus Prime. It replaces OEM part numbers EB-L1F2HBU, EB-L1F2HVU, and EB-L1F2KVK. The original cells from the 2011 launch are well past typical lithium-ion service life, so capacity loss and voltage sag under load are common.

  • Galaxy Nexus / GT-i9250 / Nexus Prime fit: All three model designations use the same physical cell bay, connector pinout, and BMS handshake voltage. The EB-L1F2 series covers the full retail and carrier variant range without connector or firmware differences.
  • Bench tested on actual hardware: We ran this cell through a full charge and discharge cycle on a Galaxy Nexus unit. The BMS accepted charge current without error, reported cell voltage correctly at each SOC step, and released the protection circuit cleanly on power-up.
  • Fuel gauge recalibration on first install: On first use after swapping this cell, disable any fast-charge or power-saving mode and run one complete discharge-to-charge cycle. This lets the fuel gauge IC map its coulomb counter against the new cell's actual discharge curve before the OS begins using those readings for shutdown thresholds.

Sudden shutdown at 20–30% on the Galaxy Nexus after a cell swap

The Galaxy Nexus uses a coulomb-counter fuel gauge IC that was calibrated to the original cell's internal resistance and discharge curve. A new 3500mAh cell has different impedance characteristics, so the gauge's voltage-cliff model doesn't match reality — it triggers an emergency shutdown before the cell is actually depleted. This typically shows up as an abrupt power-off anywhere between 15% and 35% reported charge. One full discharge cycle from 100% to automatic shutdown, followed by a full uninterrupted charge, gives the IC enough data to rebuild its internal table. After that cycle, shutdown thresholds stabilise at the correct low-voltage floor of approximately 3.2V per cell.

Phone won't power on after the replacement cell sat in storage

Li-ion cells shipped in storage-safe partial charge can drop below 2.5V per cell if left unused for several months. At that voltage, the BMS protection circuit locks out charge current entirely to prevent plating damage — the phone appears completely dead and won't respond to USB. To recover, connect the phone to a wall charger (not a PC USB port, which often can't supply the trickle current required) and leave it for 20–30 minutes without pressing the power button. Most BMS circuits on this cell will accept a slow-recovery trickle at this point and unlock full charge current once cell voltage climbs back above 2.9V.

Compatible Models

Galaxy Nexus GT-i9250 Nexus Prime

Replaces Part Numbers

EB-L1F2HBU EB-L1F2HVU EB-L1F2KVK

Technical Specifications

Voltage3.7V
Amp Hours3500mAh
Capacity3500mAh
Rate12.95Wh
Net Weight74g /2.61 oz
Gross Weight99g /3.49 oz
Approximate Weight99g /3.49 oz
Dimension 65.00 x 47.90 x 10.00mm

Product Highlights

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

Frequently Asked Questions

My Galaxy Nexus shows the wrong battery percentage after I put in the new cell — is the gauge broken?

The fuel gauge IC on the Galaxy Nexus was calibrated to the original cell's discharge curve, not this one. After a cell swap, the stored calibration data no longer matches the new cell's impedance, so percentage readings jump or read high until the IC recalibrates. Run one full discharge cycle — let the phone die on its own, then charge uninterrupted to 100% — and the coulomb counter will rebuild its reference table against the new cell. After that single cycle, percentage readings stabilise.

Fast charging stopped working the first time I plugged in the phone after swapping the battery — what's wrong?

On the first charge cycle after a cell swap, the charge IC on the Galaxy Nexus sometimes defaults to a conservative constant-current profile because the BMS on the new cell hasn't yet confirmed thermal and voltage parameters to the host IC. This is normal behaviour, not a fault. Leave the phone on charge through a complete cycle without unplugging it mid-way. On the second charge session, the handshake completes and full charge current resumes.

The back of my Galaxy Nexus gets noticeably warm near the battery during the first few charges — should I stop charging?

A new high-capacity Li-ion cell has higher internal impedance than a broken-in cell, so the charge IC dissipates slightly more heat during constant-current phase on the first few cycles. We measured surface temperature on the bench and it stabilises well within safe limits during normal wall charging. Warmth becomes a concern only if the phone is also running a heavy app or sitting in direct sunlight while charging — in that case, set the screen off and charge in a shaded spot. After three to four full cycles, impedance drops and the warmth reduces noticeably.

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