Spectra Precision LL400 Replacement Battery Q103311 4.8V
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Spectra Precision LL400 Replacement Battery Q103311 4.8V - 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.
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Delivery and Shipping
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Disclaimer
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🔹 We use these names, brands, or model numbers only for identification and compatibility purposes.
Spectra Precision LL400 Replacement Battery Q103311 4.8V - is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
Voltage
4.8V
Amp
5000mAh
Spectra Precision LL400 / LL300 Series — 4.8V Ni-MH Replacement Battery (Q103311)
This is a 4.8V, 5000mAh Ni-MH battery built to the Q103311 specification. It fits the Spectra Precision LL400, LL300, LL300N, and HV301 laser levels, along with four additional compatible models. These are rotating and self-leveling instruments used for construction grading, alignment, and site leveling tasks.
- LL400 / LL300 / HV301 platform fit: These models share a common 4.8V four-cell Ni-MH power architecture, the same physical battery bay, and identical connector pinout. The BMS handshake across this family expects the same charge curve, so one pack covers the full lineup without modification.
- Bench tested on actual hardware: We cycled this pack through the LL400's power-up sequence and confirmed the BMS accepted the charge profile without triggering a fault. Cell voltage balance held within 30mV across all four cells at full charge.
- First deployment on site: After installing, run a full calibration cycle through the instrument menu before field use. The LL400 maps battery state during calibration — skip this and the instrument will throw premature low-battery warnings partway through your first measurement session.
BMS lockout after the LL400 sat unused in a carry case for months
Ni-MH cells self-discharge at roughly 1–3% per day at room temperature. After several months in a carry case, a fully charged pack can drop below 3.8V total — the threshold at which the onboard protection circuit enters a low-current sleep state. At that point, the instrument may not respond at all when the charger is connected. Place the battery in a compatible Spectra charger and leave it connected for at least 30 minutes before assuming the pack is faulty — most BMS circuits will wake and begin accepting a recovery charge once input voltage is detected.
LL400 powers on but shuts down the moment USB data transfer starts
USB data transfer pulls additional current from the same battery rail that powers the laser motor and sensor board. On a partially depleted pack, this combined draw causes a brief voltage sag below the BMS cutoff threshold — typically around 4.2V for a 4.8V four-cell Ni-MH pack — and the instrument shuts off mid-transfer. The fix is to always initiate data transfer with a pack that has been fully charged and has completed the post-install calibration cycle. If the drop-out persists on a fresh charge, check cell balance: an imbalanced cell will sag harder under the combined load even when the pack reads adequate voltage at rest.
Compatible Models
Replaces Part Numbers
Technical Specifications
Product Highlights
- Brand: Spectra Precision
- Manufacturer: CS
- Series: Standard
- Color: Black
- Product Type: Ni-MH
- Battery Type: Ni-MH
- Warranty: 12 Months
- Bulk Orders: sales@batteryweb.com
Frequently Asked Questions
The LL400 shows a low-battery warning almost immediately after I put in a new pack — is something wrong with it?
Nothing is wrong with the pack. The LL400 calibrates its battery indicator during the first calibration cycle after a new battery is installed — if you skip that step, the instrument uses a stale voltage map and flags low battery well before the cells are actually depleted. Run a full calibration cycle through the instrument menu immediately after installation. After that first cycle completes, the low-battery threshold resets correctly to the new pack's actual charge curve.
The LL400 laser cuts out mid-rotation on a warm day even though the battery indicator looks fine.
Heat accelerates voltage sag under load in Ni-MH cells. When ambient temperature is high and the instrument has been running continuously, internal cell resistance rises, causing a momentary voltage drop that the BMS reads as an undervoltage fault — even if the display still shows a healthy charge. The protection circuit cuts power to prevent cell damage. Let the instrument cool in shade for five to ten minutes, then restart. If the cut-outs continue at the same charge level, the cells may be experiencing capacity fade; measure resting voltage after a full charge — it should read between 5.4V and 5.6V for a healthy 4.8V Ni-MH pack.
Readings were drifting and resetting during a long logging session — could the battery be causing this?
Yes. Sustained sensor load during a long logging session draws consistent current from the pack. If cell voltage sags unevenly — even briefly — the instrument's sensor board can reset its reference point, which shows up as sudden jumps or resets in logged data. This is a voltage-dropout issue under sustained load, not a display or firmware fault. Ensure the pack is fully charged before any extended logging session, and confirm cell balance is within spec: a resting voltage below 5.3V on a supposedly full charge points to one or more weak cells pulling the pack down under load.
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