Sony PCV-J200 System Reference Manual - Page 41

Replacing the Lithium Battery

Page 41 highlights

Removing, Installing, and Replacing Components 29 Replacing the Lithium Battery You may need to replace the lithium battery if your computer consistently loses the date or time settings after turning it off. The lithium battery has a typical life of three years, after which the battery may be too weak to power the CMOS memory. ! When you remove the lithium battery, all values stored in the CMOS memory (BIOS setup values and Plug and Play values) may be lost. Although the computer can hold the charge for a short time while replacing the battery, it is safer to assume that the settings will be lost. When the values are lost, the BIOS values revert to their factory-default settings (see "Accessing the BIOS Setup Utility" on page 16). Do not handle damaged or leaking batteries. The lithium battery may explode if mistreated. Do not disassemble it or dispose of it in fire. 1 Reboot your computer by selecting Shut Down... from the Start menu, and then selecting Restart the computer. 2 If the error message "Error: Check date and time settings"appears during the reboot sequence, press F2 during the reboot process to access the BIOS Setup Utility. If the error message does not appear, you do not need to replace the battery at this time, and you can skip all remaining steps. 3 Compare all the BIOS options to their default settings. See "CMOS Setup Options" on page 65 to locate the BIOS default settings. Make a list of all the BIOS options that are different from their default settings. You will refer to this list when you restore the BIOS settings later. 4 Select Exit Discarding Changes from the main menu using the right arrow key. 5 Press Enter, type Y when prompted to discard changes, then press Enter to exit the BIOS Setup Utility. 6 Turn off the computer, and unplug the power cord. 7 Remove the side panel (see "Removing the Side Panel" on page 22).

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Removing, Installing, and Replacing Components
29
Replacing the Lithium Battery
You may need to replace the lithium battery if your computer consistently
loses the date or time settings after turning it off. The lithium battery has
a typical life of three years, after which the battery may be too weak to
power the CMOS memory.
1
Reboot your computer by selecting Shut Down... from the Start
menu, and then selecting Restart the computer.
2
If the error message “Error: Check date and time settings”appears
during the reboot sequence, press F2 during the reboot process to
access the BIOS Setup Utility. If the error message does not appear,
you do not need to replace the battery at this time, and you can skip
all remaining steps.
3
Compare all the BIOS options to their default settings. See
“CMOS
Setup Options”
on page 65 to locate the BIOS default settings. Make a
list of all the BIOS options that are different from their default
settings. You will refer to this list when you restore the BIOS settings
later.
4
Select Exit Discarding Changes from the main menu using the right
arrow key.
5
Press Enter, type Y when prompted to discard changes, then press
Enter to exit the BIOS Setup Utility.
6
Turn off the computer, and unplug the power cord.
7
Remove the side panel (see
“Removing the Side Panel”
on page 22).
!
When you remove the lithium battery, all values stored in the CMOS memory
(BIOS setup values and Plug and Play values) may be lost. Although the
computer can hold the charge for a short time while replacing the battery, it
is safer to assume that the settings will be lost. When the values are lost, the
BIOS values revert to their factory-default settings (see
“Accessing the BIOS
Setup Utility”
on page 16).
Do not handle damaged or leaking batteries.
The lithium battery may explode if mistreated. Do not disassemble it or
dispose of it in fire.