- May 19, 2011
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This is my understanding:
CMOS information including date and time is stored with the aid of the CMOS battery. My understanding is that the CMOS battery gets used as the power source for storing CMOS information when there is no other power source (e.g. a laptop's normal battery, its mains supply, or a desktop PC's live mains connection). In my experience, CMOS batteries can last a decade or so in a desktop PC if the PC has a live mains connection, whereas if the owner is in the habit of shutting down the PC then switching off its mains connection, the battery tends to only last about 5-6 years.
Is this correct? I'm encountering a scenario with a customer's PC that challenges my belief, in that it developed the typical issue of losing time/date and giving CMOS errors on boot-up (and sure enough the customer had been disconnecting the mains after shut down), so I replaced the battery, but now the PC is apparently not keeping time after resuming from sleep mode or being shut down (despite the live mains connection).
CMOS information including date and time is stored with the aid of the CMOS battery. My understanding is that the CMOS battery gets used as the power source for storing CMOS information when there is no other power source (e.g. a laptop's normal battery, its mains supply, or a desktop PC's live mains connection). In my experience, CMOS batteries can last a decade or so in a desktop PC if the PC has a live mains connection, whereas if the owner is in the habit of shutting down the PC then switching off its mains connection, the battery tends to only last about 5-6 years.
Is this correct? I'm encountering a scenario with a customer's PC that challenges my belief, in that it developed the typical issue of losing time/date and giving CMOS errors on boot-up (and sure enough the customer had been disconnecting the mains after shut down), so I replaced the battery, but now the PC is apparently not keeping time after resuming from sleep mode or being shut down (despite the live mains connection).