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Problem with NUC7i5BNH
ON bootup after power down it comes up with
CMOS CHECKSUM Erroe
Date time not set
Replaced the battery
Upgraded the BIOS
same problem Anu suggestions please
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Massive thankyou to everyone who as suggested possibilities. It's now working and maintaining the date and time
Steps I tried
Purchased a new battery from Battery World No Luck
update bios to latest release (0093) from USB on startup using F7 I think from memory No luck
Went back to original battery battery No luck
Tried removing Jumper and upgrading BIOS from USB again
This seems to have resolved the problem as it has maintained correct Date time overnight and NOT seeing the message
Date time not set anymore
Again thanks to everyone who provided suggestions
Link Copied
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What battery did you use? Photo please.
Doc (not an Intel employee or contractor)
[Maybe Windows 12 will be better]
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Hello Geoff,
Greetings for the day !
Thank you for posting in Intel Community.
Technical and Warranty Support for Intel’s NUC 7 through NUC 13 Systems has transitioned to ASUS as of January 16, 2024. Please visit the Intel Newsroom for details.
Please contact ASUS for further assistance.
Regards,
Varsha
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@IntelSupport NO! If you notice, we are dealing with this user and asking for more information. Do not be so quick do dismiss this user.
Doc (not an Intel employee or contractor)
[Maybe Windows 12 will be better]
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@GJW,
We need an angle - and far closer view - that allows us to see which color wire is going to which pin in the connector. With the existing picture, I cannot tell.
...S
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@GJW Since we are waiting for your photo, let's look at this more closely.
A- the battery is dead
B-the battery is wired correctly
C-the battery is wired incorrectly
D-the battery is not the issue.
I am betting on C. Since there is only PLUS and MINUS, it should be an easy task for you to reverse the polarity.
If you get the same results, well, something else is wrong.
If you ordered the battery from amazon or some such place, provide a link to it.
Doc (not an Intel employee or contractor)
[Intel, like it or not, NUCs did exist]
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Thankyou so much for your assistance Gents
I purchased a new battery from Battery World (rather than on line) Have had it checked and it is <> 3.2v
If you are able to confirm that the + - aren't in the correct position I'll try your suggestion re swapping them
Here is a closer photo of the connection
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Ok, dumb question, but it could save time - have you physically compared the connectors of the old and new batteries?
I have a couple of these batteries in my spare parts pile - unfortunately none that I can positively say came from my failed BN unit. The keying is different from that of the replacement battery pictured above.
If you have wires in opposite positions, it is ~fairly~ easy (sarcastically says the guy who has done it many, many times) to swap the wires in the connector. Within that connector (positioned as you have it in the picture with the pen), there are two tiny white tabs that hold the pins into the connector. Using point of safety/sewing pin, you can lift the tabs slightly and the pin can be pulled from the connector (aside: to lower frustration level, I use tip of X-Acto knife to do this as it will lift and hold up the tab for the time it takes to get the pin pulled out). Once the pins are out, you can, one at a time, push them into opposite holes in connector. Pushing pin in and pulling back, you should feel when the tab locks it in place.
Once you have installed a battery with correct polarity, you should boot up using the F2 key to enter BIOS Setup. Within BIOS Setup, all you need to do is set the date and time and then you can exit. On the resulting POST, you should not see any complaints about the CMOS. To verify completely, after booting into Windows (or Linux), do a full shutdown and then unplug the NUC's power cord from the wall (A/C power) for 10 minutes. If all is good, upon powering up you should not see any CMOS complaints.
Hope this helps,
...S
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HI all Thanks so much for your assistance thus far.
I picked up another battery that had the + and - connections different.
I've tried both batteries and still have the same problem
Maybe problem is with the board??
Geoff
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Again, did you compare the original battery to the new battery(s)?
...S
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When the battery needs to be replaced, you need to install the battery, power on the system, use F2 key to enter BIOS Setup and set date and time. After exiting BIOS Setup and once you have seen BIOS Splash screen, power off, unplug system from A/C power and then wait 15 minutes. If, when powering back on after all this, you see BIOS indicating CMOS error, you know you have a (a) bad battery (or wired backwards) or (b) true CMOS failure. If wired backwards and switching the pins doesn't help, then you know it is true CMOS failure. In this case, you have two choices, (a) put up with it, or (b) replace the NUC.
...S
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In addition to Scott's advise given in the post above, I would suggest to update BIOS with the latest version 0093, but this time using BIOS Recovery method (either from Power Button Menu or By BIOS Security Jumper Removed).
Leon
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Massive thankyou to everyone who as suggested possibilities. It's now working and maintaining the date and time
Steps I tried
Purchased a new battery from Battery World No Luck
update bios to latest release (0093) from USB on startup using F7 I think from memory No luck
Went back to original battery battery No luck
Tried removing Jumper and upgrading BIOS from USB again
This seems to have resolved the problem as it has maintained correct Date time overnight and NOT seeing the message
Date time not set anymore
Again thanks to everyone who provided suggestions
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