ah, the SNES cartridge battery conundrum! I didnt bother trying to solder
it, I went on ebay and bought some 2032 coin cell holders, the same thing
that your newer motherboards use for the cmos battery, and soldered them
onto the board (may take a bit of effort as the tabs and holes on the board
dont agree, may take some jumpering) I had to jumper one, and hot glued it
to the case, same with the golden zelda cartridge for NES. then, the next
time your battery dies in the next, oh, 10-20 years, you can just pop it out
and replace it with a new one (given that 2032's still exist that far away,
yes, I've thought about it)
On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 9:31 AM, Mr Ian Primus <ian_primus at yahoo.com> wrote:
Well, I did something mildly stupid recently, and I did it even though I
_knew_ the dangers. Some people might not know these dangers (or think about
them), so I figured I'd post a word of warning, since this is bound to come
up in classic computing.
So, I was recently givin a copy of "Mario All Stars" for the Super
Nintendo. It played, but the save game feature doesn't work. These
cartridges use a battery-backed SRAM chip to store save games. So, my
assumption was that the battery was simply dead.
Opening the cartridge revealed the problem. The battery (a solder-tab style
CR2032) was actually good, but the positive terminal 'tab' had come off. The
spot-welds just let go. It must have been poorly made, and then got dropped
at some point. I don't have a replacement battery with solder tabs, nor do I
have a way to get one quickly. But, this seems simple enough, I'll just
solder the tab back on.
Now, I've soldered to coin batteries before and never had a problem. The
trick is to rough up the surface of the battery so the solder can stick, and
work quickly to avoid damaging the battery. Well, this battery wasn't having
any of that. The solder simply would not flow. It was then that I thought "I
can't heat a lithium battery too much - it might explode!". So I donned my
full face mask and got back to work.
More attempts to get the solder to stick were failing. I tried piling on
more solder, so that the flux might have a chance to get it to flow. It
looked like it was just about to stick and.... PFOOOF!!
Yes. Lithium batteries _do_ explode when heated too much.
The battery exploded sending bits of black crud and molten solder (that
never stuck to the battery) everywhere. It suprised the hell out of me,
that's for sure. I heard a little *plink* as the top cover of the battery
landed behind me. I just stared at the bottom of the battery on the bench
for a minute, startled. I took off the face mask and went to get the vacuum
cleaner to clean up the mess.
After cleaning up the debris and finding the battery tab and the battery
cover, I was trying to figure out how to replace this battery - and if I
should try soldering to another cell (more quickly, this time). I then
looked over at my face mask on the table. It was covered with solder
spashes, and quite a lot of it too (remember, I was trying to get the flux
to help the solder flow). Had I not been wearing that mask, I would have
gotten all sorts of crud in my eyes.
I've always worn this mask when drilling, dremeling, using the table saw,
and yes, when soldering to batteries. This is the first time one has
actually exploded though. Yeah, it was my fault, I heated it too much - I
should have known better. But it's easy to get frustrated and forget. But
never forget to put on safety equipment when working with stuff like this.
Givin the choice, I'd always rather have a piece of impact-resistant
polycarbonate between me and flying shards of hot metal.
-Ian