"Peabody" <
waybackNO...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:20170111-0...@Peabody.ssl.astraweb.com...
> The standard instructions for changing out a desktop CMOS battery say you
> should turn everything off and unplug the power cord. But I wonder if
> guys
> who do this kind of stuff for a living don't hot swap the batteries with
> the
> power on, or at least leave the power cord plugged in so the always-on 5V
> supply provide power to the CMOS. That should prevent losing the contents
> of
> the CMOS memory, including the TOD and the BIOS settings.
There doesn't seem to be any logic to hot swapping a CMOS battery - many
motherboards have a jumper header to discharge the smoothing caps on the RTC
rail - it holds for at least a few minutes with the battery out.
Usually you don't even know it needs replacing till boot up reports a CMOS
checksum error - then I just fit a new battery and load optimum defaults.
There's only a couple of values I need to set manually.