PSP's circuit board. To the right, I think there is a battery.
What is it for? I ever believed that it was for something like CMOS backup on PC - including time function.
But the fact is, whenever you uninstall the PSP's main battery pack(for power supply), you will get a time setting prompt the next time you start your psp(The PSP official guide book also indicated this).
So, seems this small battery has nothing to do with PSP's timing. What could it be for then?
CMOS backup? -PSP's strange built-in battery
CMOS backup? -PSP's strange built-in battery
Last edited by konfig on Fri Mar 04, 2005 2:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
Wrong. I just tried it here.
When you remove the battery when it's in sleep mode (the recharagable removeable batter that is), the system does not come out of sleep mode. It is the same as a hard power off. It will not recover back to your game.
Cheers
Pikoro
http://www.psphacks.net
When you remove the battery when it's in sleep mode (the recharagable removeable batter that is), the system does not come out of sleep mode. It is the same as a hard power off. It will not recover back to your game.
Cheers
Pikoro
http://www.psphacks.net
:
"whenever you uninstall the PSP's main battery pack(for power supply), you will get a time setting prompt the next time you start your psp(The PSP official guide book also indicated this). "
I did a test yesterday when the battery power ran out and found something different.
This time, PSP's time did not reset when it got power supply(AC adapter, no battery pack) 2 minutes later - alough time did reset the last time when PSP lost power supply temporarily(that's about a day long).
Also what the PSP official guide book says is "when battery pack is gone, PSP's time sometimes resets"(not always, I did not read the book that carefully before. sorry).
Without external power supply, PSP's time still lasted at least 2 miniutes.
So I'd like to believe it is the contribution of this small battery: it is a rechargeable battery to keep some information(including system time, maybe RAM content as well) for a short while to enable battery pack exchange(though it can't last too long). It charges when PSP is connected with a power supply(battery pack, AC adapter etc), regardless of whether PSP is running.
Hope this can be of some use.
"whenever you uninstall the PSP's main battery pack(for power supply), you will get a time setting prompt the next time you start your psp(The PSP official guide book also indicated this). "
I did a test yesterday when the battery power ran out and found something different.
This time, PSP's time did not reset when it got power supply(AC adapter, no battery pack) 2 minutes later - alough time did reset the last time when PSP lost power supply temporarily(that's about a day long).
Also what the PSP official guide book says is "when battery pack is gone, PSP's time sometimes resets"(not always, I did not read the book that carefully before. sorry).
Without external power supply, PSP's time still lasted at least 2 miniutes.
So I'd like to believe it is the contribution of this small battery: it is a rechargeable battery to keep some information(including system time, maybe RAM content as well) for a short while to enable battery pack exchange(though it can't last too long). It charges when PSP is connected with a power supply(battery pack, AC adapter etc), regardless of whether PSP is running.
Hope this can be of some use.