Replacing A Failed Ebook Reader Battery

Resurrecting a beloved piece of tech can be a trying process when fighting through the mild heartbreak — doubly so if the product has been discontinued. When their old Sony PRS-T1 e-book reader refused to charge after leaving it on their dashboard during a hot day, [Andrea Gangemi] decided to leverage a little techno-necromancy and hack together a fix.

[Gangemi] found the problem to be a battery failure, but there was nary a replacement to be found. An old Motorola mobile phone battery ended up fitting the purpose nicely. Cracking open the e-book reader, de-soldering the old battery and — after deciphering which pins were which — installing the new one was simply done with a fine, high temperature soldering iron tip and Kapton tape to avoid short-circuiting. But hold on — the new battery wouldn’t charge, and the reader displayed a message saying that the battery was over heating; irony, thou art cruel.

Replaced Ebook Reader BatteryIt turns out that the new battery had a different value NTC thermristor which threw off the reader’s safety feature. [Gangemi]’s solution was to solder in a 60K Ohm resistor to offset the NTC value enough to allow the reader to charge — effectively disabling the safety feature in the process. For a low-power device, it’s a small price to pay to have it working good as new.

If you have an old e-book reader kicking around, consider turning it into a message board for your house!

[Thanks for the submission, Andrea Gangemi!]

14 thoughts on “Replacing A Failed Ebook Reader Battery

      1. Actually the only spare battery I’ve found on the net was not original and I don’t trust LIIon batteries with unkonow pedigree. Only after mounting into the reader one of my spare Motorola battery I realized that the internal NTC had a different value and decided to try to cheat the thermal control.

  1. I did this too, unfortunately I damaged the screen when I opened the device so now I’m thinking if I should spend 30 bucks on a new screen or just get a new reader (i’ll probably go for the last option). A complete service manual is available online, look at that first before you decide to crack your reader open.

  2. “effectively disabling the safety feature in the process. For a low-power device, it’s a small price to pay”

    Saw this at the end of my rss feed. I thought it was time to get popcorn and read comments.

Leave a Reply to itsthatidiotagainCancel reply

Please be kind and respectful to help make the comments section excellent. (Comment Policy)

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.