Howdy dannic,
Short answer: The short answer is that the CMOS battery has a shelf life of 10 years.
Longer answer: Motherboards draw power from the CMOS battery to retain BIOS settings, DateTime clock, etc, while the system is turned off. Having said that, the battery life depends upon how you use the VXI controller. If
the VXI controller is turned on all the time, then the battery life will be
extremely long because the CMOS battery isn't being used. However, if the VXI controller is turned off all the time, then the
battery use will be much higher, and the battery life would be
shorter.
Overall, the mean time between failures on CMOS batteries is also about 10 years, and that includes battery life and any
other possible malfunctions. So the
batteries should last for a long time, but it is too hard to specify
further than that because of how dependent the battery life is on the
system configuration and usage. If you would like to implement a
battery replacement rotation program, you should be extremely safe
replacing them every 5 years or so.
Here's an additional reference you might find handy, if not for posterity's sake:
KnowledgeBase 2JIGCU00: Information about the Lithium Battery in the VXIpc-770/870B ControllersI hope this helps!
Message Edited by pBerg on
05-02-2008 01:08 PMMessage Edited by pBerg on
05-02-2008 01:09 PM
Warm regards,
pBerg