02-26-2014
I did replace the battery, I wired up a AA holder to the pin header plug. I think it was a 4.5 volt battery if memory serves, so 3 AA cells. Was one of the first things I tried but sadly didn't make a difference. The old battery was very dead. Floated at around 2 volts and would slowly drop on the meter.
I definitely don't need the 39H and probably will end up picking up a newer system. I'd still like to fix it though. I'm a bit of a collector and its not generic PC hardware after all. I think its worth keeping running.
Thanks for the tip. I have my eye on eBay.
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
battery-stats-collector
BATTERY-STATS-COLLECTOR(8) System Manager's Manual BATTERY-STATS-COLLECTOR(8)
NAME
battery-stats-collector - Collect statistics about battery charge
SYNOPSIS
battery-stats-collector [option] ...
DESCRIPTION
Does exactly as it says on the tin - it will collect information from the APM subsystem and write it to a log file.
Normally battery-stats-collector will be invoked by the system startup scripts.
OPTIONS
battery-stats follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-').
-V, --version
Show version of battery-stats-collector and exit.
-h, --help
Show summary of options and exit.
-s, --syslog
Log error messages to syslog, rather than stderr. Note that messages regarding invalid command line parameters will still go to
stderr.
-o filename, --output filename
Append statistics to the given file. The default filename is /var/log/battery-stats
-1, --once
Only collect a single sample and exit. The default is to loop continiously.
-i seconds, --interval=seconds
Sampling intervals in seconds. If not specified, stats will be collected every 30 seconds.
-I, --ignore-missing-battery
Keeps quiet about missing batteries. This stops the warnings on stderr/syslog that would otherwise occur when the battery is miss-
ing.
-F samplecount, --flush=samplecount
Flushes data to the logfile every <samplecount> samples. A value of zero turns off flushing altogether. If left unspecified, bat-
tery-stats-collector will assume a value of 1, i.e. flush at every write. Setting the value too low will tend to keep the disk
spinning (and use battery needlessly). Setting the value too high will loose statistics in case of an improper shutdown.
Note that since battery-stats-collector uses the standard Ansi C library, data will still be flushed periodically (regardless of
this setting) once the buffer fills up. The size of the buffer is platform dependent, but 4Kb and 8Kb seem pretty normal.
FILES
/var/log/battery-stats
Default file for writing battery charge samples to.
SEE ALSO
battery-graph(1)
Newer versions of this program may (or may not) be available at http://karl.jorgensen.com/battery-stats
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Karl E. Jorgensen <karl@jorgensen.com>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).
September 18, 2002 BATTERY-STATS-COLLECTOR(8)