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Christie 2210 ICP Board Battery

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  • Christie 2210 ICP Board Battery

    Anyone have advice on how to change the battery on an (Christie 2210) ICP board?

  • #2
    If it is just the RTC battery, then no special tools are needed. You will have to clear the marriage tamper (and have the credentials to do so). It is the same BR-2330 that all of the Series 2 projectors use.

    Christie will reset the clock on the ICP using the other clocks within the projector.

    If it is the certificate battery...then that is non-changeable as it is soldered in and once that battery goes flat (or removed), the certificate evaporates and the board will have a permanent security tamper that will preclude future DCI shows. This is true for NEC and Barco as well.

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    • #3
      Really appreciate your response. Thank you.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Steve Guttag View Post
        If it is just the RTC battery, then no special tools are needed. You will have to clear the marriage tamper (and have the credentials to do so). It is the same BR-2330 that all of the Series 2 projectors use.

        Christie will reset the clock on the ICP using the other clocks within the projector.

        If it is the certificate battery...then that is non-changeable as it is soldered in and once that battery goes flat (or removed), the certificate evaporates and the board will have a permanent security tamper that will preclude future DCI shows. This is true for NEC and Barco as well.
        Well, if the cert battery does die, you can have a tech come in and replace the ICP with a new one. So the entire projector does not necessarily have to be replaced. Unless you wanted to go to 4k or laser...

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Mark Gulbrandsen View Post

          Well, if the cert battery does die, you can have a tech come in and replace the ICP with a new one. So the entire projector does not necessarily have to be replaced. Unless you wanted to go to 4k or laser...
          At a ridiculous cost The laws regarding non replaceable batteries should apply

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          • #6
            For owners of Barco projectors, that is a big argument in favor of the ICP-D if and when an old school ICP dies: its certificate battery is replaceable (without doing a science experiment involving an external power supply and a soldering iron that carries no guarantee of success).

            As Steve pointed out, if it's just the clock battery, that's easily fixable. Incidentally, I had a customer ask me the other day if he could use a CR2330 rather than a BR: The only BRs he could find on Amazon were in the form of a pack of 15 for $150, and didn't want to buy them, as 14 of them would likely never be used. The answer is yes, but the CR likely won't last as long: geeky details attached.
            Attached Files

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            • #7
              Pretty sure we do not have battery laws like that here, unless it's mentioned in the MFRS warranty. But buying a new ICP is a heck of a lot less money than a new projector for a theater on a budget. One could also buy another used projector, but how much life is left in it's Cert battery? I actually only had one ICP fail out of all the stuff I installed, and it was due to a nearby lightening strike at a drive in.

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