@ronmor:
I have a question about your NiCad to Li battery conversion...well sort of a statement ant a question.
Did you put in a power diode to protect against reverse current? That is, if the circuit sends a charging voltage through when the power is on.
About 6 years back I bought a secondhand notebook. Ex Telstra. I'd been using it, seeing what it could and couldn't do. Then I stepped away for a minute to use the toilet. Just after I got up from the table and made it to the next room, the computer exploded. I'm talking a proper explosion here.
The explosion had enough force to rip chips off the boards, tear through the layers of metal, propel the keyboard across the room, and the keys throughout 2 rooms, and took a chunk out of the table it was sitting on.
After the smoke cleared (an hour or so at least. That smoke was like concentrated evil), inspection revealed that some bright spark replaced the NiCad with a Lithium, and as near as I can tell, it was because the mainboard had tried to charge it.
Hope I haven't scared you.
If you don't mind resetting your clock, I suggest taking out the battery, starting up and _carefully_ check the connector/battery holder for a voltage.
I just don't want this happening to anyone else. Especially with nice bits of hardware :-)