Hi,
Only my second post, I've been lurking as a guest for a while but thought I would wait until I had something to say.
Anyway I purchased one of these a while back from a UK seller. On inserting the battery I was greeted by a burning smell and rapidly heating battery. I contacted the seller and apparently I was one of several. After receiving a refund threw it into a dark corner. A few weeks later I decided to investigate. It was immediately clear that the SOT223 3V regulator on the board was blown and the source of the smell. No idea why, it should have been well within voltage rating and I hadn't reversed the battery. Probably a case of 'contents not matching the label'. Curiously the power switch was wired AFTER the regulator too, meaning low continuous quiescent drain on the battery.
I removed the regulator and bridged the footprint and powered the rest of the circuit from a bench supply and found that it was quite happy. What's more it was quite happy down to about 1.6V, ie. end voltage of a pair of 1.5V cells, when the low battery indicator came on! There was no change in display over the normal expected voltage range.
I have no idea of the logic of powering a chip designed for 3V operation from a 9V battery via a non-zero cost regulator - I wondered if it was a case size constraint, but no - a wire ended double AAA holder fits perfectly in the battery compartment, with sufficient space for a bit of foam too. Amazon reviews say battery life is long, but AAA cells are cheaper and much higher capacity. Wasting the best part of 6V from a low capacity 9V battery is just plain silly.
Hopefully this will be helpful to others looking for longest possible runtime. BTW a small section of plastic cut from a blister pack sandwiches nicely inside the front of the case to protect the otherwise bare LCD.
Hi Chris, I realise I'm responding to an almost 7 year old post but I thought you might like an update on the latest versions being sold in 2021/2022.

I was looking at these K-type thermometers the end of January and noticed they had replaced the on/off slide switch with a momentary press on/off button and were now using a 2xAAA cell battery in place of the more expensive 9v block battery (PP3) so ordered one from the cheapest ebay seller (a Chinaman, of course!).
This was as pictured (red push button and 2xAAA cell battery holder) but was DoA (PM me for details

). I got a refund and tried again. The second working unit was also as pictured and AAA cell powered. Out of curiosity, I measured the consumption and was amazed to see that it only drew 0.35mA (after an initial startup surge of just over a mA for a second or three).
I then decided to buy another one from another seller offering the "or best offer" option and got it a little cheaper. When it arrived, I was a little dismayed to see that it used the slide switch rather than the red on/off button of the current models. However, it also used a 2xAAA battery pack and likewise drew a mere 0.35mA.
The first working one with the push button had the seemingly unselectable auto-shut off time out annoyance (10 or 15 minutes) which the second slide switch version hadn't been cursed with. After some calibration testing with my best cheap thermocouple (mini-K plug upgraded to a chromel/alumel pinned plug), this proved to be the most accurate of the two meters (within 0.1K of melting ice and showing 99.9 deg C in boiling tapwater at an absolute barometric pressure of 1017mBar suggesting an error of about -0.3 deg C at this calibration point). Almost certainly just a matter of "pure dumb luck" rather than 'by design'.

By using a shorting link to see what these meters thought their reference temperatures were, the second (good) one matched to within .2 deg C of what the two room thermometers were showing under stable early morning room temperature conditions (the only time they'll agree to within 0.3K of each other, largely due to vastly different thermal time constants). The first working one under-reads by about 2K (shorted input or compared using the same thermocouple) - I haven't bothered to test that one with melting ice and boiling water.
Today, I decided to open the DoA meter to see whether there might be some way to recalibrate these meters and with a 5.1M resistor and a 100K with a 1K on the board alongside of the mystery CoB, I suspect there well may be a means to adjust the high gain settings involved to adjust for the 40.7uV/K required for temperatures at the high end and just possibly also a means to adjust the reference offset to get an accurate melting ice value within 0.1K.
However, I've only opened up the DoA unit so far. I'll need to open up the working push button (sacrificial) unit to test whether they can be recalibrated with subtle changes of resistor values. Anyone else thinking of doing the same experiment, please be aware that the tiny screws holding the board against the display panel's zebra stripe have been tightened to breaking point and care should be taken when reassembling it to clean any plastic off the threads before carefully trying to avoid cutting a fresh thread into what remains of the plastic.
IOW, turn those self tapping screws anti-clockwise with minimal pressure to detect when it (hopefully) drops into engagement with the existing thread. Don't be like one of those clumsy klutzes that do such teardown videos which make me wince every time I see them blundering straight into tightening self tapping screws back into already damaged plastic without any attempt to engage what remains of the original thread

Just prior to checking out the DoA unit, I'd been taking a closer look at the display during its short switch on initialisation sequence to see if I could spot any interesting but inaccessible options such as Celsius/Fahrenheit temperature scales (it defaults, sensibly imo, to Celsius) and some means of disabling the annoying auto-shut off feature (at 0.35mA and a couple of cheap alkaline AAA cells, totally superfluous).
After experimenting with button press sequences, I eventually discovered how to disable that annoying auto-shut off feature. This proved to be a remarkably simple process, just a matter of the usual momentary press and wait for it to complete its initialisation and declutter the screen before pressing and holding the button down until the timer icon, top left vanishes after about 5 or 6 seconds. Useful to know for anyone who has bought any of these late version models.
Getting back to the possibility of displaying temperature in Fahrenheit units (why would anyone want to inflict this on themselves?), from my examination of the DoA's circuit board, there seems to be a solder blob jumper option for this choice of temperature scale (currently un-blobbed).
There's also another jumper close by marked "SW", presumably to handle the difference between a momentary button press and a permanent on state from a slide switch which might also offer a means to disable the auto-shut off feature by default.

Interestingly, there seems to be another set of connector holes which look like a PT100 or PT1000 or even a 3 wire PT100 sensor option (the power on display test hints at such a possibility).

One other remaining 'interesting' feature is the board version apparently being at Rev1. even though it is totally different to the early and later improved slide switch versions. It seems so far to date, that there are at least 3 different versions that have been or are being sold (quite possibly even more).
I've attached a couple of photos each of the two variants that I acquired (the DoA unit is exactly the same Rev 1. as the working Rev1. unit btw) for comparison against other internet published images of this meter's PCB.