I hear you. I have a 48G emulator on my iPad, use a 48GX at work, keep a 48G where I wind pickups and a 15C here next to the computer. I wanted a garage calculator for woodworking and other projects and loaded up an old Sharp calculator I bought only because it does various unusual calculations useful for coding (HEX, OCTAL, etc.). Used it for one class in college in '89 and then put it away. The 28S and 28C suffer from excessive stress from the cover due to the N-Types under spring pressure. There's not a lot of "meat" to keep the cover in place. Mine isn't broken, but it's a bit dicey. This allows you to dramatically reduce and control that pressure, which is cool. I'll have to admit, I stole the idea from here:
http://www.mpshp.com/hp28s/
If it comes to it, I can fashion the fancy steel cover too. I used 3 each LR44 batteries - didn't put a lot of thought into that part.
Measured the depth of the cavities to determine lengths and matched the relative diameter of an N-Type battery. The LR44 buttons are pretty much that diameter too. I made the bigger "battery" out of cardboard (toilet paper roll

), rolled it tight and then wrapped it in aluminum foil that extends past the ends of the roll a bit and secured with masking tape. Fold the foil on each end to make "battery" ends (hemispherical, basically). The smaller one is pretty much just foil that is a bit smaller than a button battery so it doesn't get stuck in the calculator. I dropped the three buttons in the shorter cavity and put the foil button on top of them. Maybe next time you need batteries you can go this route. I think the buttons are cheapr too.
The 28S was a workhorse for me for many years. Nice to have it back in action.