T43 Mother Board went Bad so I REPLACED it, But..PROBLEM :(

T4x series specific matters only
Post Reply
Message
Author
djThinkbad
Freshman Member
Posts: 65
Joined: Thu Jan 10, 2008 2:01 pm
Location: New York , NY

T43 Mother Board went Bad so I REPLACED it, But..PROBLEM :(

#1 Post by djThinkbad » Thu Jan 24, 2008 9:03 am

Hi I have a t43 laptop but I had the usual motherboard flex problem develope. Move the laptop and it would freeze or turn off. So I ordered a new motherboard from ebay and installed it. (BRANDNEW). I started up the latop and everything worked well. I had reformated my hardrive earlier (Access IBM/Factory settings) so I wanted to update the thinkpad software using Software Update. Now here comes the problem before the software tries to update,, it tries to find the s/n and type of the machine. But this new mother board I installed doesnot have the serial number of my old mother board burned into it, or doesnot have a serial number at all for that matter. So right now my laptop has a new mother board everyting is fine, but no serial number or type :cry:

SO I CANNOT INSTALL THE IBM/LENOVO UPDATED SOFTWARE/Drivers :banghead:

MY QUESTION :? :
Is there a way I can transfer the serial number & type of my old mother board into the new? How do I pass on the identity? Thanks!

Brad
**SENIOR** Member
**SENIOR** Member
Posts: 1847
Joined: Tue Mar 29, 2005 12:41 am
Location: Long Island New York

#2 Post by Brad » Thu Jan 24, 2008 9:08 am

You can easily update the model type and serial number.

You simply need a floppy disk, a floppy disk drive and a copy of the hardware maintenance diskette.

This is a very simple process.

You can search for the HMD or send a PM and I can email the image to you. This will allow you to create the bootable diskette.

Brad
Long Island New York
T43p 2669-Q1U, A22p's UTU A21p HXU
Transnote, 770's 8AU, 600, 701CS, 755CD

djThinkbad
Freshman Member
Posts: 65
Joined: Thu Jan 10, 2008 2:01 pm
Location: New York , NY

#3 Post by djThinkbad » Thu Jan 24, 2008 9:13 am

Brad wrote:You can easily update the model type and serial number.

You simply need a floppy disk, a floppy disk drive and a copy of the hardware maintenance diskette.

This is a very simple process.

You can search for the HMD or send a PM and I can email the image to you. This will allow you to create the bootable diskette.

Brad
Thanks for the quick reply Brad!!

But I am not too familiar with HMD and in software in general. (Only a hardware guy.) I would greatly appreciate it if you could give some more info on what to do. Some steps would be nice :)
My email address is ahelpinghand@gmail.com

THANKS :D

ulrich.von.lich
Junior Member
Junior Member
Posts: 488
Joined: Mon Oct 31, 2005 4:18 am

#4 Post by ulrich.von.lich » Thu Jan 24, 2008 9:53 am

Please take look at the thread below:

http://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.ph ... highlight=

I think everything has been clearly said. Please follow the steps of RealBlackStuff. If you still have questions, feel free to ask!

djThinkbad
Freshman Member
Posts: 65
Joined: Thu Jan 10, 2008 2:01 pm
Location: New York , NY

#5 Post by djThinkbad » Thu Jan 24, 2008 11:23 am

ulrich.von.lich wrote:Please take look at the thread below:

http://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.ph ... highlight=

I think everything has been clearly said. Please follow the steps of RealBlackStuff. If you still have questions, feel free to ask!
So if I understand correctly this is only possible if I have an external floppy drive? :?
No CD or usb memory can be used?

ulrich.von.lich
Junior Member
Junior Member
Posts: 488
Joined: Mon Oct 31, 2005 4:18 am

#6 Post by ulrich.von.lich » Thu Jan 24, 2008 11:47 am

That is correct!

However I've heard of some sort of bootable CD, which some people claim doesn't work. IMO, why bother when you can get a USB floppy drive for just a few bucks?

djThinkbad
Freshman Member
Posts: 65
Joined: Thu Jan 10, 2008 2:01 pm
Location: New York , NY

#7 Post by djThinkbad » Thu Jan 24, 2008 12:59 pm

ulrich.von.lich wrote:That is correct!

However I've heard of some sort of bootable CD, which some people claim doesn't work. IMO, why bother when you can get a USB floppy drive for just a few bucks?
Thanks ulrich.von.lich... for your reply! :)

SteveS
Sophomore Member
Posts: 179
Joined: Thu Apr 12, 2007 4:57 pm
Location: Camas, WA

#8 Post by SteveS » Thu Jan 24, 2008 10:47 pm

djThinkbad started this topic writing:
Hi I have a t43 laptop but I had the usual motherboard flex problem develope. Move the laptop and it would freeze or turn off.
I did not think T43 models were suspect to the GPU bonding problem. You don't see any posted "for parts" on e-bay with the classic GPU symptoms, whereas you see lots of T40-42 models in this condition.
Thoughts?
2668G1U

richk
Moderator
Moderator
Posts: 2911
Joined: Sun Jan 01, 2006 3:29 pm
Location: San Francisco, CA

#9 Post by richk » Thu Jan 24, 2008 11:13 pm

T43 with models that start off 2xxx-xxx have AT1 graphics chips and can have the problem, although they are attached better than earlier models. T43 machines with 1xxx-xxx models have intel graphs which is entirely different and does not have the problem.

sjthinkpader
Senior ThinkPadder
Senior ThinkPadder
Posts: 2908
Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:29 pm
Location: San Jose, CA

#10 Post by sjthinkpader » Fri Jan 25, 2008 1:07 am

In the mid-nineties, a small company named Neomagic decided to take the risk and integrated GPU and VRAM on the same chip which was not done on a wide scale before. GPU and RAM were almost always done separately up to that time. The Neomagic approach can be called chip integration. This chip was used in the 600 series and dominated the laptop GPU market for a few years.

IBM decided to use an old chip from S3 in the T20 and the video performance was so so.

When IBM did the A2x, they selected ATi but with separate GPU and RAM. In the late nineties, ATi was working on a single chip GPU/RAM design. But they use a package integration approach using separate GPU and RAM chip then put them on a multi-chip module (MCM). This gave more flexibility in selecting the RAM and faster to market than the Neomagic's chip integration approach. Eventually this allowed ATi to edge out Neomagic in the laptop GPU market.

Up to that time, no large RAM supplier would supply bare chip called Known-Good-Die. But ATi got chips from smaller RAM suppliers in Taiwan. A30/A31 had a lot of space inside so these machines never used the MCM designs. The T4x series being more short on MB space started using these ATi MCM. Clearly they didn't do a good job in engineering a reliable product.
T60p 2623-DDU/UXGA IPS/ATI V5200
T60 2623-DCU/SXGA+ IPS/ATI X1400
T43p 2668-H8U/UXGA IPS/ATI V3200
R50p 1832-NU1/UXGA IPS/ATI FireGL T2
X61t 7762-B6U dual touch IPS/64GB SSD
X32 2673-BU6/32GB SSD
755CDV 9545-GBK Transmissive Projection LCD

Post Reply
  • Similar Topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post

Return to “ThinkPad T4x Series”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 11 guests