Hugely interesting what diversity of Thinkpad gear used to exist

Hugely interesting what diversity of Thinkpad gear used to exist
Nope. Official IBM RAM limit for A31/p - and T30, R40 plus some others - was 1GB since 512MB was the biggest DIMM available at the time of introduction. That was an upgrade at the time though, stock was 256/512MB. Ask me how I know....
Did A31p never come with 2.2Ghz CPU models out of the box? That's kinda disappointing as 2 out of my 3 Latitude C840 came with 2.2Ghz Pentium 4-M! Replaced one with a rare 2.5Ghz CPU, and well I don't think that extra heat output is really worth it. It runs quite a bit hotter than a 2.2Ghz model. The fan has to spin by the time Windows finishes booting, while on the 2.2Ghz one you then have to fire up a browser to make the fan spin!
I think you meant Pentium 4-M lol. Big difference here. Putting a Pentium M inside is basically death sentence to the motherboardmanmanmanman wrote: ↑Tue Nov 03, 2020 1:04 pmThe specs on the A31p are as follows (machine type: 2653-R9G)
- Pentium M CPU @2GHz (the fastest available in these),
- 1600x1200 UXGA FlexView panel (a bit dim on the sides but still more than usable),
- 512mb RAM, can bump it up to 1GB if I find my DDR stash,
- ATI FireGL 7800,
- CD reader in the left Ultrabay.
No. T30 did, and R40 even had a 2.4
Thank you kind sir...
Miine has both of those too as well as the 1600x1200 UXGA FlexView panel, and the ATI FireGL 7800.ajkula66 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 03, 2020 7:48 pmNope. Official IBM RAM limit for A31/p - and T30, R40 plus some others - was 1GB since 512MB was the biggest DIMM available at the time of introduction. That was an upgrade at the time though, stock was 256/512MB. Ask me how I know....![]()
Wi-fi and BT are/were the deciding factor(s).
ALL of them do. That's what makes it a "p" as opposed to a high-end A31
Someone flipped the case/shell? Firewire was standard on the "p" version, not on the standard units.
They all have in and out?
Yes.
Oops, edited that, my mistakekfzhu1229 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 03, 2020 8:58 pmDid A31p never come with 2.2Ghz CPU models out of the box? That's kinda disappointing as 2 out of my 3 Latitude C840 came with 2.2Ghz Pentium 4-M! Replaced one with a rare 2.5Ghz CPU, and well I don't think that extra heat output is really worth it. It runs quite a bit hotter than a 2.2Ghz model. The fan has to spin by the time Windows finishes booting, while on the 2.2Ghz one you then have to fire up a browser to make the fan spin!
And well yes you can upgrade beyond the official limits to 2GB easily, but I personally found 1GB DDR sticks to heat up a LOT (especially if you go for off brand ones), and that's just gonna accelerate the failure of the RAM slots.I think you meant Pentium 4-M lol. Big difference here. Putting a Pentium M inside is basically death sentence to the motherboardmanmanmanman wrote: ↑Tue Nov 03, 2020 1:04 pmThe specs on the A31p are as follows (machine type: 2653-R9G)
- Pentium M CPU @2GHz (the fastest available in these),
- 1600x1200 UXGA FlexView panel (a bit dim on the sides but still more than usable),
- 512mb RAM, can bump it up to 1GB if I find my DDR stash,
- ATI FireGL 7800,
- CD reader in the left Ultrabay.![]()
Have the Flexview panel not suffered from backlight failure just yet? That's kinda rare in my opinion. I've stumbled across 4 of these panels before and every single one of them have a dead backlight that I had to replace.
You would be correct, the R line continued into the xx00 series (R500, R400), while the last of the A series was the A31p (later "revived" with the A475, AMD version of the T470).
Well I guess here I have a different experience yet again... It seems like I didn't exactly have any motherboard flex with my A30p and A31p laptops.
Only the "p" models were considered workstations. They always sported higher-end screens - even before FlexView was introduced on A30p - and better graphic chips.
T series replaced 600 as "bread and butter" business laptop that was considered to be the industry standard. Back in the day if you walked into a serious business of any kind T2x machines were everywhere.
How interchangable were the m models to the p models in terms of parts?ajkula66 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 04, 2020 5:23 pmThe rest of A range was a mix and match with a lot of low-end Celeron powered systems, some of them with 800x600 LCDs. A22m was one of the first - if not the very first - ThinkPads to offer integrated wireless as an option on very few select configurations. For the most part they were heavy and bulky and mid-spec'd models were priced lower than their T2x counterparts. But the "p" units were cream of the IBM crop, no questions asked.
It's been many years since I've last touched an A22m but my recollection is that as long as you were in the same frame (12" vs. 14" vs. 15") things worked out OK.
If you remember, you mean that you cannot swap the motherboard on a 12.1" A2xm for example for an A2xp one, or to replace the lid assembly with a 15" one?
By long day you meant the election chaos inside a swing state like PA?
No sir.
How did you get it to work independently under XP? In my memory it would also enable the numpad on the keyboard.Saucey wrote: ↑Tue Nov 10, 2020 12:27 pmMy only misfortune with the numpad is that I couldn't figure out how to configure the system to work "automatically" under Linux Mint when I got my numpad years back. I would have to enable the numberpad keys, but that would enable the ones on the keyboard as well. Otherwise it would use the directional buttons & page up/down fuctions.
Went back to install XP Black Edition to get the numpad to "work again".
It's been so long I've forgotten. I think it worked out of the box, which is why I was frustrated with Linux.
Doubt it. The numeric keypad was an extremely niche product from what I can see, so I don't quite see a reason for others to follow.
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