Interesting Thinkpad 770 - No video
Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2012 2:59 pm
I recently picked up this 770 from someone who said they got it out of a storage bin they bought. Always sketchy buys, since there's no history or description on the thing.
But after getting it, the thing looked pretty solid. It's in decent condition, aside from some marks, gashes on the top lid, and there is one point where it's worn all the way through. But-it's in much better condition than any other 770 I've seen. The Pentium and Windows NT/95 sticker are on there as well, and both look pretty good. Not worn off, or rubbed a lot. The trackpoint is in the worst shape, but hey. Never a shortage of those. There is a Hard Drive, the caddy shows 4GB. The 770 itself is a type 9548, so I assume it's got the 200 MHz Pentium CPU. The PC card slots contained an Ethernet card and 56k modem, and it looks like the original modem had been removed. The Ultrabay contains a DVD-ROM drive, and looking in the RAM bays, there is RAM installed, and it does look like the original RAM. All the ports and fan don't seem to have a lot of dust, so it looks like this 770 has seen very little use.
I don't have any further stats, because plugging it in, and then trying to power it on, the indicators on the calculator-style LCD panel and lights flash, and you hear the "crack" from the speakers and the fan spin up, but then nothing. No video, no beeps. Turning it off powers it off instantly, so I assume it isn't loading Windows.
Taking the Hard Drive out of the caddy and hooking it up to my USB adapter shows the drive to spin up perfectly fine, and it appears to have an install of Windows 98 on it.
What's particularly interesting though is this white sticker on the bottom of the 770, next to the RAM hatch - It says:
"This system unit has been assembled in the United States using authorized componentry to the referenced solution type model under the IBM Authorized assembler program."
Then some numbers and schtuffs I'm too lazy to glance, type, glance, type. Dunno if that means anything important, but I just thought I'd note it.
Is there any common issue or solution to this failure to boot properly? I'd really like to see this 770 working, i'd hate for it to be an absolute dud.
But after getting it, the thing looked pretty solid. It's in decent condition, aside from some marks, gashes on the top lid, and there is one point where it's worn all the way through. But-it's in much better condition than any other 770 I've seen. The Pentium and Windows NT/95 sticker are on there as well, and both look pretty good. Not worn off, or rubbed a lot. The trackpoint is in the worst shape, but hey. Never a shortage of those. There is a Hard Drive, the caddy shows 4GB. The 770 itself is a type 9548, so I assume it's got the 200 MHz Pentium CPU. The PC card slots contained an Ethernet card and 56k modem, and it looks like the original modem had been removed. The Ultrabay contains a DVD-ROM drive, and looking in the RAM bays, there is RAM installed, and it does look like the original RAM. All the ports and fan don't seem to have a lot of dust, so it looks like this 770 has seen very little use.
I don't have any further stats, because plugging it in, and then trying to power it on, the indicators on the calculator-style LCD panel and lights flash, and you hear the "crack" from the speakers and the fan spin up, but then nothing. No video, no beeps. Turning it off powers it off instantly, so I assume it isn't loading Windows.
Taking the Hard Drive out of the caddy and hooking it up to my USB adapter shows the drive to spin up perfectly fine, and it appears to have an install of Windows 98 on it.
What's particularly interesting though is this white sticker on the bottom of the 770, next to the RAM hatch - It says:
"This system unit has been assembled in the United States using authorized componentry to the referenced solution type model under the IBM Authorized assembler program."
Then some numbers and schtuffs I'm too lazy to glance, type, glance, type. Dunno if that means anything important, but I just thought I'd note it.
Is there any common issue or solution to this failure to boot properly? I'd really like to see this 770 working, i'd hate for it to be an absolute dud.