T30 or T40
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phoenix_one
- Posts: 33
- Joined: Sat May 28, 2005 8:05 pm
- Location: Philadelphia, PA
T30 or T40
I just acquired a T30 2366-66U for my wife and I am extremely satisfied with it.
I am thinking of getting a ThinkPad for me and I am debating wether to get another T30 (2.0GHz or higher) or go with a lower speed T40.
There both Pentium 4m. The only main difference as far as I know is the Centrino Technology, USB 2.0 and wireless capability.
For example for the price of a T30 2.0Ghz , I can get a T40 1.5 or 1.6Ghz roughly same features.
Thank You for your thoughts.
I am thinking of getting a ThinkPad for me and I am debating wether to get another T30 (2.0GHz or higher) or go with a lower speed T40.
There both Pentium 4m. The only main difference as far as I know is the Centrino Technology, USB 2.0 and wireless capability.
For example for the price of a T30 2.0Ghz , I can get a T40 1.5 or 1.6Ghz roughly same features.
Thank You for your thoughts.
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K. Eng
- Moderator Emeritus

- Posts: 1946
- Joined: Thu Apr 15, 2004 7:10 am
- Location: Pennsylvania, United States
The T30 and T40 actually use different processors. The T30 uses a Pentium 4-M, which is a low power version of the desktop Pentium 4. The T40 uses a Pentium M, which is a completely different processor more related to the Pentium III-M.
A Pentium M at 1.6 GHz will generally perform as well as a Pentium 4-M at 2.4 GHz.
I'd say get the T40. It's much lighter to carry around.
A Pentium M at 1.6 GHz will generally perform as well as a Pentium 4-M at 2.4 GHz.
I'd say get the T40. It's much lighter to carry around.
Homebuilt PC: AMD Athlon XP (Barton) @ 1.47 GHz; nForce2 Ultra; 1GB RAM; 80GB HDD @ 7200RPM; ATI Radeon 9600; Integrated everything else!
If a T30 has higher Mhz rating than a T40, my guess is that the T30 is a P4 M, and not a Pentium M.
The Pentium M (T40) should perform noticeably better. There used to be a time when laptops were doomed to be slower than desktops (with the same clock frequency), however the Pentium M changed that. I have read in different places that a Pentium M with 1.7 GHz would in average perform as well as a Pentium 4 with a 2 Ghz CPU or faster.
The T40 will have better resale value as well (make sure you take care of it).Also, the T40 is much slimmer than the T30 (I don't own a T30 but I own a T23, and they seem to have approximately the same profile).
To tell you the truth, I would never get a T30. If you are satisfied with the performance of the T30, then get a refurbished T23 (buy directly from IBM Certified Used stock, you can send it back within 7 days if you are not satisfied, you just pay for the shipping). If you want more performance, go for the T40.
I hope that helped you.
Edit: I had the Pentium M confused with the Pentium 4 M, and the Pentium 4 M confused with the Pentium 4
The Pentium M (T40) should perform noticeably better. There used to be a time when laptops were doomed to be slower than desktops (with the same clock frequency), however the Pentium M changed that. I have read in different places that a Pentium M with 1.7 GHz would in average perform as well as a Pentium 4 with a 2 Ghz CPU or faster.
The T40 will have better resale value as well (make sure you take care of it).Also, the T40 is much slimmer than the T30 (I don't own a T30 but I own a T23, and they seem to have approximately the same profile).
To tell you the truth, I would never get a T30. If you are satisfied with the performance of the T30, then get a refurbished T23 (buy directly from IBM Certified Used stock, you can send it back within 7 days if you are not satisfied, you just pay for the shipping). If you want more performance, go for the T40.
I hope that helped you.
Edit: I had the Pentium M confused with the Pentium 4 M, and the Pentium 4 M confused with the Pentium 4
T-23 (2647-2MU)
1.13 Ghz
1Gb RAM
60 Gb 5400 HD
1.13 Ghz
1Gb RAM
60 Gb 5400 HD
I have a friend with a Dell X300 that has a PM 1.4ghz w/2MB L2 cache, and that thing runs circles around his P4 2.8ghz desktop. The L2 cache makes all the difference in the world.
Almost all of the standard P4 cpu's up until recently, with the Extreme Editions, only had 512k L2 cache. The LGA775 socket intro'd P4's with 1MB L2 cache, but that still hinders performance.
And to think how far we've come from the Celeron's with their 128k L2 cache!
Almost all of the standard P4 cpu's up until recently, with the Extreme Editions, only had 512k L2 cache. The LGA775 socket intro'd P4's with 1MB L2 cache, but that still hinders performance.
And to think how far we've come from the Celeron's with their 128k L2 cache!
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phoenix_one
- Posts: 33
- Joined: Sat May 28, 2005 8:05 pm
- Location: Philadelphia, PA
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K. Eng
- Moderator Emeritus

- Posts: 1946
- Joined: Thu Apr 15, 2004 7:10 am
- Location: Pennsylvania, United States
It's not so much the size of the cache, but the speed of the cache that makes the difference. I can't remember the exact numbers, but the latency in nanoseconds for the Pentium M's L2 cache is much much lower than in the Prescott Pentium 4.
JHaislet wrote: Almost all of the standard P4 cpu's up until recently, with the Extreme Editions, only had 512k L2 cache. The LGA775 socket intro'd P4's with 1MB L2 cache, but that still hinders performance.
Homebuilt PC: AMD Athlon XP (Barton) @ 1.47 GHz; nForce2 Ultra; 1GB RAM; 80GB HDD @ 7200RPM; ATI Radeon 9600; Integrated everything else!
I had a T30 with a P4 (M) 2.0 GHz processor and 768 Mb of ram. I changed to a T41 with a PM 1.4 GHz processor and 768 Mb of ram. I asked the same question about speed over a year ago, made the change, and found the 1.4 GHz PM faster than the P4 (M). Now the T41 is a 1.8 GHz Dothan and it is very fast. I think you will be please with the T40.
... JD Hurst
... JD Hurst
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K. Eng
- Moderator Emeritus

- Posts: 1946
- Joined: Thu Apr 15, 2004 7:10 am
- Location: Pennsylvania, United States
As far as I know, that is correct. What some people have done is purchased aftermarket boxed processors from Newegg or other online retailers and upgraded their ThinkPads.
RS_003 wrote:There where no dothans in the T41's?? right?
Homebuilt PC: AMD Athlon XP (Barton) @ 1.47 GHz; nForce2 Ultra; 1GB RAM; 80GB HDD @ 7200RPM; ATI Radeon 9600; Integrated everything else!
is it difficult? and does it have to be the chip from IBM, or any dothan chip?jdhurst wrote:I purchased the Dothan from a member here and did the upgrade myself. Very pleased with the results. ... JD Hurst
(T40 2373-7CU here)
--<<(({{[[Ben Plaut]]}}))>>--
If the only tool you have is a hammer,
Every problem begins to look like a nail
If the only tool you have is a hammer,
Every problem begins to look like a nail
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