R40 MiniPCI compatibility - any A/B/G or B/G cards supported
R40 MiniPCI compatibility - any A/B/G or B/G cards supported
I checked out the latest R40 bios update summary of changes and it looks like one of the IBM Thinkpad b/g cards is now supported. I guess my question is whether anyone knows if any of the a/b/g cards from IBM work with the R40.
I'll be sending off an email to IBM to ask if they carry anything but it'll likely be super expensive (1/2 the price of my laptop). And I just wondered if anyone had any experience with other cards that "just work".
The Intel 2200BG card I was using with the no-1802 hack was fine, but I have a feeling that it was causing some of the weird issues I was having with the laptop crashing on resume and starting up in the morning. I'm doubting that it would be a driver issue since I had the latest drivers for it. But you never know.
I'm going to run a few more test for a couple days with the old Cisco Aironet card and see if the crashes go away.
I'll be sending off an email to IBM to ask if they carry anything but it'll likely be super expensive (1/2 the price of my laptop). And I just wondered if anyone had any experience with other cards that "just work".
The Intel 2200BG card I was using with the no-1802 hack was fine, but I have a feeling that it was causing some of the weird issues I was having with the laptop crashing on resume and starting up in the morning. I'm doubting that it would be a driver issue since I had the latest drivers for it. But you never know.
I'm going to run a few more test for a couple days with the old Cisco Aironet card and see if the crashes go away.
[insert witty contrived signature here]
-
Terrahawk
- Junior Member

- Posts: 430
- Joined: Wed Sep 20, 2006 12:51 am
- Location: Hamilton, New Zealand
- Contact:
Check out these threads:
http://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.php?t=31379
http://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.ph ... ght=no1802
I have an IBM Thinkpad 11a/b/g Mini-PCI Adapter II in my R40.
http://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.php?t=31379
http://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.ph ... ght=no1802
I have an IBM Thinkpad 11a/b/g Mini-PCI Adapter II in my R40.
Geoff.
T60P 2007-8JM / T60 1951-A35 / Z60M 2531-E9M / Tablet 1838-23M / Tablet 2 3679-27M
T410 2522-CTO / X301 2776-A17 / X201 3680-FAG / T420 4180-AQ3
T60P 2007-8JM / T60 1951-A35 / Z60M 2531-E9M / Tablet 1838-23M / Tablet 2 3679-27M
T410 2522-CTO / X301 2776-A17 / X201 3680-FAG / T420 4180-AQ3
Does the wireless light and Fn+F5 work even though you had to do the 1802 hack.I bought the 73P4301 ThinkPad 11a/b/g Wireless LAN Mini-PCI Adapter II card and have since installed it. The sales folks told me it was compatible with my R40 but I got the 1802 error.
[insert witty contrived signature here]
Actually it looks like one of the IBM parts does in fact use an Intel 2200BG.
I'm going to try to hack the eeprom to try to get the IBM drivers to recognize it as an IBM card, thus letting me use the Fn+F5 and wireless light
If this works, this might be a feasible solution to getting your wireless cards to use the wireless light and Fn+F5, along with the 1802 hack.
I'm going to try to hack the eeprom to try to get the IBM drivers to recognize it as an IBM card, thus letting me use the Fn+F5 and wireless light
If this works, this might be a feasible solution to getting your wireless cards to use the wireless light and Fn+F5, along with the 1802 hack.
[insert witty contrived signature here]
-
Terrahawk
- Junior Member

- Posts: 430
- Joined: Wed Sep 20, 2006 12:51 am
- Location: Hamilton, New Zealand
- Contact:
I previously had a generic Atheros chipset card, and I tried to get the LED and Fn+F5 functionality to work properly. The LED is more than just a driver thing - the hardware has to support it too. There is a block of four GPIO pins on the Mini-PCI card and one of them will be wired to the radio enable/disable line. If it does not correspond to IBM's wiring, interesting things can happen. I hacked the generic Atheros drivers to enable the LED but that caused my R40 to instantly lock up.
I downloaded the Mini-PCI spec and found that the wireless on/off pin that was being driven by the generic Atheros driver was different to the one reserved in the spec to turn off wireless cards. Having no circuit diagrams or anything like that, it was somewhat confusing and my conclusions are rather vague at best, but I found that yeah, you need a combination of the right hardware and a proper driver to make the LED and Fn+F5 functionality work.
Hence, I decided to just front up for a genuine IBM card (which *still* required the no-1802 hack) but it appears that they will swap it for an IBM 11a/b/g Mini PCI I card, which I hear does work properly. I don't think I'll bother though.
I downloaded the Mini-PCI spec and found that the wireless on/off pin that was being driven by the generic Atheros driver was different to the one reserved in the spec to turn off wireless cards. Having no circuit diagrams or anything like that, it was somewhat confusing and my conclusions are rather vague at best, but I found that yeah, you need a combination of the right hardware and a proper driver to make the LED and Fn+F5 functionality work.
Hence, I decided to just front up for a genuine IBM card (which *still* required the no-1802 hack) but it appears that they will swap it for an IBM 11a/b/g Mini PCI I card, which I hear does work properly. I don't think I'll bother though.
Geoff.
T60P 2007-8JM / T60 1951-A35 / Z60M 2531-E9M / Tablet 1838-23M / Tablet 2 3679-27M
T410 2522-CTO / X301 2776-A17 / X201 3680-FAG / T420 4180-AQ3
T60P 2007-8JM / T60 1951-A35 / Z60M 2531-E9M / Tablet 1838-23M / Tablet 2 3679-27M
T410 2522-CTO / X301 2776-A17 / X201 3680-FAG / T420 4180-AQ3
Yep. Sorta came to the same conclusion a few hours ago before heading to bed too 
With the Intel 2200BG card, you can use ethtool in linux to modify some parts of the eeprom to change the subvendor id so that the card is detected as a geniune IBM part. But as far as I could see they weren't able to get the LED to function, again probably a subtle difference between the two cards. I might end up doing it anyway just so I don't need to rely on the 1802 hack in case the CMOS battery dies or I update the firmware.
But I guess unless I find a cheap IBM part that supports 802.11g I'll be using my $20 2200BG card for now.. though I really liked the Fn+F5 and LED!
With the Intel 2200BG card, you can use ethtool in linux to modify some parts of the eeprom to change the subvendor id so that the card is detected as a geniune IBM part. But as far as I could see they weren't able to get the LED to function, again probably a subtle difference between the two cards. I might end up doing it anyway just so I don't need to rely on the 1802 hack in case the CMOS battery dies or I update the firmware.
But I guess unless I find a cheap IBM part that supports 802.11g I'll be using my $20 2200BG card for now.. though I really liked the Fn+F5 and LED!
[insert witty contrived signature here]
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 5 Replies
- 641 Views
-
Last post by intelfx
Fri Jan 13, 2017 9:28 pm
-
-
Broadcom BCM943222 and BCM43222 802.11n WiFi cards for T4x
by dandreye » Wed Jan 04, 2017 2:48 pm » in ThinkPad T4x Series - 5 Replies
- 2078 Views
-
Last post by dandreye
Sat Jan 21, 2017 1:17 pm
-
-
-
Cheap 32MB DRAM cards for TP755/750/360, etc
by goldeneagle » Thu Jan 12, 2017 10:28 pm » in ThinkPad Legacy Hardware - 3 Replies
- 1501 Views
-
Last post by goldeneagle
Fri Feb 24, 2017 4:03 am
-
-
-
WTB: PCMCIA Sound Cards with SB emulation
by jeffbaichina » Wed Jan 25, 2017 11:25 am » in Marketplace - Forum Members only - 0 Replies
- 252 Views
-
Last post by jeffbaichina
Wed Jan 25, 2017 11:25 am
-
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 13 guests



