Is there a way to tell how many hours a T60 has been in use?

T60/T61 series specific matters only
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JalopyBob
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Is there a way to tell how many hours a T60 has been in use?

#1 Post by JalopyBob » Thu Oct 30, 2008 9:28 pm

And how would I be able to try it?

Thanks

basketb
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#2 Post by basketb » Thu Oct 30, 2008 10:09 pm

To answer the question in your title: I don't think so, but see also this thread: http://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.php?t=63569.

To answer the question in the body of your post: what do you mean by "it"? i.e., what do you want to try?

hellosailor
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#3 Post by hellosailor » Mon Nov 03, 2008 5:41 pm

AFAIK your computer is not a cell phone, there is no "cumulative timer" counting minutes in it.

However, if the hard drive has S.M.A.R.T. monitoring, I believe there is a cumulative hour monitor in the DRIVE firmware and the drive maker should be able to tell you how to interrogate that. If the drive is original, the hours on it should be the same as the hours on the computer.
"The only good silicon life form, is a dead silicon life form." [Will Rogers]
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.

Marin85
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#4 Post by Marin85 » Mon Nov 03, 2008 6:59 pm

Or did you mean for how long your Thinkpad has been on power (i.e. without having been shut down) :?:
IBM Lenovo Z61p | 15.4'' WUXGA | Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 2x 2.16GHz | 4 GB Kingston HyperX | Hitachi 7K500 500 GB + WD 1TB (USB) | ATI Mobility FireGL V5200 | ThinkPad Atheros a/b/g | Analog Devices AD1981HD | Win 7 x86 + ArchLinux 2009.08 x64 (number crunching)

andrey
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#5 Post by andrey » Tue Nov 04, 2008 6:56 am

You can tell how many hours hard drive has been powered on, there are utilities for that. But hard drives can be easily switched.

The best way to tell is by receipt and the remainder of the warranty as those are typically 1 year, 3 years and 5 years.

hellosailor
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#6 Post by hellosailor » Tue Nov 04, 2008 10:34 pm

"The best way to tell is by receipt and"
No way. The receipt, the purchase date, all that tells you is how old the machine is--nothing at all about how many hours that computer was used.

I know salesmen who were given company laptops, that were used 8 hours a say IN the office, plus evenings at home and longer days on the road. And, other folks who were given a laptop (or demanded one) but never really used it in or out of the office. Or just used it when on the road, three or four days a month.

The pruchase date means nothing, except to put a maximum number on how loing it MIGHT have been in use.
"The only good silicon life form, is a dead silicon life form." [Will Rogers]
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.

andrey
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#7 Post by andrey » Tue Nov 04, 2008 10:36 pm

hellosailor wrote:"The best way to tell is by receipt and"
No way. The receipt, the purchase date, all that tells you is how old the machine is--nothing at all about how many hours that computer was used.

I know salesmen who were given company laptops, that were used 8 hours a say IN the office, plus evenings at home and longer days on the road. And, other folks who were given a laptop (or demanded one) but never really used it in or out of the office. Or just used it when on the road, three or four days a month.

The pruchase date means nothing, except to put a maximum number on how loing it MIGHT have been in use.
And that is precisely the concervative approach you need to take when you don't know. :)

hellosailor
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#8 Post by hellosailor » Tue Nov 04, 2008 10:40 pm

And that's why he's trying to find out the actual hours. The question was not "how old is it" but "how long was it actually in use" and that's an entirely different question.
"The only good silicon life form, is a dead silicon life form." [Will Rogers]
-- Harboring a retired T61P with Vista/U/32 and housebreaking a younger W530 foolishly upgraded from Win7/64 to Win10.

andrey
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#9 Post by andrey » Tue Nov 04, 2008 10:42 pm

read my first post :)

If there is a way to find out the time, he should go by hard drive uptime. If that information is not available, manufacture date would be the best next approach.

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