hellosailor wrote:AFAIK the activation is not ties to a particular motherboard, but rather to a particular SERIES of motherboard, actually to a particular BIOS string that identifies the motherboard TYPE.
Problems you may find are that if the video systems are different, the OS may not boot in the new machine, or it may boot to safe mode or require a repair/driver reinstallation. If the hardware at all levels is completely the same--no problem. As you add each variation in each subsystem--more likely to have a problem.
Well I went ahead and reverse cloned my T61's WinXP 7200 RPM HDD (15.4" WS WSXGA+), including it's OEM WinXP Service Partition, onto to my recently aquired T61p's 7200 RPM HDD (also 15.4" WS WSXGA+). The T61p came with Vista Business so I remembered to first make a set of Vista Recovery Disks before wiping out all of the T61p's partitions during the cloning operation with Acronis TI v11.
The T61p with its newly cloned WinXP HDD worked great and everything was identical to my T61 in terms of useability after the clone/swap. Both units are nearly identically configured except for the Nvidia NVS 140M versus the FX 570M video cards and different wireless network cards (Intel a/b/g versus Intel AGN). Fortunately, it seems that the different components still use the same drivers and software.
For 800 smackers, I'm very satisfied with the performance boost experienced on this mint 4 month old T61p (built in Aug 2008) ...... cost me less than half of what I priced one out new last August. It nearly triples my T61's 3DMark06 score (1669 vs 4334 .... both running WinXP) and that's with only a single 2gb memory module running in async mode while the pair of 1gb modules in the T61 are sprinting in sync mode.
And yet, it looks and phyically feels exactly the same as my T61 (just the way I had hoped) ........ except everything seems to run much faster
