Anyone ever own or know anything about IBM Thinkpads? I just got a 760ED thinkpad. The problem is – I didn’t know that you have to switch out the 3 1/2inch floppy for the CDrom drive. So, I have a few questions: 1) Is there any site that’ll show you the proper way to do it? and 2) Is there a site that has the drivers for the 4x IBM cdrom that goes with it?
and what else should I know about my thinkpad that might be quirky?
I have an IBM Thinkpar T20 from 2000…and I hate it. Part of it is that the sottware I have to run on it is no good on a laptop (math and CAD software for school. It overheats and has memory issues.)
I don’t know about yours, but to switch out the Ultrabay in mine, there is a little tab next to the drive, very small. I flick it, and a bigger tab flips out, and a message on the screen says “please wait”, then it tells you can change the drive, and you pull on the large tab, the drive comes out, you put the new on in, push in the big tab, and you’re good to go. But NEVER pull out the drive until it tells you to, otherwise you need a hard reboot (which on my laptop requires unplugging and taking out the battery.)
I love my T30 laptop. It’s a 1.8ghz and instead of dragging my PC to LAN parties I drag it instead.
Besides that, it does everything pretty well. I’ve never had a problem with it. The only ‘quirky’ thing I’ve found about it is that I need my docking station to use my USB mouse.
Former 760 owner here, I think I found the one you want
The trick is opening the keyboard. I think the opening latches are on the sides of the machine, and you pull forward, if you push them towards the back of the machine, it should release the keyboard and let you flip it up towards the LCD screen. Don’t force it, it should come up VERY easily.
There also is a plastic insert in place on the side of the box to accept the shape of the 3.5" drive, this must be removed when you put in the CD drive, which is bigger. I can’t recall if you need to unlatch it to get the 3.5" drive in and out, you’ll just have to experiment.
I always thought that was a cute design on the older Thinkpads. Instead of access doors all over the place, just make the keyboard removable and have everything accessible in bays below it.
Having dealt with a number of older Tthinkpads with this design I’d almost consider it a design flaw, as the spring loaded side latches on these units are extremely prone to breaking and failure over time.
Re the “nerd’s” opinion I’ve played with a lot of different notebooks and IBM Thinkpads are usually regarded as among the sleekest, most desired, most expensive and best constructed notebooks. Having dis-assembled a number of units down to the component level (IMO) Thinkpads sold over the last 5 -6 years or so are generally a distinct level above most other units in terms of the quality of internal and external construction vs the competition.
I think I’ve got the switching of drives down pat… only thing is, when I put the CDrom drive in, and turn the computer on, it gets to a screen in DOS that looks like a crude ascii animation of asking for a disk to be put in the 3 1/2 inch floppy drive that I swapped out for the CDrom. I hit F1 (since it indicates you can hit that to continue) and I get an error message of sorts… (just a bunch of random numbers)