25:04 it's interesting to see they used a monochrome LCD in this thing.. In some of the really old laptops I've owned, there was an orange-on-black flatscreen plasma on it, the contrast was amazing!
***** Haha take a look at Plasma_display on wikipedia and go to 1983. There they explicitly mention the orange and black style. I had one on a really old Compaq 80386 (google tells me it was the Portable III). There was even a windows 3.1 driver for it. ;) Wow! "The monochrome plasma video display was co-invented in 1964 at the University of Illinois by Donald Bitzer, H. Gene Slottow and Robert Willson for the PLATO Computer System." That's from another site. I would post a link, but the chances are you'd never see my comment due to the spam filter.
***** The orange was indeed plasma. I had a 80286 with that. Slow as hack but did what it needed to do. though not my oldest as that was a 8088 lcd. they mad a desktop on your lap when you had that closed
FunnyHacks They certainly did use a lot of power! When I said "laptop", I meant a computer you could potentially carry around (it had a carry strap and everything), though it didn't actually have an inbuilt battery, and it weighed an absolute ton. I still feel bad for tossing it away a couple years ago in a big clean-up :( , it had Windows 3.1 and working harddrive and working everything in it, dual floppy drive, ISA extension slots with an old modem in it. shit I feel bad for tossing it away, got it for like 5$ at an early computer convention. You'd probably have to shell it >100$ these days to get one of those
for those who don't know, Daewoo make everything from big tanker ships and dock cranes to computer hardware, consumer electronics and yes, cars. (the car manufacturing part was bought by GM lots of years ago)
This took me back 23 years to when I was in an IT Helpdesk and talking customers through how to "run auto config from their Ref Disk". Has brought back lots of memories. Thanks for posting
1991 even monochrome a 640x480 lcd screen is an amazing feat of technology, the first mainstream lcd color screens in the late 90s and early 200s were 640x480, if you wanted higher there was a massive premium in 98.
yep I remember my first 15in LCD KDS monitor back in the early 2000's was close too $500, and I think it was limited to something like 1024x768 screen rez with only VGA input, and speakers on it where so dinky you could barely hear them lol! But that was state of the art indeed.
I was working designing flat screen LCD's and systems at Keycorp in 1994. They were 640 x 480 and 800x600 colour, but dead pixels were an accepted thing in production units back then! Sampling VGA analog output and converting to LCD was REALLY HARD back then, even at 640x480, and it took a whole box full of tricks to accomplish. We tried to cram at that into the monitor which was a big deal at the time. Now it's just a single chip and we don't think twice about plugging our LCD monitor into an analog VGA port and get perfect full HD picture.
Artūrs Savickis i had a thinkpad in 2000 that had a 640x480 (it was around there, strange res and it has been a long time) color display. this was around the time that active matrix was starting to become all the rage (my thinkpad didn't have it) but i do remember from that time that in laptops the most expensive part and the thing that you were really buying was the display. to say the least if you had an lcd at 1024x768 in 2000 you likely spent more than 500 bucks on it, while at the same time you could get a crt that could handle more than your video card could at nearly half the price. crt's though are kinda unfair, my secondary monitor is a relatively cheap crt from 2005 and i have it running at 1920x1440 right now just so it matches the width of my primary (hd lcd) monitor which makes tossing my tv to it easier. unless it is faking it internally it is actually managing to run that resolution, i've looked through settings back and forth and i can't figure out how the hell it manages it, even looking up close there is only a bit of blur and i think i could fix that if i popped the back off and tweaked the right pot.
Dave, thanks so much for this! My first engineering job was at Western Digital, where I designed the SRAM and worked on the real time clock and battery detector circuitry in the 7620/7621. I also did some of the physical layout and touched parts of the 7610. That was an exciting time to be able to design so much of what went into this laptop for IBM. So this is very near and dear to me, bringing back so many memories!
EEVblog Thank you for doing what you're doing. I've learned so much from you and have been quite entertained at the same time. Smiley face. Keep it going!
Great videos, by the way. I had a computer shop back in late 90s up to 2001. I would buy surplus computer equipment some stuff good and other stuff not. We would spend hours dissecting the stuff that was not good, we had a blast. You must have so much fun doing what you do. Thanks for taking the time to share with us what you do....
This computer was engineered by IBM Japan, and it actually came out later than expected, in 1992. It was IBM's first laptop, and it retailed for US$5,000.
Wow, a 387 coprocessor, those things were hard to find about a decade ago, they must be super rare by now. It's interesting that it has 2MB of system RAM. Most PC systems back then only had 1MB, before extended memory that is.
This has been one of the most exciting EEVblog videos I've ever seen. I also think that the keyboards were MUCH better before. Dave: Have you ever typed in a IBM model M?
Sorry very late on this, but I just found it(and am really enjoying your channel!) Fun Fact, IBM spent over 1 million dollars(US) on just keyboard "feel", I bought myself 3 of them for my computers back in the day cause you couldn't find any manufacturer that even came close to the feel of the IBM keyboard. Man, I miss those days...
Just to be clear for the "noobies" watching this: The computer didn't normally come up with Basic. IBM PC's normally tried to boot from floppy first, then from hard disk, and if all of those failed, they would revert back to "cassette basic". No IBM computer had a cassette port except the first IBM PC's (they removed the port on the PC/XT) so it was totally useless: you couldn't save or load programs to/from floppy drives from cassette basic. The only reason it was still there in every IBM PC after 1982 was that the "BASICA" interpreter that was included with DOS (which WAS capable of using the floppy and hard disk) relied on the routines in the ROM to do its work. Back then, computers didn't have fancy BIOS user interfaces; I think the original PC BIOS was 16 kilobytes so no space for error messages. IBM used a scheme of error messages where the last two digits were the error code and the digits in front of it were the device that was causing the error. 1=motherboard, 2=memory, 3=keyboard, 6=floppy, 17=hard disk etc. www.bioscentral.com/misc/ibmdiag.htm contains a list of the errors from the BIOS and also the various diagnostic diskettes for all the IBM models.
It's amazing on how far technology has come. These days you get all that in the size of a Watch. Computers back then where monstrous now they're just tiny little things you can throw in any bag and forget it's there.
Love your key tapping obsession. The sound gives an insight to feel..a high Q hard plastic plunk with smooth instant action and light foam damping with a 0.3mm 6 turn high tensile return spring...Oh no I was listening to my granny taking her teeth out.
Oooh. I can hear that keyboard. I know that sound. No wonder you love it so much. I had a PS/1 and used a bunch of PS/2s. I don't recall what their keyboard was like.
The keyboards that came with the early IBM PC's, - say 1985, - were superb. The gold anodized cross lever contacts and the tactile response was fantastic. You always knew if your finger depressing the button had come home. These days, you have to look at the display now and then to be sure that all the buttons you have pushed has actually been detected. BUH!
I see these come up on ebay from time to time and have been tempted to pull the trigger on one. I just have too many retro project computers already. This one is in beautiful shape!
Hey Dave, Daewoo still make cars under the Chevrolet brand now. Their car factories were purchased by General Motors in the early 2000's or even a bit earlier and their cars were rebadged in '04 or '05. They still make te same style of cars and have quite a bit of success in Europe.
I remember the LCD's on those things had rely slow update intervall so if you changed from black to white screen you could see a wave of pixels changing on the screen, thanks for the video Dave :)
I was 8 or 9 when these computers appeared. I remember being taught about the ultra fast ALU and later on, that it was incorporated into the CPU. It would be nice if you could do a little episode on various techniques of storing data or creating your own ALU (at least adding and subtracting/2's complement) as the history is just mind boggling. I think that's the main gap that when bridged, can get you from logic gates to the microprocessor. Nowadays, these processors have this black magic aura around them and it's a shame that we just take them for granted. I'd also be interested in how you get to above 25-50mhz hacker style (no expensive ARM cpus). PS: I was a happy coder until I discovered this blog. In less then 2 months afterwards, I had my house full of plastic boxes and pieces and had read through everything I could find. Now I look at assembly language as that high level decadent bourgeois luxury that I just don't have. A coder's take on what you can achieve with such low level insight is out of this world. Best hobby I could ever find!
The keyboard on this uses what's been referred to as "buckling rubber sleeves" in recent years. The keycaps have long poles that acuate by pressing the membrane beneath. However, there's a hollow rubber cap sleeve between the keycap and the membrane that buckles when pushed. That's what gives you that tactile feedback despite there not being any mechanical switch involved. IBM later created the IBM M4 and IBM M4-1 keyboards as desktop equivalents to the IBM L40SX's keyboard. The only difference between the two desktop keyboard models is the M4-1 has a track point in the middle, similar to a Thinkpad keyboard. I own an IBM L40SX, the numpad attachment for it, and an IBM M4 keyboard. I can confirm they use the exact same keyboard. I know because the numpad is broken and I used one of the rubber sleeves in it to replace a worn down one in my M4's spacebar and it worked flawlessly. I also compared the L40SX and M4 keyboards side by side. There were no noticeable differences between the two. I have to agree with the video, this is a fantastic keyboard. On par with the Model M in its own way imo. If you want to experience this keyboard then track down either an IBM/Lexmark M4, M4-1 or a Unicomp Mighty Mouse (discontinued but were replicas of the M4-1 made from 2008 to 2010). The Topre Type Heaven is a more modern interpretation of this design and also comes highly recommended. My only word of caution is that since these use rubber sleeves that are unique to this style of keyboard, finding replacement sleeves will be difficult if any of them give out. I was lucky enough to have a broken numpad to pull replacement sleeves from, but it's something to keep in mind.
I live in the USA and I used that laptop for programming PLC . It worked try IRD and serial port. I was working for a big UPS company . They made from .5 kva up to 10,000.00 KVA . The switch gear had sy/max and Allen Bradly. and a few older ones. That laptop worked great for the 11 years I worked there. I even have one kicking around somewhere . All the guys who programmed the PLC got the first dibs when they upgraded the laptops . We had to use the parallel port for a dongle . You have to have one for each of the different programming software .It was 1992 when we started using them . That was the job a headhunter got me after I spent 7 years in the NAVY on submarines . I was going to reenlist for 4 more years as I was going on my first shore duty rotation. I was going to San dingo for CCTV school then back to my hometown to run the security system at a torpedo maker. Now that I look back I wish I had stayed in the NAVY!!!
The Samsung Notemaster SX20 was one of its competitors back in the day. I inherited one from my father in 1993, I believe, and most magazines showed offers from Toshiba, IBM and Samsung.
I had one of those about 8 years ago. I bought it from a second hand shop for about 5 euros or something like that. Mine had 14MB of RAM, a 960MB hard drive and Windows 3.1 installed on it! I miss it! Don't know where it went! :(
Great video Dave! Just so you know, according to a Microsoft Knowledge base article on the web, boot error code 161 is BIOS battery error (it's probably flat), and 163 is Time and date not set, probably due to BIOS battery being flat. EDIT: Sorry, was writing this comment before you found out yourself the same conclusion. Still a great video though.
Re It's true that IBM team is still around, actually I have a W520 wich is branded Lenovo. But as time go by, Lenovo engineers will gradually take over and my guess is they'll gradually reduce the production cost of their workstation and their computer will become flimsier.
The Lenovo T series are still really nice, I fixed up a t410s that I got for free, and it's quite a nice beast. Graphics wise it's no good for gaming but can do 1080p streaming no problem, and build quality is still really nice, magnesium frame and LCD cover.
That reference diskette was for programming the CMOS. PS/2's did not have BIOS configuration software in ROM - the Reference diskette was used instead. This is probably why the hard drive wouldn't boot - because the CMOS battery died. It may be able to boot that drive after running the auto-config (and don't power it off in between!)
Very nice! I have been able to obtain this machine in a very pristine condition for a small price. I absolutely agree with you about the keyboard. Cheers!
Looks very similar to the Tandy 1500 HD laptop that I rocked back in the early '90's. Had a 486 SLX that was actually more compatible than the regular 486 chip I had in my desktop. The CPU was actually a Cyrix chipset. It was counted as either a fast 386 or a slow 486. It lasted from 1992 until 2005 before both the floppy and hard drive gave up the ghost.
The old IBM machines did not have a fully-fledged CMOS BIOS like the IBM-clone-machines, so the "BIOS-program" is on that diskette, and after being run, it saves the information in the computer's NVRAM.
In the US, that Daewoo laptop was likely branded "Leading Edge". They also had a MCA license and marketed a MCA bus desktop called the Leading Edge Model D3/MC.
As a Defense Contract Audit Agency sub-contractor I once stood on a truck dock above a dumpster tossing 4 of these (or very similar model) and almost 100 CRTs in "As hard as you can." Because they had become fully depreciated and needed to be Destroyed. LOL The real heart breaker that day was the Compaq Portable. : (
Dave, really enjoyed the teardown. The Bruce Springstreen and gamers references made me laugh ;) Find an old DOS terminal emulator; you can use that nice keyboard on the serial ports on all those development boards you have. You know that will be more fun than using some crappy windows terminal emulator ;)
EEVblog I bet that the hybrid with PLL was connected to the power save switch. Probabally used to generate the main clock or a low clock that was fed into a multiplier. Especially because you mentioned the missing 4 pin crystal. I never knew Western Digital made chipsets or video controllers. Even less a whole set. That keyboard sounds (when you press the keys) just like a Dell Quietkey I have. I looked inside to clean out the dirt and found all the little rubber cups actually glued to the plastic matrix sheet with a tiny drop of silicone glue (its white and rubbery, what else). Such a nice keyboard, the keys no longer stick that Iv cleaned the dust out. I know what you mean, it just feels nice typing on it. I use it whenever I have to type a lot, but keep my multimedia keyboard for general use as the 12 programmable hotkeys get a lot or use (the built in calculator and hibernate buttons are my favorite). As to the graphics, it definitely wouldnt run Crysis LOL. Maybe Doom though considering it could have MS-DOS installed if one wished (I know it runs IBM DOS, it would probabally run normal DOS).
I actually replaced the hard drive in my L40SX with a IDE to Compact Flash adapter and put a 512MB Compact Flash card in there to act as solid state drive. Works like a charm.
Hey Dave, I'm interested in old tech and new tech but to be honest I don't have a clue about motherboards, resisters or any of that mombo jumbo but I love watching your videos man your hilarious great stuff mate!
The Crysis bit killed me haha, particularly because my close friend always makes that comment jokingly when I talk about video performance. ;) Great little laptop. I had a 386 one as well when I was a kid, running Windows 3.1. It had no soundcard, but I remember using some app under windows, that PWM'd the PC speaker (the little internal speaker that strictly makes beeps) to allow it to play .wav audio files with a few bits of resolution haha. It didn't sound too terrible! :)
This was the first computer I had ever used! I was about 4 years old and my dad had this laptop for work at the credit union he was employed at. Every night he'd bring it home so I could play games on it. I still have it and made a few repairs on it. I even managed to install Windows 95 on it! YES! The 386 is actually a 32-bit processor, so it can handle Windows 95, albeit it's a bit sluggish on this machine. Also when installing Windows 95 you need about 25 floppy disks! XDDD
dude, if you think a computer of that era was slow without the math co try a 486 with the on-board cache pulled a generation later. used to have to pull it out of computers to see if it had gone bad and to test it i had to let it go through and boot then try to replicate the error with the cache out, that could take forever. the reason i couldn't just swap it out was because there were so many standards of cache at the time and it was so expensive that it would have been insane for a small shop to have a set that would fit in every 486 setup, a replacement cache sometimes cost more than a grand.
Very simple enclosure, almost like a homebrew arrangement. Basically just a rectangle where the battery, motherboard, HDD and FDD sit next to each other. Quite different to modern laptops, where there are is a complex tight sandwich of custom plastic/metal pieces. The thermal management is another hassle. Blows my mind how they these days are able to get it all together, and in a relatively short time. Must be an interesting but stressful job.
The big chip on the left side of the planar (IBM term) is a Hitachi H8 microcontroller which serves as the ISA bus controller; quite a common thing on 386 systems.
I love how I can see the design cues from these early IBM laptops in my 2009 Lenovo Thinkpad R500. Bought new and still running strong as my main PC after upgrading with a SSD, some RAM and a minor fan repair. The lack of an IBM badge hurts a bit, but I'm not a huge brand whore anyway. The biggest selling point for me was durability and I'm not disappointed.
i cracked open a mono vga lcd from an old 386 once, the lcd was prety much all hitachi lcd drivers, 4x40 perchip pair, same as the hitachi drivers in "graphic lcd" modules
Those WERE the days :) but just a minor point, the first colour laptop was the 5kg Sharp mains-only luggable in early 1993, so it is unfair to knock the L40SX's grey-scale LCD. The Sharp was £5,000+ too, because of the ridiculous failure rate of the early colour LCD panels.
She's probably not booting to the hdd because the bios has lost the settings for the drive. If you go in and set it up again with 1050 cyl, 16 heads and 63 sectors (I noted them down for you) I'd bet she'll boot up no problem.
Dave why You didnt tear down PSU ? It might be intereseting if You do seperate video on explaining of switchmode PSU's worked back in the days. Thumbs up so he can see !
Usually these PSUs are sealed shut with glue and/or ultrasonic welding making it almost impossible to open the case without breaking it. If you ever tried opening a broken PSU you'd know what I mean. I don't think the technology would be much different though. Maybe a higher switching frequency allowing for a smaller transformer.
Peter-Paul Vervoort You can , by gradually hitting sides with a screwdriver or something. it seals the glue off and then ya can take it apart ! Well, maybe some ancient fets or chips, would be cool though :)
The PSU wouls be probably weldeded by ultrasound. If you want this open, you should use a hammer. After that you never get box in origin state and you even could broke something in it if you have very bad luck.
Here, Dave, let me give you a helping hand with that LCD panel - Front > animus.pro/public/lcd_1.jpg Back > animus.pro/public/lcd_2.jpg It's Hitachi 97-24634-2, made in Japan. Display matrix is VGA, monochrome, capable of 32 levels of gray. It has multiple OKI m5299a segment drivers on the back of LCD board. I also had exactly the same laptop, and also teared it down few years ago, so upon seeing Your video, went to attic and found LCD panel. :) And I must agree with you - typing on that keyboard was pure pleasure. I remember running Windows 3.11 and learning Pascal programming on that rig even in late 90s, when everyone around was already playing StarCraft/Half-Life on their 133Mhz Pentium MMX.
Dave... I know your thoughts on Apple products but had you ever tried the 96 era Power Book 1600's keyboard. It too is highly regarded as one of the nicest most comfortable keyboards out there. I love these vintage computer tear downs! Please keep up the great work.
Dave, if you like that keyboard, you can look for an IBM M4-1 or a Unicomp Mighty Mouse, both of which were basically desktop versions of this laptop's keyboard.
IBM PS/2 machines did not have BIOS config in ROM but instead had them on their "reference diskettes". This made them a pain to repair and one had to regularly dial into the IBM BBS in order to download the appropriate reference disk for diagnostics and repair... In those days, it could take up to an hour to download the disk on a bad day. I think that that particular PS/2 is one of the last to have ROM BASIC. Later ones only had BASIC Advanced available on their IBM PC-DOS disks. Fond memories. If you would like to upgrade the RAM, I may have a suitable 72pin SIMM laying around somewhere. Bump it up to 8MB and you'd able to run IBM OS/2 2.0 on it. ;-)
I think Dave needs a moment alone with that keyboard
its amazing that a computer more than 20 years old still works but my 3 year old laptop died on me yesterday
F
A Old laptop with modern hardware would be badass.
Retro looks, kick ass performance.
IIGrayfoxII A /bit/ late, but they’re called “sleeper” computers
25:04 it's interesting to see they used a monochrome LCD in this thing.. In some of the really old laptops I've owned, there was an orange-on-black flatscreen plasma on it, the contrast was amazing!
I had one of those! I think they used a lot of power. My one certainly got very hot.
***** Haha take a look at Plasma_display on wikipedia and go to 1983. There they explicitly mention the orange and black style. I had one on a really old Compaq 80386 (google tells me it was the Portable III). There was even a windows 3.1 driver for it. ;)
Wow! "The monochrome plasma video display was co-invented in 1964 at the University of Illinois by Donald Bitzer, H. Gene Slottow and Robert Willson for the PLATO Computer System." That's from another site. I would post a link, but the chances are you'd never see my comment due to the spam filter.
***** Yeah, that quote surprised me as well :)
*****
The orange was indeed plasma. I had a 80286 with that.
Slow as hack but did what it needed to do.
though not my oldest as that was a 8088 lcd. they mad a desktop on your lap when you had that closed
FunnyHacks They certainly did use a lot of power! When I said "laptop", I meant a computer you could potentially carry around (it had a carry strap and everything), though it didn't actually have an inbuilt battery, and it weighed an absolute ton. I still feel bad for tossing it away a couple years ago in a big clean-up :( , it had Windows 3.1 and working harddrive and working everything in it, dual floppy drive, ISA extension slots with an old modem in it. shit I feel bad for tossing it away, got it for like 5$ at an early computer convention. You'd probably have to shell it >100$ these days to get one of those
for those who don't know, Daewoo make everything from big tanker ships and dock cranes to computer hardware, consumer electronics and yes, cars. (the car manufacturing part was bought by GM lots of years ago)
Cool I did not know that!
brings back memories of my dad lugging this beast around for his work. we ended up donating it to a mission, and its still in use now.
This took me back 23 years to when I was in an IT Helpdesk and talking customers through how to "run auto config from their Ref Disk". Has brought back lots of memories. Thanks for posting
nothing on earth is more exciting than basic in rom
Agreed! :->
1991 even monochrome a 640x480 lcd screen is an amazing feat of technology, the first mainstream lcd color screens in the late 90s and early 200s were 640x480, if you wanted higher there was a massive premium in 98.
yep I remember my first 15in LCD KDS monitor back in the early 2000's was close too $500, and I think it was limited to something like 1024x768 screen rez with only VGA input, and speakers on it where so dinky you could barely hear them lol! But that was state of the art indeed.
In 1999 there were already large number of ordinary laptops with SVGA, and few business oriented laptops in market with XGA.
I was working designing flat screen LCD's and systems at Keycorp in 1994. They were 640 x 480 and 800x600 colour, but dead pixels were an accepted thing in production units back then!
Sampling VGA analog output and converting to LCD was REALLY HARD back then, even at 640x480, and it took a whole box full of tricks to accomplish. We tried to cram at that into the monitor which was a big deal at the time. Now it's just a single chip and we don't think twice about plugging our LCD monitor into an analog VGA port and get perfect full HD picture.
EEVblog
awesomesauce!
Artūrs Savickis
i had a thinkpad in 2000 that had a 640x480 (it was around there, strange res and it has been a long time) color display. this was around the time that active matrix was starting to become all the rage (my thinkpad didn't have it) but i do remember from that time that in laptops the most expensive part and the thing that you were really buying was the display. to say the least if you had an lcd at 1024x768 in 2000 you likely spent more than 500 bucks on it, while at the same time you could get a crt that could handle more than your video card could at nearly half the price. crt's though are kinda unfair, my secondary monitor is a relatively cheap crt from 2005 and i have it running at 1920x1440 right now just so it matches the width of my primary (hd lcd) monitor which makes tossing my tv to it easier. unless it is faking it internally it is actually managing to run that resolution, i've looked through settings back and forth and i can't figure out how the hell it manages it, even looking up close there is only a bit of blur and i think i could fix that if i popped the back off and tweaked the right pot.
Dave, thanks so much for this! My first engineering job was at Western Digital, where I designed the SRAM and worked on the real time clock and battery detector circuitry in the 7620/7621. I also did some of the physical layout and touched parts of the 7610. That was an exciting time to be able to design so much of what went into this laptop for IBM. So this is very near and dear to me, bringing back so many memories!
Awesome, thanks for sharing. There are countless unspoken designers out there who designed all this stuff!
EEVblog Thank you for doing what you're doing. I've learned so much from you and have been quite entertained at the same time. Smiley face. Keep it going!
Great videos, by the way. I had a computer shop back in late 90s up to 2001. I would buy surplus computer equipment some stuff good and other stuff not. We would spend hours dissecting the stuff that was not good, we had a blast. You must have so much fun doing what you do. Thanks for taking the time to share with us what you do....
This computer was engineered by IBM Japan, and it actually came out later than expected, in 1992. It was IBM's first laptop, and it retailed for US$5,000.
Would love to see an old computer ad for it. Anyone?
EEVblog Bish bosh done. 2.bp.blogspot.com/-GGIh-ncsYh4/Uz708NtYXGI/AAAAAAAALKg/dylYZx9gbto/s1600/l40.jpg
I managed to find some old IBM keyboards (PS2 connector) and you're right, the keys are like butter. Just amazing. Nothing like it.
Daewoo is actually still around. I bought a very good air-conditioner made by them a few years ago.
Rats! I was hoping you would enter the date to see if it was y2k compliant.
me too. I was waiting the same
Mariano Gaston that makes three of us!
Ben Childs four
I was going to mention that. I have read that the WD chipset is not C2K compliant.
EEVblog Please test it out and make a short follow-up (maybe on altzone)
Wow, a 387 coprocessor, those things were hard to find about a decade ago, they must be super rare by now. It's interesting that it has 2MB of system RAM. Most PC systems back then only had 1MB, before extended memory that is.
This has been one of the most exciting EEVblog videos I've ever seen. I also think that the keyboards were MUCH better before. Dave: Have you ever typed in a IBM model M?
- Can I play Crysis on it?
- Sure. Just plug it in, grab your head, and scream and run around in circles. That's how we played crisis in the old days.
Wow. Thanks for bringing me back to the computers I learned on.
Sorry very late on this, but I just found it(and am really enjoying your channel!) Fun Fact, IBM spent over 1 million dollars(US) on just keyboard "feel", I bought myself 3 of them for my computers back in the day cause you couldn't find any manufacturer that even came close to the feel of the IBM keyboard. Man, I miss those days...
Just to be clear for the "noobies" watching this: The computer didn't normally come up with Basic. IBM PC's normally tried to boot from floppy first, then from hard disk, and if all of those failed, they would revert back to "cassette basic". No IBM computer had a cassette port except the first IBM PC's (they removed the port on the PC/XT) so it was totally useless: you couldn't save or load programs to/from floppy drives from cassette basic. The only reason it was still there in every IBM PC after 1982 was that the "BASICA" interpreter that was included with DOS (which WAS capable of using the floppy and hard disk) relied on the routines in the ROM to do its work.
Back then, computers didn't have fancy BIOS user interfaces; I think the original PC BIOS was 16 kilobytes so no space for error messages. IBM used a scheme of error messages where the last two digits were the error code and the digits in front of it were the device that was causing the error. 1=motherboard, 2=memory, 3=keyboard, 6=floppy, 17=hard disk etc. www.bioscentral.com/misc/ibmdiag.htm contains a list of the errors from the BIOS and also the various diagnostic diskettes for all the IBM models.
It's amazing on how far technology has come. These days you get all that in the size of a Watch. Computers back then where monstrous now they're just tiny little things you can throw in any bag and forget it's there.
Error 161: "CMOS battery fail."
Error 163: "Incorrect date and time."
What is 162
@@Rainbow__cookie death.
@@rayproductionsbackupchanne3862 💀
Love your key tapping obsession. The sound gives an insight to feel..a high Q hard plastic plunk with smooth instant action and light foam damping with a 0.3mm 6 turn high tensile return spring...Oh no I was listening to my granny taking her teeth out.
Oooh. I can hear that keyboard. I know that sound. No wonder you love it so much.
I had a PS/1 and used a bunch of PS/2s. I don't recall what their keyboard was like.
The keyboards that came with the early IBM PC's, - say 1985, - were superb.
The gold anodized cross lever contacts and the tactile response was fantastic.
You always knew if your finger depressing the button had come home.
These days, you have to look at the display now and then to be sure that all the buttons you have pushed has actually been detected. BUH!
I see these come up on ebay from time to time and have been tempted to pull the trigger on one. I just have too many retro project computers already. This one is in beautiful shape!
Loving these retro tear downs. I miss computers that mak hard drive noise.
"Where's the fan? Where's the water cooling? Can i play Crysis on it?" Had myself a nice little chuckle with that one
Hey Dave, Daewoo still make cars under the Chevrolet brand now. Their car factories were purchased by General Motors in the early 2000's or even a bit earlier and their cars were rebadged in '04 or '05. They still make te same style of cars and have quite a bit of success in Europe.
I remember the LCD's on those things had rely slow update intervall so if you changed from black to white screen you could see a wave of pixels changing on the screen, thanks for the video Dave :)
I was 8 or 9 when these computers appeared. I remember being taught about the ultra fast ALU and later on, that it was incorporated into the CPU. It would be nice if you could do a little episode on various techniques of storing data or creating your own ALU (at least adding and subtracting/2's complement) as the history is just mind boggling. I think that's the main gap that when bridged, can get you from logic gates to the microprocessor. Nowadays, these processors have this black magic aura around them and it's a shame that we just take them for granted. I'd also be interested in how you get to above 25-50mhz hacker style (no expensive ARM cpus).
PS: I was a happy coder until I discovered this blog. In less then 2 months afterwards, I had my house full of plastic boxes and pieces and had read through everything I could find. Now I look at assembly language as that high level decadent bourgeois luxury that I just don't have. A coder's take on what you can achieve with such low level insight is out of this world. Best hobby I could ever find!
The keyboard on this uses what's been referred to as "buckling rubber sleeves" in recent years. The keycaps have long poles that acuate by pressing the membrane beneath. However, there's a hollow rubber cap sleeve between the keycap and the membrane that buckles when pushed. That's what gives you that tactile feedback despite there not being any mechanical switch involved.
IBM later created the IBM M4 and IBM M4-1 keyboards as desktop equivalents to the IBM L40SX's keyboard. The only difference between the two desktop keyboard models is the M4-1 has a track point in the middle, similar to a Thinkpad keyboard.
I own an IBM L40SX, the numpad attachment for it, and an IBM M4 keyboard. I can confirm they use the exact same keyboard. I know because the numpad is broken and I used one of the rubber sleeves in it to replace a worn down one in my M4's spacebar and it worked flawlessly. I also compared the L40SX and M4 keyboards side by side. There were no noticeable differences between the two.
I have to agree with the video, this is a fantastic keyboard. On par with the Model M in its own way imo. If you want to experience this keyboard then track down either an IBM/Lexmark M4, M4-1 or a Unicomp Mighty Mouse (discontinued but were replicas of the M4-1 made from 2008 to 2010). The Topre Type Heaven is a more modern interpretation of this design and also comes highly recommended.
My only word of caution is that since these use rubber sleeves that are unique to this style of keyboard, finding replacement sleeves will be difficult if any of them give out. I was lucky enough to have a broken numpad to pull replacement sleeves from, but it's something to keep in mind.
I live in the USA and I used that laptop for programming PLC . It worked try IRD and serial port. I was working for a big UPS company . They made from .5 kva up to 10,000.00 KVA . The switch gear had sy/max and Allen Bradly. and a few older ones. That laptop worked great for the 11 years I worked there. I even have one kicking around somewhere . All the guys who programmed the PLC got the first dibs when they upgraded the laptops . We had to use the parallel port for a dongle . You have to have one for each of the different programming software .It was 1992 when we started using them . That was the job a headhunter got me after I spent 7 years in the NAVY on submarines . I was going to reenlist for 4 more years as I was going on my first shore duty rotation. I was going to San dingo for CCTV school then back to my hometown to run the security system at a torpedo maker. Now that I look back I wish I had stayed in the NAVY!!!
oh shout out or what! I work for IBM UK! We're still going strong. Lovely.
PS/2 takes me back. Even though it's all about the cloud these days ;-)
Nice, I've used one of those. Had one in school, used it for programming micros. Also had a PS/2 Desktop.
The Samsung Notemaster SX20 was one of its competitors back in the day. I inherited one from my father in 1993, I believe, and most magazines showed offers from Toshiba, IBM and Samsung.
I had one of those about 8 years ago. I bought it from a second hand shop for about 5 euros or something like that. Mine had 14MB of RAM, a 960MB hard drive and Windows 3.1 installed on it! I miss it! Don't know where it went! :(
Great video Dave!
Just so you know, according to a Microsoft Knowledge base article on the web, boot error code 161 is BIOS battery error (it's probably flat), and 163 is Time and date not set, probably due to BIOS battery being flat.
EDIT: Sorry, was writing this comment before you found out yourself the same conclusion. Still a great video though.
It's a shame that IBM doesn't build laptop anymore. I consider myself lucky to have one of their last thinkpad.
Re YOU ARE EVERYWHERE
Re It's true that IBM team is still around, actually I have a W520 wich is branded Lenovo. But as time go by, Lenovo engineers will gradually take over and my guess is they'll gradually reduce the production cost of their workstation and their computer will become flimsier.
Ovni121 They already have. Look at the T400/500 keyboard compared to the T60/61.
Agree, since Lenovo "took over" ThinkPad sucks! Have a X220 now..
The Lenovo T series are still really nice, I fixed up a t410s that I got for free, and it's quite a nice beast. Graphics wise it's no good for gaming but can do 1080p streaming no problem, and build quality is still really nice, magnesium frame and LCD cover.
Surprised at how aesthetically pleasing its design is.
That reference diskette was for programming the CMOS. PS/2's did not have BIOS configuration software in ROM - the Reference diskette was used instead.
This is probably why the hard drive wouldn't boot - because the CMOS battery died. It may be able to boot that drive after running the auto-config (and don't power it off in between!)
Very nice! I have been able to obtain this machine in a very pristine condition for a small price. I absolutely agree with you about the keyboard. Cheers!
Nice teardown, worked with this laptop myself :) Great machine and indeed a perfect keyboard.
love all the little details and wow those crusty nichicons still work ... no puff the magic dragon ...
Old computers? You have a new subscriber. :)
Dave, your teardowns are my favorite, i just love em.
Back when I was a youngin' I would have loved to have this. Now that I am not so young I still want to have this.
Looks very similar to the Tandy 1500 HD laptop that I rocked back in the early '90's. Had a 486 SLX that was actually more compatible than the regular 486 chip I had in my desktop. The CPU was actually a Cyrix chipset. It was counted as either a fast 386 or a slow 486. It lasted from 1992 until 2005 before both the floppy and hard drive gave up the ghost.
The old IBM machines did not have a fully-fledged CMOS BIOS like the IBM-clone-machines, so the "BIOS-program" is on that diskette, and after being run, it saves the information in the computer's NVRAM.
I love these retro teardowns so much
In the US, that Daewoo laptop was likely branded "Leading Edge". They also had a MCA license and marketed a MCA bus desktop called the Leading Edge Model D3/MC.
Words may not but the sound of you pushing those buttons do them more justice than you think, I think...
:s
Need more EEVBlog retro computers!
As a Defense Contract Audit Agency sub-contractor I once stood on a truck dock above a dumpster tossing 4 of these (or very similar model) and almost 100 CRTs in "As hard as you can." Because they had become fully depreciated and needed to be Destroyed. LOL
The real heart breaker that day was the Compaq Portable. : (
I remember that computer. :-)
Dave, really enjoyed the teardown. The Bruce Springstreen and gamers references made me laugh ;)
Find an old DOS terminal emulator; you can use that nice keyboard on the serial ports on all those development boards you have. You know that will be more fun than using some crappy windows terminal emulator ;)
EEVblog
I bet that the hybrid with PLL was connected to the power save switch. Probabally used to generate the main clock or a low clock that was fed into a multiplier. Especially because you mentioned the missing 4 pin crystal.
I never knew Western Digital made chipsets or video controllers. Even less a whole set.
That keyboard sounds (when you press the keys) just like a Dell Quietkey I have. I looked inside to clean out the dirt and found all the little rubber cups actually glued to the plastic matrix sheet with a tiny drop of silicone glue (its white and rubbery, what else). Such a nice keyboard, the keys no longer stick that Iv cleaned the dust out. I know what you mean, it just feels nice typing on it. I use it whenever I have to type a lot, but keep my multimedia keyboard for general use as the 12 programmable hotkeys get a lot or use (the built in calculator and hibernate buttons are my favorite).
As to the graphics, it definitely wouldnt run Crysis LOL. Maybe Doom though considering it could have MS-DOS installed if one wished (I know it runs IBM DOS, it would probabally run normal DOS).
You could run a compact flash drive in there no problem at all with an IDE adapter
I used one of these for several years when I was a teenager. Wonderful machine.
I actually replaced the hard drive in my L40SX with a IDE to Compact Flash adapter and put a 512MB Compact Flash card in there to act as solid state drive. Works like a charm.
Hey Dave, I'm interested in old tech and new tech but to be honest I don't have a clue about motherboards, resisters or any of that mombo jumbo but I love watching your videos man your hilarious great stuff mate!
The Crysis bit killed me haha, particularly because my close friend always makes that comment jokingly when I talk about video performance. ;) Great little laptop. I had a 386 one as well when I was a kid, running Windows 3.1. It had no soundcard, but I remember using some app under windows, that PWM'd the PC speaker (the little internal speaker that strictly makes beeps) to allow it to play .wav audio files with a few bits of resolution haha. It didn't sound too terrible! :)
the rubbery keys was just very nice also... they kept it in the laster slim laptops and also the clam shell...which i really loved at 1st site
When you hear that "Hai", you know you're in for a good video.
This was the first computer I had ever used! I was about 4 years old and my dad had this laptop for work at the credit union he was employed at. Every night he'd bring it home so I could play games on it. I still have it and made a few repairs on it. I even managed to install Windows 95 on it! YES! The 386 is actually a 32-bit processor, so it can handle Windows 95, albeit it's a bit sluggish on this machine. Also when installing Windows 95 you need about 25 floppy disks! XDDD
Booting vintage computers is priceless!
dude, if you think a computer of that era was slow without the math co try a 486 with the on-board cache pulled a generation later. used to have to pull it out of computers to see if it had gone bad and to test it i had to let it go through and boot then try to replicate the error with the cache out, that could take forever. the reason i couldn't just swap it out was because there were so many standards of cache at the time and it was so expensive that it would have been insane for a small shop to have a set that would fit in every 486 setup, a replacement cache sometimes cost more than a grand.
Very simple enclosure, almost like a homebrew arrangement. Basically just a rectangle where the battery, motherboard, HDD and FDD sit next to each other. Quite different to modern laptops, where there are is a complex tight sandwich of custom plastic/metal pieces. The thermal management is another hassle. Blows my mind how they these days are able to get it all together, and in a relatively short time. Must be an interesting but stressful job.
i got a toshiba ct50 laptop with a solid state cf card with cf to ide and its hell of a difference in speed and battery lasts 2x longer
Yeah, a CF to IDE adapter would do the trick.
The only bad thing about the libretto 50ct and 70ct was that the ide controller is on the slow ISA bus along with the PCMCIA controller
The big chip on the left side of the planar (IBM term) is a Hitachi H8 microcontroller which serves as the ISA bus controller; quite a common thing on 386 systems.
Sounds like a mechanical keyboard, awesome!
I love how I can see the design cues from these early IBM laptops in my 2009 Lenovo Thinkpad R500. Bought new and still running strong as my main PC after upgrading with a SSD, some RAM and a minor fan repair. The lack of an IBM badge hurts a bit, but I'm not a huge brand whore anyway. The biggest selling point for me was durability and I'm not disappointed.
i cracked open a mono vga lcd from an old 386 once, the lcd was prety much all hitachi lcd drivers, 4x40 perchip pair, same as the hitachi drivers in "graphic lcd" modules
I've added the LCD photos to the description. Someone posted them.
Those WERE the days :) but just a minor point, the first colour laptop was the 5kg Sharp mains-only luggable in early 1993, so it is unfair to knock the L40SX's grey-scale LCD. The Sharp was £5,000+ too, because of the ridiculous failure rate of the early colour LCD panels.
I believe the "161" and "163" BIOS error messages relate to the CMOS. Dead battery or something for the CMOS, probably.
24:05 hahahahhah what the hell is that thing hahahahah
Nice video Dave... Thanks
She's probably not booting to the hdd because the bios has lost the settings for the drive. If you go in and set it up again with 1050 cyl, 16 heads and 63 sectors (I noted them down for you) I'd bet she'll boot up no problem.
Nice I also had an old ibm laptop with black/white display. And yes I freakin loved the keybord espacially the sound!
Dave why You didnt tear down PSU ? It might be intereseting if You do seperate video on explaining of switchmode PSU's worked back in the days. Thumbs up so he can see !
Usually these PSUs are sealed shut with glue and/or ultrasonic welding making it almost impossible to open the case without breaking it. If you ever tried opening a broken PSU you'd know what I mean. I don't think the technology would be much different though. Maybe a higher switching frequency allowing for a smaller transformer.
Peter-Paul Vervoort You can , by gradually hitting sides with a screwdriver or something. it seals the glue off and then ya can take it apart ! Well, maybe some ancient fets or chips, would be cool though :)
The PSU wouls be probably weldeded by ultrasound. If you want this open, you should use a hammer. After that you never get box in origin state and you even could broke something in it if you have very bad luck.
nice "Simple Jack" computer nerd impression :) @ 24:04
Here, Dave, let me give you a helping hand with that LCD panel -
Front > animus.pro/public/lcd_1.jpg
Back > animus.pro/public/lcd_2.jpg
It's Hitachi 97-24634-2, made in Japan. Display matrix is VGA, monochrome, capable of 32 levels of gray. It has multiple OKI m5299a segment drivers on the back of LCD board. I also had exactly the same laptop, and also teared it down few years ago, so upon seeing Your video, went to attic and found LCD panel. :)
And I must agree with you - typing on that keyboard was pure pleasure. I remember running Windows 3.11 and learning Pascal programming on that rig even in late 90s, when everyone around was already playing StarCraft/Half-Life on their 133Mhz Pentium MMX.
That keyboard sounds beautiful!!!
Just to be clear, he REALLY likes the keyboard.
Pretty amaZing tech for early 90's IMHO. I was just introduced to CLONES in the late 80's. Without a GUI that speedster would be a joy.
👍😎
Wow '91. This computer came out the year I was born.
Dave... I know your thoughts on Apple products but had you ever tried the 96 era Power Book 1600's keyboard. It too is highly regarded as one of the nicest most comfortable keyboards out there. I love these vintage computer tear downs! Please keep up the great work.
I think it could render crysis at 1 frame per year.
Hearing Dave ask if it can play Crysis about had me on the floor.
Nice piece of history u got there, thanks for teardown! :)
oh man! what a gorgeous unit. I remember these.
Hurray for teardown Tuesdays....
i have a 1999 ibm aptiva and has 256mb of ram, and that was HUGE in those days.
Dave, if you like that keyboard, you can look for an IBM M4-1 or a Unicomp Mighty Mouse, both of which were basically desktop versions of this laptop's keyboard.
Hi Dave awesome video....
my favorite videos are your fundamental Fridays videos... do more of them...
Thanks
Great video Dave. I suggest investing in a Cherry MX Brown mechanical keyboard from your comments on the feel of the laptops keyboard.
IBM PS/2 machines did not have BIOS config in ROM but instead had them on their "reference diskettes". This made them a pain to repair and one had to regularly dial into the IBM BBS in order to download the appropriate reference disk for diagnostics and repair... In those days, it could take up to an hour to download the disk on a bad day.
I think that that particular PS/2 is one of the last to have ROM BASIC. Later ones only had BASIC Advanced available on their IBM PC-DOS disks.
Fond memories. If you would like to upgrade the RAM, I may have a suitable 72pin SIMM laying around somewhere. Bump it up to 8MB and you'd able to run IBM OS/2 2.0 on it. ;-)
8:47 Be careful with that screen!!..... XD You can barely contain your excitement!!..... XD But, it's nice to see people happy..... :)
Good thing you caught the batteries before they started leaking all over the board
A guess in the PLL circuit. Frequency spectrum spreading? At 20 MHz you would be around HF radio bands. Maybe it was part of compliance certification?
Doesn't seem to be in the right location for that. See the other clokc oscillator modules elsewhere.
de/modulator for the telephone modem? maybe