Hey, I said that and he got mad at me!
But if it supports 16MB SIMMS, then there is a shot at a 32MB working etc.
----- Original Message -----
From: Canyonlands Computer Services
To: Thinkpad Users Group
Sent: Monday, December 27, 2004 8:12 PM
Subject: Re: [Thinkpad] Need another answer
As I recall from my old 365 machines, there were four series of 365
machines, and one of them with some luck could be jumped up to 72
MB... But you had to be lucky because even memory from the same
manufacturer didn't always perform the same as other modules.
365 2625-XXX 1 slot, 8 mb non-removable onboard, 40 MB total
365 C/CS/CD/CSD 1 slot, 8 mb non-removable onboard, 24 MB total
365 E/ED 1 slot, 8 mb non-removable onboard, 24 MB total
365X 1 slot, 8 mb non-removable onboard, 72 MB
total with one lucky
64 MB module that worked by surprise.
I tried replacing CPU's with a number of other Thinkpads, and had no
luck. As I recall, nobody had any luck.
Stacked modules and other tricks never worked eitherr.
The 365 was a fine machine for use with Windows 95, but worthless by
later standards set by the 760, 765, 770, 560, 570 and so on.
I strongly recommend that you waste no more time and money on this
machine. You can buy a good used machine cheaper than you can buy
modules or cpu that work for this one.
Ray Bayles
On Mon, 27 Dec 2004 20:01:27 -0500, Bruce Markowitz
<scosgt@worldnet.att.net> wrote:
> Again, AFAIK that can not be done, there are no RAM doublers for laptops.
> Now the RAM limit you state may not be accurate - many times the published spec came out before the larger RAM chips became available, and it possibly can handle a larger chip.
> But I don't recall any follow up to that series, so I doubt there is another mobo that can fit in. As I recall that machine is basically a 486 with a non-Intel chip, and they called it a "586". There used to be some folks that made a CPU upgrade, but I doubt that would be cost effective at this point if you could even find one.
> I don't remember what type of RAM that takes, but if it has 8MB on board, then there is an ADD ON 16MB, maybe EDO SIMM? If so, try a 32MB and see if it works.
> If it has 4MB on board, then it must have twoX8 add ons, and of course you should be able to replace with a 16 or two. It most likely would not support a 64MB DIMM, and they would be expensive anyway.
>
> AND I HATE IT WHEN I AM BEING HELPFUL AND SOMEONE TELLS ME I AM NOT BEING HELPFUL. DON'T DO THAT AGAIN.
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Jim Clark
> To: thinkpad@stderr.org
> Sent: Monday, December 27, 2004 8:05 PM
> Subject: [Thinkpad] Need another answer
>
> With all due respect, this reply is not helpful. If I could find a newer machine
> that I could afford, I wouldn't be upgrading this one - we live on "social
> insecurity". Also my spouse would be upset if she saw a different machine, given
> our situation. Our computers were acquired before I took a mandatory retirement
> and we can't be buying toys we don't need.
>
> I do not care about XP which is on my wife's newer machine - I usually use Linux
> on my computers. I need to upgrade this laptop, which already has a larger disk
> drive than the original 500 MB, for use on short driving trips to check email and
> do financial stuff. The Windows emulator on Linux uses Windows 98 which runs
> fine on this machine, except with more RAM I could speed it up a little.
>
> Due to contacts with fellow retirees, I can get the RAM basically free, once my
> machine can use it (if it doesn't cost a lot to modify it). A plug-in adapter
> would be fine if it works - I remember when adapters were available for desktops
> that allowed "doubling up" RAM SIMMS/DIMMS/etc.
>
> I keep seeing postings that people acquired newer Thinkpads for $25 but I don't
> have a clue how to find these sources.
>
> Jim
>
> Jim
> With all due respect, that machine is not up to the latest operating systems, and
> there is not much you can do about that. Use it for a print server or a DOS
> machine. For not too much $$, you can get a more modern machine (such as a 570)
> that can do XP reasonable well and be much more useful
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Jim Clark
> To: thinkpad at stderr.org
> Sent: Monday, December 27, 2004 2:47 PM
> Subject: [Thinkpad] Upgrade a Thinkpad 365ED
>
> Is there any way to put a newer motherboard in a 365ED to get around the 24MB RAM
> limitation? [Even if it means cutting some more openings in the case] Or is there
> a way to workaround that limitation, such as an adapter plug?
> Thanks
> Jim
>
> _______________________________________________
> Thinkpad mailing list
> Thinkpad@stderr.org
> http://stderr.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/thinkpad
> _______________________________________________
> Thinkpad mailing list
> Thinkpad@stderr.org
> http://stderr.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/thinkpad
>
--
All my possessions for a moment of time!
Elizabeth (1533-1603) English Queen
_______________________________________________
Thinkpad mailing list
Thinkpad@stderr.org
http://stderr.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/thinkpad
_______________________________________________
Thinkpad mailing list
Thinkpad@stderr.org
http://stderr.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/thinkpad
Received on Mon Dec 27 20:22:24 2004
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Fri May 26 2006 - 16:04:06 EDT