IBM ThinkPad 300 & 300C

IBM ThinkPad 300 & 300C

IBM Type 2615

Released alongside the original ThinkPad 700 as a lower-end counterpart. These were weird laptops - IBM didn't make them, Zenith Data Systems did. They were heavily based on the Z-Note 386 Series. They changed the location of the secondary LCD (and the actual LCD they used), along with housing it all in a dark gray case with some IBM styling. The 300 was specifically based on the Z-Note 325L, and the 300C was based on the Z-Note 325Lc. The manufacturing shuffle goes a level deeper, as I believe these Z-Note laptops were at least in part developed by Sanyo in Japan, as the motherboards are full of Sanyo chips (and the power supply was made by Sanyo).

The 300C is very rare as it was available only as an upgrade for 300 owners, and said upgrade cost an additional $3000 over what they had already paid for the laptop.

The 300 grayscale model isn't very rare, but it didn't sell as well as other ThinkPads. They also both have a reputation for being unreliable.

Image on this page from solidpro.


Specifications

Spec ThinkPad 300 ThinkPad 300C
CPU Intel 386SL @25MHz
RAM Type: ThinkPad 300 Proprietary
Standard: 4MB
Maximum: 12MB
Hard Disk IDE 2.5"
Uses Proprietary Adapter?: Sort of, has a cable inside
Standard: 80 or 120MB
Display Options 9.5" Passive Matrix Grayscale @640x480 8.4" Active Matrix Color @640x480 (Sharp LQ9D01 Series)
Graphics Chipset Western Digital WD90C24
Audio PC Speaker
Main Battery NiMH
CMOS Battery NiCad
Power Supply Zenith Proprietary Mini-DIN
- PSU P/N: Sanyo 232-423
Disk Drives 3.5" 1.44MB Floppy Drive
PC Cards Modem-only PCMCIA
Networking Modem, AAUI Ethernet
Other I/O - 1x Parallel
- 1x Serial
- 1x VGA Out
- 1x Dock Connector
- 1x PS/2
BIOS Unknown
Pointing Device None

Common Faults & Maintenance

The 300's case plastics should still be fairly strong - the Zenith versions still are. The main issues afflicting these laptops are bad capacitors. The 300 and 300C's motherboards both have a good number of surface mount electrolytic caps, which fail and leak corrosive fluid onto the board. Any 300 or 300C should have the motherboard recapped before you use it. If you're lucky enough to own a 300C, the LCD in those also MUST be recapped. They use the 8.4-inch Sharp LQ9D01 series panel, and same display that was used in just about any laptop with an 8.4-inch TFT display, including the Apple PowerBook 180c and some models in the Compaq LTE Lite series.

I don't currently know if the TP300 grayscale display has electrolytic caps on it, but I'd check if I were you.



Page last updated (MM/DD/YYYY): 11/05/2024
Update Reason: formatting updated

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