Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

For sale Toshiba Notebnook less than 12 months old in excellent condition

specs are as follows

Satellite® 2410 Series

Processor

Mobile Intel® Pentium® 4 Processor-M 1.7GHz

with 512KB on-die L2 cache

System Architecture

PCI Bus V2.2

Intel® 845, 400MHz processor system bus

Hard Disk

Capacity: 30GB**

Accommodates 9.5mm height, 2.5” hard drive

12-14ms average access time (read/write)

2.5-3ms track-to-track seek time (read/write)

Enhanced IDE (ATA-5)

One screw user removable

Memory

Capacity: 256MB

Satellite 2410 expandable to 1GB

Type: PC2100 DDR 2.5V

Expandable with two user installable memory

slots (One slot used by standard memory)

BIOS

ACPI, PnP, SM BIOS

Colour Display

14.1“ TFT Active Matrix colour display

XGA 1024 x 768 resolution

Up to 16 million colours

Video

nVidia® Geforce4TM 420GO 3D graphics

controller, 16MB video memory

BitBLT hardware

AGP 4 X 66MHz

External Display Support

Up to 1600 x 1200 resolution at up to 100Hz

Composite TV out (RCA Port)

Diskette Drive Integrated

DVD-ROM Drive

5.25” EIDE, 8X max. DVD-ROM, 12.7mm height

100ms DVD-ROM random access time

Compatibility: CD-ROM, CD-R (read only), CDRW

(read only), DVD-ROM, DVD-R (read only)

Audio

Dedicated CD/MP3 Audio Player buttons

Yamaha® YMF753 sound processor

3D Sound support

DirectSound® DirectSound3D®

Full duplex sound support

Audio volume adjustable by dial

Headphone and microphone ports

Integrated stereo speakers

Expansion

Secure Digital Media Slot (SD Card)

1 x IEEE1394 port (iLink)

Two PC Card slots support two Type II or one

Type III PC Cards

Supports PCMCIA R2.01, PC Card 16 and CardBus

One free expansion memory slot

SVGA video port

TV-out port (NTSC/PAL output; RCA jack)

ECP parallel port

Fast infrared port (4Mbps, IrDA V1.1 compliant)

Three Universal Serial Bus (USB V1.1) ports

RJ-11 modem port

RJ-45 LAN port

Shutter door covering selected ports, Diskette

Drive and PC Card slots when not in use

Communications

Integrated V.90 56K modem***

Integrated Intel® 10/100 Base-TX Ethernet

Local Area Network

Intel® 82562 Ethernet Controller

Integrated Wi-Fi Antenna (802.11b)

Optional Integrated Wi-Fi Mini PCI Card (802.11b)

Battery

Rechargeable, removable 4500mAh Lithium Ion

battery

Greater than 2.5 hours battery life with main

battery^^^

3+ hours recharge time^^^

ACPI support

Power Supply

75W external AC adapter

100-240V input voltage

50-60Hz frequency

Keyboard

Full-sized 85 keys

Integrated TouchPad pointing device

Dimensions (h x w x d)

43–46mm (front-back) x 328mm x 287mm*

Weight

3.4kg

price $1400ono

comes with

bag and charger

recovery disks

instruction book

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Good luck on the weekend mate
    • Must have been an absolute nightmare to drive when the power steer was out, the rack ratio/wheel size/caster is all set up for power assistance
    • Welcome to SAU, what are you looking at buying?
    • I checked the injectors again (1 and 2, since they’re easiest to access) to make sure they weren’t clogged. Even though the entire fuel system had been cleaned, I wanted to be certain. Everything looked clean, so I reinstalled and connected everything. When I started the car to confirm everything was okay, it immediately revved up high, so I shut it off straight away. I checked to see if I’d missed a vacuum hose or something, but everything was connected. On the second attempt, the car ran without the high idle, but I noticed a distinct “compressed air” sound coming from the engine bay. Tracing the sound, I pushed injector #6 forward slightly and the noise stopped — it turned out it wasn’t seated properly, despite the fuel rail being bolted down. While holding it in place, the car idled steadily without stalling and ran for over 5 minutes. At this point, I pulled all six injectors out just in case I hadn’t seated them correctly or dirt had gotten onto the O-rings. Unfortunately, I discovered that I had damaged 3 out of 6 injectors (the OEM 270cc ones) during installation. So yes, this was my fault. Since only the pintle caps were damaged, I’ve ordered a Fuel Injector Service Kit from NZEFI to refurbish them. In the meantime, I reinstalled my new injectors – the car now idles fine for over 15 minutes without stalling. I have not attempted to drive it so far. It’s not perfect yet, as it hesitates when the throttle is pressed, but it’s a big improvement. Unplugging the IACV with the new injectors idles at around 800rpm, even with the IACV screw tightened fully. But this is probably due to tune.
    • I wanted to try and preserve the front bumper as long as possible, they're not cheap and are made to order in Japan. Taking inspiration from my previous K11 Micra build where I made an undertray for the Impul bumper, I did the same for this BN Sports bumper but a little slimmed down.  This time round I only made a 'skid plate' (if that's the correct wording/term) for just the bumper surface area, the Micra version covered the gap like an undertray. Starting off with a sheet of mild steel approx. 0.9mm thick 4ft x 2ft in size. I traced around the bumper, cut it out and cleaned the edges. Luckily I was able to get two halves from one piece of metal In the video I installed it as is, but I've since then I've removed it to spray and add a rubber edging trim. The rubber trim is suitable for 1-2mm and it's a really nice tight fit. The bolts had to be loosened due to the plates being too tight against the bumper, the trim wouldn't push on I used some stainless M6 flat headed bolts for a flusher finish (rather than hex heads poking down), I believe this style fastener is used for furniture too incase you struggle to source some. The corner's are a little wider, but this may be an advantage incase I get close to bumping it  The front grill got some attention, finally getting round to repairing it. Upon removal one fixing pulled itself out of the plastic frame, one side is M8 that fixes inside of the frame, where as the other side is M5. Not knowing I could get replacements, I cut down an M8 bolt, threaded it inside the frame along with a decent amount of JB Weld.  The mesh was replaced to match the bumper. One hole on the bonnet/hood had to be drilled out to 8mm to accommodate the new stud, once the glue had set it could be refitted. I think the reason the grill was double meshed was to hide the horn/bonnet latch (which makes sense) but I much prefer it matching the bumper Bumper refitted and it's looking much better IMO The Youtube video can be seen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bVZP35io9MA
×
×
  • Create New...