Toshiba Satellite 4010CDT

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Toshiba Satellite 4010CDT Overview

Features

  • Intel Mobile Pentium II 266Mhz CPU (soldered to the mainboard, not replaceable)
  • 12.1-inch TFT color LCD (800x600 resolution, 100:1 contrast ratio)
  • Chips&Tech CT65555 video controller (2MB VRAM, 24bit colour capable)
  • ESS 1868 with Yamaha OPL3 Audio Card, SoundBlaster 2.0/Adlib capable emulation
  • 32 MB 66MHz SDRAM on-board up to 160 MB Max (2x64MB RAM modules)
  • 2.1 GB Toshiba HDD
  • 3.5 inch FDD placed in a removable bay

or

  • CD-ROM Drive (optional, can replace the FDD in the removable bay)

Other

  • Stereo speakers with analogue volume knob
  • Integrated microphone
  • Audio input and headphone output on jack
  • 2xPCMCIA Slots
  • VGA Output
  • Proprietary Docking port and docking station
  • Li-Ion rechargeable battery
  • Single USB 1, PS/2, Serial, Parallel ports
  • 15V power supply (separate)
  • Windows 3.1 and Windows 95/98 support, MS-DOS Sound Blaster Pro emulation

Toshiba Satellite 4010CDT 12"

Best retro purpose

Early Windows 95 era gaming released before 1998 or as an office computer. While the CPU is reasonably fast, the highlight of this laptop is the ESS 1688 audio chip with a true Yamaha OPL3 implementation, a model with a very good SoundBlaster emulation capability along with good MIDI capability. While finding drivers and configuring audio settings is quite cumbersome, the implementation is solid. The video chipset is well compatible with MS-DOS and Windows 95 games, but it does not take advantage of any meaningful progress, being the same as on Pentium I Toshiba models. The drawback of an obsolete video chipset, clearly slower than NeoMagic controllers, make the laptop suited for most classic DOS games or some old Windows 95/98 one, including Quake, avoiding any resolution that is higher than 400x300 resolutions if 3D acceleration is required. 2D games run perfect in 640x480 resolutions.

Benchmarks

Durability and Repair-ability

The durability of this laptop is above average. While the chassis plastic is far from being perfect, the laptop is well built and also has quite durable internal circuitry. The only shortcomings are on the Accupoint system cap that degrades and dissintegrates with age, as well as the trackpoint buttons rubberized coating. Fortunately, the rubberized coating can be completely removed by scrubbing with iso-propyl alcohol leaving the buttons quite comfortable eve in this state.

The laptop's screen is easy to service, meaning that LCD backlight lamp removal and replacement is quite easy. This is possible due to the generous and forgiving lamp mounting space which means that repairs are quite easy to carry out with moderate patience and care. This is actually one of the easiest repairs of this type that can be done for beginner users, keeping in mind the usual care of dismounting and un-clipping. Thus, replacing an old or damaged LCD fluorescent lamp is quite simple as it requires only disassembly of the display's case and removal of some screws and a top plate.

Overall, despite the poor reliability of Toshiba harddrives, the configuration itself seems very well designed, meaning that laptops have quite a long life and the system itself survives quite well due to low internal heat dissipation in a roomy case.

Greatest features & flaws

Features Flaws
Great Windows 3.1 and MS-DOS gaming, good Windows 95 support Low Windows 98 2D acceleration for a Pentium II laptop
Great SoundBlaster compatible support, great speakers, USB port Very slow video chipset compared with Neomagic
Good keyboard and trackpoint, good serviceability Soldered CPU, rather bulky case
Removable bay for floppy and CD-ROM drive, great, quiet cooling Poor reliability Toshiba harddrive

Review

A mid-range laptop, features wise, with a good LCD screen but seriously crippled by an obsolete video chipset. The display has only two brightness levels, being somewhat inadequate in use, being also totally inadequate for a Pentium II system of its time. Response time is alright, making the laptop suited for office use as well as vintage games. The speaker setup is one of the best in its time, being one of the highlights of this laptop. The design, format and weight are not as spectacular as some IBM laptops, and the laptop seems bulkier than some mainstream IBM or Compaq laptops of its time.

The laptop feels quite fast due to the specified CPU, although the video controller is clearly dated, with a performance that is very far from Neomagic models. The CPU does not get warm and the cooling system handles load very well, with a quite large fan for its time. The laptop handles constant heat quite well with no fan spin, which is a major benefit. The keyboard has reasonable tactile feedback but it is far from being the best, with quite a long key travel and a mushy feel. Due to the laptop's thickness, typing comfort is severely reduced. The Accupoint cursor system (mouse compatible) is reasonably accurate but the cap disintegrates and the click buttons rubbery face fails similarly, in time, becoming sticky. It is surprising that Toshiba din not make any real improvement on this issue that lingered at least since 1995. The laptop's plastic case is quite durable but not the best.

The drive bay is very good for a laptop of its generation, holding both a CD-ROM and a floppy drive. Unfortunately, none are easily removed or replaced. The rechargeable battery can be easily removed or replaced. There were many Toshiba laptops that used the same battery and working with a removed battery does not affect stability or aesthetics. There are two more internal rechargeable NimH batteries inside the laptop that may leak and are somewhat harder to replace (not the typical, compact CR2032 3V button cell). They are used for Bios settings and memory suspension features.

The integrated speakers are very good. The front placement and large size make them very pleasant, despite the laptop not being positioned as a PRO model. Actually, the sound output is one strong point of Toshiba Satellite laptop throughout many generations. The microphone quality and positioning is mediocre, with chassis noise (hard-drive) being picked up easily as in most laptops of this era.

The harddrive is placed on a caddy, requiring removal of a single screw to slide. There is plenty of space inside for other storage systems. Unfortunately, the standard HDDs supplied by Toshiba have a known tendency to have their heads stick to the parking position limiter when old, making the drive fail to start. Careful internal disassembly is required to unstick the heads from the parking position. Use care and touch only the drive arm near the center pin to slowly unstick it. Overall, the hard-drive offers medium performance while having quite a pleasant sound in operation. Another slight disadvantage of the platform is that it does not support, at least in theory, modules any higher than 64MB, even if the laptop's slow operation makes it a poor candidate for Windows 2000 already.

Software support is great in DOS, Windows 3.1 and Windows 95/98 as well, making the system feel snappy. DOS sound capability is great, with good Adlib compatibility and Sound Blaster Pro emulation. While configuration to enable DOS support is quite cumbersome, it is properly working. In Windows 98 you start to feel the sluggishness of the system as the video controller has insufficient acceleration and low screen scrolling performance. Basically Toshiba used roughly the same platform on Pentium laptops with little differentiation. Although the video controller is faster than some Trident models, it is very poorly performing compared with Pentium II era Neomagic 256 chipsets.

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