I have 3 of these and have been putting off trying to determine 'what can go wrong' due to their age, non-standard design and brittle plastic. The point of this post is to just report on what I found, what other owners should look out for and some questions that some others might know the answer to.The PS/note N45 SL was priced at $2,045 and contains a 25MHz 386SL. It had 2MB RAM and a 80 or 120MB HDD and was equipped with only 6-row keyboard without dedicated navigation block, the similar layout as a low-end ThinkPad 300 laptop. PC Mag considered the display a disappointment, but noted its good design and performance. It was manufactured by Zenith Data Systems.
It feels very much like the IBM Thinkpad 300, which is made from the same plastic and indeed made by Zenith. The power supply is totally unique and has a connector which is a bit like an S-Video connector. I hate it.
The plastic on the case also is starting to show loads of 'swooshes' where areas have seen more wear than others.
The LCD
The LCD is a monochrome affair presenting 640x480. My one was really flickery so I decided to see what the capacitor issue was like. Getting to the screen is actually quite simple but you do have to pry the old plastic apart to release clips around the edges. I actually didn't realised there were 6 screws holding the LCD bezel onto the back - there are 4 under covers underneath the screen and 2 screws under rubber pads either side of the top of the LCD. Take these 6 screws off and the back will come off. Note also there are actually 4 sets of hinges in this machine - maybe they started to realise that the hinges were a big problem! One set bolts to the LCD itself from the back and one set bolts from the fascia to the back from the front (under those 2 plastic panels).
There were 6 'through hole' electrolytic caps which were soldered on sideways to the LCD itself. No other caps at all! They were easy to remove and solder on new ones except there are 3 ribbon cables which have to be carefully de-soldered and lifted before you can access the PCB with the 6 capacitors on.
This is the back removed:


Here are the plastic clips along the top of the lid, which were the hardest to loosen:


Here are the 3 ribbon cables you can see which are ensuring you can't get to the 2 caps top and 4 caps bottom:



The caps were 4 x 22uf/16v, 1 x 4.7uf/50v and 1 x 10uf/16v. All have to be really small to not obstruct anything.
Amazingly, first try all my soldering was fine. I spent £400 on a Thermaltronics solder station which doesn't even have a temp control - it is completely self regulating and I have to admit this first go was bliss!
The base
I wanted to know if there were timebomb caps inside, what hard drives was in there and if there was a hibernation battery. There were 4 electrolytic caps inside and they all looked OK. I decided to park them for another day.

I managed to determine that:
1 x 100uf/16V
2 x 1000uf/6.3v
1 (small surface mounted tiny cap, unknown values)
The hibernation battery. I have never seen a battery like this before. It weighs like it's made from lead and consists of 4 x long, rectangular blocks bound together in plastic. At first I wasn't sure what I was looking at because it just says "JAPAN WD" on the outside and was next to the hard drive. But I could tell from the red and black wires coming out of it it was battery related. Anyway, I removed it and the machine powers on and behaves the same without it but it was showing plenty of signs of leakage.



Has anyone seen this battery type before?
The hard drive. The machine wouldn't boot from the disk but now I've removed it, I have a feeling it's just because there is no CMOS, no built in BIOS configuration and definitely no auto configuration. It's a connor CF2084. The PIN connector looks exactly like every other PATA/IDE 2.5" hard drive i've seen. Does this mean it is IDE? I put in a CF card on an adaptor but I haven't yet gone to the trouble of downloading a diagnostics disk to try and configure it. Thats for another day. Is an IDE drive going to work in this machine?
Memory
Does anyone know what this memory is?

I've never seen it before. I don't actually know yet how much is in this machine but it's weird there are 3 of them.
Finally here are some pics of me during the teardown:



Anyway, it seems like these machines aren't that scary and are relatively easy to teardown. I just need to do a little more research before I can truely consider it preseved.











