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Episode: 4464
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Title: HPR4464: Replacing the Trackpad on my Laptop
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4464/hpr4464.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-26 00:57:10
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4464 for Thursday 11 September 2025.
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Today's show is entitled Replacing the Track Bed on My Laptop.
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It is part of the series Hardware Upgrades.
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It is hosted by Claudio Miranda and is about 11 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is Claudio talks about how he took a gamble and replaced his faulty track
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bed on his laptop.
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Hey Hacker Public Radio, this is Claudio Miranda, recording an episode for Hacker Public
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Radio.
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It's been a while.
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I wanted to talk to you today about my little project where I replaced the track pad
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on my Clavo manufactured EVU EVC 141-12 laptop.
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This particular laptop was sold a few years ago in Walmart and you can find it under different
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names as well.
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This one had the EVU name after that I think it changed to Motile, but both of those are
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actual Walmart brands, I'll provide the links for that in the show notes.
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These laptops along with a bunch of other ones that you find like that, like XPG and stuff
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like that, Shinker.
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Most of them are, they use a design that's created by a company called Clavo or Clavo, C-L-E-V-O.
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This is a Taiwanese company and I'll provide the link in the show notes for that and what
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they do is they manufacture the hardware to sell to these resellers where they go ahead
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and they configure everything for their brand.
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This one cost me, I bought it refurbished, cost me about, I bought it in 2022 I want to
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say.
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It's a 2020 laptop because it comes with a Ryzen 5, 3500U, the Vega 8 graphics so it's
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not a bad laptop and there's one review that I found about this laptop.
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The only thing that is not so great about it is that it only has one RAM slot, so single
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channel speed RAM.
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To compensate for that, the nice thing about this is that it has, aside from the, the
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UnSATA slot that it has, it comes with a free, with an available NVMe slot, so M.2.
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So I went ahead and I popped in a second drive in there and I left a windows install on
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the drive that it came with and on the drive that I installed on the M.2 slot, I put Open
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BSD on it.
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So this has been dual booting or in a sense, just with two separate hard drives, I'm just
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using the UEFI bootloader, the boot selector to go between the two operating systems instead
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of using some sort of boot manager on one particular hard drive.
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So I don't want to deal with that nightmare anymore.
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But anyway, the trackpad also had an issue with it where, and in the review, if I can find
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the link I'll put in the show notes, the review for this laptop said that the trackpad
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reacted kind of odd because it would sort of track, but there was like a slight delay
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in it and on top of that, it would never really land, the point it would never really land
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exactly where you wanted to.
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So there were some issues with this particular trackpad.
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Well after a number of years, the trackpad started to fail.
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So I needed to see if I could find a replacement for this and finally got to the point where
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it was just unreliable and I had to use a USB mouse.
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Now I could have purchased a wireless USB mouse, but which I intend to do as well, however
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is I find it to be very, very clumsy in certain instances.
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So I don't mind using the trackpad.
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I know people have issues with that, but in honesty, I don't have a problem with that.
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So I started looking for this particular trackpad itself, the module.
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So the nice thing about it is that you can actually open this up.
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It's very user-serveable.
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And you can even replace easily, you can take out the trackpad.
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There's just a few screws after you get into the inside and then it comes loose.
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You just release the ribbon that goes to the main board.
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Now the model for this is TDA147011T01.
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Now this is where I had some difficulty because the only place I found online that sold
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this exact part was in Japan.
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And I had to go through some secondary reseller to be able to get it from Japan to the States.
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And I was like, well, no, I'm not even going to bother with that.
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So I said, let me hit eBay and see what I can find.
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So I did find one of this exact model.
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And I believe it was either in the Czech Republic or I know there was one in Germany.
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And I was like, well, do I really want to, let me see what else I can find.
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Now eBay did give me some other recommendations.
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And some of these had the same, very similar, it was the same product number except the last
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two digits were different.
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So there was one that started with TDA147011T10.
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And then there was another one that I found that ended in T20.
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So I was like, well, I'm going to make a gamble here.
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I'm going to test this out because the one that had the T20 at the end was actually a poll
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from an XPG Xenia 15 gaming laptop.
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I said, well, it's going to cost me almost $60 US.
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So let me give this a test.
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I can only assume that this is a revised model of that original one because of the last
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the numberings at the end.
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So I said, well, I've done all the research I can, I'll buy it.
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So I went ahead and I ordered it, eventually came.
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I went ahead and the part is exactly the same if you look at the pictures of it.
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On the underneath, the cables were the same.
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This one on the T20 was a little longer, which wasn't a big deal.
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The one on the original was a little shorter just to keep everything neat inside.
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So I went, I removed the original one, the T01, and installed the T20 using the original
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cable that came with the laptop.
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So I went in everything fit perfectly, turned it on, and well, unfortunately nothing happened.
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I didn't get anything.
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No reaction from the touchpad at all.
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So I shut it down, I fiddle with the cables again, I went ahead and said, well, let me
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try with the cable that the replacement trackpad came with.
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So I went ahead and installed it, kind of managed to fit it in there somewhat neatly.
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And then I went ahead and I sealed everything back up and turned it back on.
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And I booted up to OpenBSD, still nothing.
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So I said, well, hopefully it's not a bomb device.
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So let me see, ah, let me boot into windows and see if maybe if it's just a fluke that
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just an OpenBSD window detected, let me see if it detects certain windows.
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So I decided to boot up in windows, cross my fingers, windows boots up, and lo and behold,
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the trackpad started working.
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So I was like, okay, at least it's working in windows.
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You know, maybe I can send a bug report to the OpenBSD bugs team through their mailing
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list and see, and I was collecting the info, I was going to collect the info in order
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to send that information to them and see if they can get it to work.
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So what I noticed, at least on the windows side, was that this trackpad was actually much
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more precise than the original one.
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So I guess my assumption was correct.
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This is a revised model that improved on the bugs of the original.
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And it was very precise, much, you would move your finger over and it would respond instantly.
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So there was no delay as there was with the first one, the original one, nor was there
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that issue where the pointer wouldn't land exactly where you wanted it to based compared
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to the trackpad.
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It was precise.
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So I said, okay, great, at least I can use this in their windows and I'll do the information
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about the boot into OpenBSD.
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So I went ahead and boot into OpenBSD, I plugged in a USB mouse, and as I boot up, I accidentally
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hit the trackpad and noticed the mouse move.
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So I'm like, okay, now it's working under OpenBSD, so I don't know what happened.
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I don't know if windows installed an update to the firmware for that, for this laptop
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to allow it to work.
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But since then, it's been working without issue on OpenBSD, so I have to say my gamble
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paid off, but I did do my research.
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I did do my research on the versions and just to see if there were any other models if
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I can get the original one.
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So at least, you know, if you have something like this that's very similar, whether it's
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the same EVU model or the Motel model, the specs for pretty much the same, just pay close
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attention to the product model number underneath in the trackpad if you ever need to do this,
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and just get exactly that one or a newer version, but do your homework.
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This for me was a gamble and I got lucky, but like I said, I did my homework on this.
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So yeah, now it's working great, and I have a fully functional laptop again, and I'm
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very happy.
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So I just wanted to share that with you, and this will be my first recording for this
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years.
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I know I've been overdue for a show now.
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There is one other show I'd like to do, testing Haiku with mumble, because I said that
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hey, I wonder if it works with mumble in the New Year show for the last New Year show.
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So I have a Haiku install at work, but I'm going to have to do this at home mainly because
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I just don't have time at work to play around anymore, not at least not for a while.
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So yeah, anyway, that is one of the ones that will be coming up, and hopefully I can record
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some other episodes as well, and I hope that you do too, because Hacker Public Radio
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is in need of shows, so if you can, please record an episode for Hacker Public Radio in
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just a minute.
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Alright, well, this is going to be it for me, have a good one, bye bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts, then click on our contribute link to find
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out how easy it really is.
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Posting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the Internet Archive
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and our Sync.net.
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On this otherwise stated, today's show is released on our Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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