Buying GuideMay 14, 2026·12 min de lecture

Identifier votre terminal POS IBM / Toshiba — Décodeur de numéros de modèle SurePOS et TCx

Décodez le type de machine 4 chiffres + suffixe sur votre terminal IBM SurePOS / Toshiba TCx, localisez l'étiquette physique, et associez le résultat aux pièces correctes. Référence de terrain, pas brochure commerciale.

Pourquoi le numéro de modèle est le point de départ de la recherche de pièces

We process about 60 procurement enquiries a week. Roughly one in three arrives with the wrong machine type — "IBM 4810" instead of the specific 4810-340, "Toshiba TCxWave" with no variant, or a 12-year-old support sticker reading 4694-247 for a system that was actually swapped to a 4900-786 three years ago. Each mismatch costs the buyer a return-shipping cycle. This guide is the field reference that ends those mismatches.

The model number does three jobs at once: it identifies the cabinet, the year of manufacture (roughly), and the peripheral interface generation. Once you have it, every replacement part lookup — power supply FRU, riser card revision, thermal printhead resistance — falls into place. Without it, you're guessing.

La convention type de machine 4 chiffres + suffixe

Both IBM (1973–2012) and Toshiba TGCS (2012–present) use the same underlying naming scheme on retail POS hardware. It looks like this:

4900-786
↑ machine type   ↑ suffix
A 4-digit machine type identifies the chassis family; a hyphenated suffix narrows it down to one specific configuration.

The 4-digit machine type is the broad family:

  • 4610 — SureMark / TCx receipt & document printers (separate from the POS terminal itself)
  • 4810 — SurePOS 300 class (low-cost retail register, 2003–2012)
  • 4820 — SurePoint touch displays & integrated touch POS
  • 4830 — POS keyboards (e.g. 4830-T01 ANPOS)
  • 4838 — SurePOS 100 / 300-V (compact mid-class)
  • 4840 — SurePOS 500 (mid-class)
  • 4852 — SurePOS 500 / TCx 500 next-gen (touch all-in-one)
  • 4900 — SurePOS 700 / TCx 700 (enterprise flagship)
  • 6140 — TCxWave (all-in-one with curved bezel, 2014-present)

The suffix narrows the family down to one specific configuration: processor generation, power supply rating, expansion-slot layout, and peripheral interface set. Two terminals sharing a machine type but with different suffixes can have completely different mainboards.

Où se trouve réellement l'étiquette du modèle — par châssis

Every IBM/Toshiba retail terminal ships with at least one factory label. The label has held the same six elements since 1996: machine type, model suffix, serial number, FRU of the chassis itself, MAC address, and a barcode of all of the above. Where you find the label depends on the chassis:

FamilyPrimary label location
4810-31x / 32x / 33xRight side panel, near the rear I/O cluster
4810-340 / E40Rear of chassis, above the power inlet
4810-350 / 370 / E70Top of chassis, behind the lift-up service hatch
4820 SurePoint (touch display)Rear of head unit, behind the cable cover
4838 / 4840 / 4852Bottom of chassis when unit is laid on its back
4900-7xx / 8xxRight side panel, sometimes also on the rear I/O shield
6140 TCxWave (all-in-one)Behind the rear plastic shroud — pop the cover with a finger nail at the top edge
If the outer label is missing or worn, every chassis above also carries a duplicate sticker on the inside of the rear I/O cover or on the main board.

Catalogue des familles : 4810, 4820, 4830, 4838, 4840, 4852, 4900, 6140

Below is the working catalog we use internally to map machine types to part categories. Treat the years as approximate — Toshiba extended support on most platforms 3–5 years past initial end-of-marketing.

FamilyClassYearsClass peripherals
4810-31x → 33xSurePOS 3002003–2010Powered USB v1
4810-340 / E40SurePOS 3002008–2014Powered USB v2
4810-350 / 370SurePOS 300-V2010–2016Powered USB v2
4820-21G / 51GSurePoint touch2008–2018Powered USB
4838-330 / 540SurePOS 100/300-V2010–2016Powered USB v2
4840-544 / 561 / 563SurePOS 5002003–2012Powered USB v1
4852-526 / 566 / 570SurePOS 500 / TCx 5002011–2020Powered USB v2
4900-742 / 743 / 745SurePOS 700 / TCx 7002010–2018Powered USB v2 / USB 3.0
4900-785 / 786 / C86TCx 700-C2014–presentUSB 3.0 / Powered USB
6140-14C / 18C / E3RTCxWave all-in-one2014–presentUSB 3.0 / Powered USB
Cross-references between Powered USB v1 (5V) and v2 (12V/24V) cables are a common procurement trap — they look identical but draw at different voltages.
Image: Comparison photo: IBM 4810-340, 4900-785, and 6140-14C TCxWave chassis side by side
Three generations of the same product line. From left: 4810-340 (SurePOS 300 stub-tower, 2008), 4900-785 (TCx 700 standard, 2014), 6140-14C (TCxWave all-in-one, 2016).

Décoder le suffixe : ce que 'E40', '5LG', '14C', '2NR' signifient réellement

The suffix letter sequence isn't random — it encodes specific configuration axes. The convention shifted slightly between the IBM and Toshiba eras, but the underlying mapping is consistent:

Suffix patternMeaningExample
Single digit (1, 2, 3)Power-supply generation4900-712 vs 4900-722 — same chassis, different PSU
Trailing letter EEco / Energy-efficient revision4810-E40 = ACBEL 230 W upgrade on 4810-340
Trailing letter XExtended / Expanded I/O revision(historical, rarely seen on current stock)
5xxSurePOS 500 mid-class4840-561, 4852-570
7xx / 8xxSurePOS 700 / TCx 700 flagship4900-742, 4900-786
Letter + LGLCD Graphics — SurePoint touch4820-5LG = SurePoint 15-inch capacitive
Letter + xR / xCIBM SureMark printer model — R=receipt, C=cheque/document4610-2CR = 2NR refresh + document slip
Letter + xN / xTIBM SureMark printer — N=non-printing slip, T=thermal4610-1NR (1-station receipt)
14C / 18CTCxWave display size — 14-inch / 18.5-inch6140-14C, 6140-18C
E3RTCxWave Edge 3rd-gen Retail (current shipping config)6140-E3R
TF6 / TM6 / TG4 / TI4IBM 4610 printhead/cutter generationTF6 = thermal Friction 6th gen
1NR / 2NR / 2CRIBM 4610 station count + cheque support1-station receipt / 2-station / 2-station with cheque
Memorize: digit = generation, letter = capability. Once you internalize the pattern, you can decode a suffix you've never seen by inference.

Transition IBM → Toshiba 2012 : pourquoi les deux noms coexistent

On August 16, 2012, Toshiba TEC acquired IBM's Retail Store Solutions business for $850 million. The deal transferred IBM's POS hardware portfolio — SurePOS, SureMark, SurePoint — and the 4690 operating system to Toshiba, which folded them into a new subsidiary, Toshiba Global Commerce Solutions (TGCS).

For the next 3–5 years, Toshiba continued shipping the same chassis with IBM-branded labels under a transitional licensing agreement. During this period a 4900-786 leaving the factory could carry either IBM or Toshiba branding depending on the buyer's contract — but the hardware is identical. By 2018 Toshiba completed the rebrand, renaming the SurePOS line to TCx (SurePOS 700 → TCx 700, SurePOS 500 → TCx 500), introducing the all-new TCxWave 6140 line, and retiring the IBM brand from new production.

The handful of exceptions: anything with a 7- or 8-character TGCS-era part number that starts with 00V, 54Y or 95Y is Toshiba-era stock (after 2014). Anything starting with 14R, 40N, 41J, 42M or 44V is IBM-era stock (2008–2014). Parts are forward- and backward-compatible at the chassis level.

Type de machine vs FRU vs P/N — trois numéros différents, un seul châssis

The three-number system is the biggest source of confusion for first-time procurement. Each number identifies a different thing:

Number typeIdentifiesFormatExample
Machine Type (MT)The chassis family (cabinet)4 digits + 3-char suffix4900-786
Type / Model (M/T-M)A specific configuration of that chassis4 + 3 (same as MT)4900-786
FRU (Field Replaceable Unit)A single internal part inside the chassis5–7 chars alphanumeric44V2031 = ACBEL 230 W PSU
P/N (Part Number)Variant of FRU — same part, different sourcing batchP/N often = FRU; can differ for refurb stockPN42V3935 = SurePOS 500 tailgate
S/N (Serial Number)One specific unit's identity10–12 chars alphanumeric78-CTAJX
Always quote FRU when ordering. Machine type alone can match dozens of incompatible parts (e.g. a 4900-786 has six different riser cards depending on year).
  1. 1

    Identify the failing component on the chassis

    Don't start with the symptom — start with the part. Receipt printer faded? You need a thermal printhead, not a printer. Drawer won't open? You need a cable or solenoid, not a drawer. Naming the component narrows the FRU search by an order of magnitude.
  2. 2

    Read its FRU sticker (back, top, or inside cover)

    Every internal part carries its own FRU number on a screen-printed sticker. Power supplies: on the metal case, top side. Mainboards: on the SATA-port edge. Riser cards: on the PCB silkscreen near the bracket. Photograph it.
    Caution: Don't trust the FRU printed on the original packaging — packaging gets reused. Read it off the part itself.
  3. 3

    Cross-reference FRU against the machine type to confirm compatibility

    A 44V2031 power supply fits both 4810-340 and 4810-E40, but a 99Y3273 PSU only fits 4900-785 and later. Quote both machine type and FRU when checking with a supplier.
  4. 4

    Match against supplier stock by FRU first, P/N second

    FRU is the unambiguous identifier. P/N (part number) sometimes carries refurb-batch suffixes that look different but represent the same physical part. If you see a stock listing with an FRU match but a P/N you don't recognize, ask the supplier for a photograph of the part's sticker.
  5. 5

    Confirm the replacement matches: voltage, connector, firmware

    Especially relevant for power supplies (24 V Powered-USB families changed between 4810-340 and 4810-E40), riser cards (Sparta v1 vs v2.1 use different bracket mounting), and mainboards (BIOS revisions tied to specific Toshiba TCx firmware).
From symptom to part order — the five-minute procurement workflow.

Décodeur pratique : numéro de modèle → catalogue de pièces

The screencast below walks through a real procurement workflow: a ticket lands describing "Toshiba TCx 6140-E3R, blank screen on boot, no fan noise." In under three minutes we narrow it from symptom to FRU to in-stock supplier match.

Thumbnail for: From symptom to FRU: a 3-minute POS terminal triage walkthrough
Play: From symptom to FRU: a 3-minute POS terminal triage walkthrough
Replace this video URL with WenShin's own demo once recorded. The current placeholder is a YouTube template ID.

For the written equivalent: once you have a machine type and a symptom, the part falls into one of nine standard categories. The table below maps the most common failures to the part family you need to order:

SymptomMost likely part family
Won't power on, no LEDsPower supply (FRU starting with 44V / 99Y / 57P / DPS-)
POSTs but won't load OSStorage drive / mainboard
Black screen, fans spinDisplay, display cable, or backlight inverter
Faded receiptsThermal printhead — see Guide A
Random typing on keyboardKeyboard membrane / circuit film
Drawer won't open on cueDrawer cable / solenoid (K-series for Wincor; 46N4329 for IBM)
Customer display blankVFD or LCD display module, or Powered USB cable
Card swipe failuresMSR head / card reader assembly
USB ports deadRiser / IO card / tailgate assembly
If your symptom isn't here, it's almost always a power, cable, or firmware issue rather than a hardware failure.

Modèle vérifié. Et maintenant ?

Two follow-ups, in order:

  1. Take photos of every label on the chassis before disassembly. The outer machine-type label, the inner FRU sticker, the power supply FRU, the riser card FRU. Save them in your ticketing system. Future maintenance becomes 10× faster when this data is on file.
  2. Pull the part you need from a supplier with the FRU quoted on the listing. Generic descriptions ("IBM 4900 power supply") won't cut it — that term matches six different FRUs across the 4900 family. Match the FRU number digit-for-digit.

Questions fréquentes

Je ne trouve l'étiquette du modèle nulle part — que faire ?
Trois solutions de repli, par ordre de fiabilité. Première : démarrez le terminal dans le BIOS — le BIOS POS IBM/Toshiba affiche le type de machine en haut à droite du splash screen pendant les deux premières secondes. Deuxième : exécutez Informations système sous POSReady 7 / Windows 10 IoT — le modèle rapporté par le BIOS apparaît sous 'Fabricant BIOS / Nom du produit'. Troisième : décollez la coque arrière — beaucoup de châssis 4900 et 6140 ont un autocollant FRU secondaire sous le cache d'I/O arrière, qui survit longtemps après le décollement de l'étiquette externe.
Quelle est la vraie différence entre un IBM 4810-340 et un IBM 4810-E40 ?
Les deux sont des terminaux de classe SurePOS 300. Le suffixe '340' désigne une plateforme Intel Celeron / Atom de 2008 avec une alimentation 250 W ; '-E40' est le refresh de 2010 sur le même châssis avec un Celeron basse-consommation, une alimentation ACBEL 230 W mise à jour (44V2031) et une carte Riser Sparta révisée. Des pièces qui semblent identiques entre les deux — cartes riser, plaques d'interrupteurs, alimentations — ne sont pas toujours interchangeables ; vérifiez la FRU, pas le type de machine.
L'« IBM 4900 » est-il le même produit que le « Toshiba 4900 » ?
Même matériel, étiquette différente. IBM a cédé son activité Retail Store Solutions à Toshiba TEC en août 2012, et Toshiba a continué à expédier le même châssis sous la marque SurePOS pendant plusieurs années avant de renommer la gamme en TCx (le 4900-786 est devenu TCx 700-C86 ; le SurePOS 500 est devenu TCx 500). Les pièces détachées pour « IBM 4900-786 » fonctionnent sur « Toshiba 4900-786 » et vice versa — c'est la même FRU.
Puis-je upgrader un ancien IBM 4810 vers un 4900 ?
Pas par échange de pièces. Les familles 4810 et 4900 utilisent des châssis, cartes mères et alimentations incompatibles. Ce que vous pouvez faire : réutiliser des périphériques de l'ère 4810 — imprimantes de tickets, tiroirs-caisses, claviers MSR, écrans clients — sur une base 4900, car Toshiba a maintenu stable le protocole Powered USB pour les périphériques entre les deux générations.
Que signifie 'TCxWave' dans Toshiba 6140 ?
TCxWave est le nom commercial du terminal tout-en-un Toshiba 6140 — écran, carte mère et châssis POS fusionnés dans une seule façade. « Wave » fait référence à la forme courbe du châssis en aluminium. Le 6140 existe en trois variantes principales : 6140-14C (14 pouces), 6140-18C (18,5 pouces) et 6140-E3R (Edge / 3e génération). Tous partagent la même famille de cartes mères mais ont des écrans, contrôleurs tactiles et besoins électriques différents.
Pourquoi certains terminaux ont-ils des codes FRU qui ne correspondent pas au type de machine ?
Le type de machine identifie le châssis (par ex. 4810-340). Les codes FRU identifient des pièces remplaçables individuelles à l'intérieur (par ex. 44V2031 = une alimentation 230 W spécifique). Un type de machine peut contenir des dizaines de pièces codées FRU, et les codes FRU peuvent être partagés entre types de machines lorsque la même pièce interne est utilisée dans plusieurs châssis. Lors du sourcing, citez toujours la FRU — c'est l'identifiant sans ambiguïté.
Toshiba supporte-t-il toujours le SurePOS 4900 sous marque IBM ?
Toshiba continue à fournir des pièces détachées et du firmware pour les terminaux SurePOS sous marque IBM via TGCS (Toshiba Global Commerce Solutions). Cependant le stock OEM officiel se réduit. Les fournisseurs tiers stockant des pièces d'origine ou des remplacements de qualité usine — y compris têtes thermiques, cartes mères et alimentations — sont devenus le canal d'approvisionnement pratique pour les terminaux de l'ère 4900.

Sources & lectures complémentaires

  1. TCx® 700 & SurePOS 700 Support — Toshiba CommerceToshiba Global Commerce Solutions
  2. SureMark 4610 Models 2CR / 2NR User's Guide (GA27-5003)IBM Public DHE
  3. 4690 Operating System — WikipediaWikipedia
  4. Toshiba Global Commerce Solutions SureMark 4610 Hardware Guide (Models 2xR)Toshiba TGCS
  5. IBM SurePOS 4810-32x / 33x / E40 Hardware Service ManualManualsLib (mirrored from IBM)

Guides associés

Catégories associées

Besoin des pièces mentionnées dans ce guide ?

Pièces OEM d'origine et alternatives testées en usine pour les systèmes IBM, Toshiba, NCR, Diebold, Wincor et Hyosung — avec expédition mondiale.