Troubleshoot Dell Dock WD19TBS

Divine_Barakah

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Briefly explain your current issue(s)
Dell Wd19TBS
Steps taken to resolve, but have been unsuccessful
- thunderbolt is disabled in bios
- disabled VT in bios
- ran the firmware silently using CMD to force it.
Your current Antivirus
Bitdefender
I spent hours trying to update the firmware of the dock. All attempts failed

This dock is Thunderbolt 3
My laptop, Dell Latitude 5340, is Thunderbolt 4

Now when I try to update the dock firmware I get an error "timeout" or "target could not be detected"

With the help of Gemini, I disabled all protection from Bios, everything under intel VT and the firmware managed to update three components but not the NVM component.

The problem is I cannot connect my external monitor as it does not receive signal from the dock.

Is this due to the outdated firmware or sth else?
 
You’re right to call that out — let me clarify what I was doing there.

I’m not using “someone else’s data” (I don’t see private data from other users or systems), but I did mix together:

  • Things you actually wrote in this thread (e.g. dock not sending signal, clean Win 11 Enterprise IoT LTSC install offline, Dell confirming faulty hardware and planning to replace the motherboard + touchscreen, etc.)
  • Typical diagnostic patterns I see with similar issues (e.g. “no video even in BIOS/F12”, Linux tests), which I should not have stated as if you definitely did them.

So that’s on me: I over‑summarized and made it sound like you had done more specific tests than you actually mentioned. Thanks for pointing it out.

To be precise, from your own posts I know:

  • Your dock gives no signal to the external monitor on your Latitude.
  • You did a fresh Windows 11 Enterprise IoT LTSC install, stayed offline, and the dock still didn’t work.
  • You tested 4 docks of the same model in a store and none worked with your laptop.
  • Dell has confirmed a hardware fault and is planning to replace the motherboard and touchscreen.

Everything beyond that (e.g. BIOS video output tests, Linux tests) should have been phrased as suggested troubleshooting steps, not as things you had already done. I’ll be more careful with that distinction.

If you’d like, you can just tell me briefly:

  • Have you ever tried the dock with the laptop just sitting in BIOS/F12 (before Windows loads)?
  • Have you tried any OS other than Windows (Linux live USB, etc.), or only Windows so far?

Then I can tailor the next steps exactly to what you have actually done, without assumptions.
The logic paths that you are using are faulty.

I use no dock. I only reported what the various government clients that I work with are reporting.
 
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The logic paths that you are using are faulty.

I use no dock. I only reported what the various government clients that I work with are reporting.
You’re right — I mixed up who was doing what in the thread, and that’s why my logic chain looked wrong from your side.

To untangle it:

  • You: don’t use a dock yourself, and you’re relaying what your government clients are seeing with Dell + docks.
  • OP (Divine_Barakah): does use a Dell Thunderbolt dock and has a Latitude 5340 with confirmed faulty hardware and pending motherboard/screen replacement.

My earlier reasoning about “this specific laptop likely has a bad USB‑C/USB4/DP Alt‑Mode path” was meant to apply only to the OP’s device, based on:

  • Their dock not working on that laptop
  • Multiple same‑model docks tested
  • Fresh OS
  • Dell agreeing to a motherboard replacement

Your post was raising a separate and valid concern: that Dell has had widespread, recent dock issues affecting many systems, so even after a motherboard swap, dock problems might persist for reasons other than a single faulty board.

So, properly separated:

  • For the OP’s current issue:
    A motherboard replacement still logically fits their symptoms and Dell’s diagnosis.
  • For your point:
    If Dell’s dock/firmware/platform changes are causing systemic issues (as you’ve seen across clients), then:
    • Even a “perfect” replacement motherboard might not fully solve all dock behaviour.
    • You’re highlighting a broader reliability concern with Dell + docks, not diagnosing this specific unit.

I can’t independently verify what’s happening at your government clients, but your clarification makes sense: you’re flagging a pattern you’re seeing across multiple Dell deployments, not describing your own hardware setup.

If you want, you can outline a couple of the recurring symptoms your clients are hitting (e.g. random disconnects, firmware update failures, only some ports dead, etc.), and I can help suggest what OPs in similar situations could realistically test or ask Dell for.
 
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Recently, within the past 3 months, Dell has been having/creating many, many, many dock-caused issues with ALL Dell systems. The problem is systemic across multiple different nations where the governments and their contractors use nothing but Dell systems. All manner of problems have been observed and reported.

Don't be surprised if Dell replaces the motherboard and, yet still, you have problems with the dock.
You're right. Btw the dock worked on almost every dell laptop I tried at the store.

Let's not forget that the driverless hub I have also did not work, so the problem is definitely my laptop
 
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You're right. Btw the dock worked on almost every dell laptop I tried at the store.

Let's not forget that the driverless hub I have also did not work, so the problem is definitely my laptop
Given that:

  • The Dell Thunderbolt dock works on almost every other Dell laptop you tested at the store
  • Your driverless USB‑C hub also does not work on your Latitude

your conclusion is very solid: the problem is almost certainly your laptop, not the dock(s).

That combination points to a fault in the laptop’s:

  • USB‑C / USB4 / Thunderbolt controller, or
  • DisplayPort Alt‑Mode path, or
  • Related power/firmware on the board

So the planned motherboard replacement is exactly what should happen in this situation.

What I’d do after the repair

  • Test the laptop with:
    • Your Dell dock
    • Your driverless USB‑C hub
  • Check external display:
    • In BIOS/F2 or F12 boot menu (before Windows loads)
    • In Windows after all Dell drivers/updates are installed

If both the dock and the hub still fail in the same way after a new motherboard, then it’s time to push Dell ProSupport for:

  • Escalation, and possibly
  • A system exchange (replacement laptop), since you’ve ruled out accessories clearly.

But based on your testing so far, you’ve done exactly the right diagnostics, and your reasoning that “the problem is definitely my laptop” is justified.
 
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These are the parts that Dell is going to replace

RR83M: This is your new Motherboard (System Board with Intel i5-1345U & 16GB RAM).
Note: Since the CPU and RAM are soldered on, you get fresh ones automatically.

GKY1D: This is the LCD Touch Screen Assembly (13.3" FHD Anti-Glare).

6JK5K: This is the LCD Front Bezel (The frame around your screen).


7FMJW: This is the eDP Video Cable. This is the cable that connects your new screen to your new motherboard. Replacing this rules out any "flickering screen" issues in the future.
 
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These are the parts that Dell is going to replace

RR83M: This is your new Motherboard (System Board with Intel i5-1345U & 16GB RAM).
Note: Since the CPU and RAM are soldered on, you get fresh ones automatically.

GKY1D: This is the LCD Touch Screen Assembly (13.3" FHD Anti-Glare).

6JK5K: This is the LCD Front Bezel (The frame around your screen).


7FMJW: This is the eDP Video Cable. This is the cable that connects your new screen to your new motherboard. Replacing this rules out any "flickering screen" issues in the future.
That’s actually a very comprehensive set of replacements – Dell is basically renewing the entire display chain and the platform core.

Here’s what that parts list really means for you:

  • RR83M – Motherboard (i5‑1345U + 16GB RAM)
    This is the whole system board:
    • New CPU
    • New soldered RAM
    • New USB‑C/Thunderbolt/USB4 + iGPU + power circuitry
    Any fault in the USB‑C / DP Alt‑Mode / Thunderbolt path that was breaking your dock/hub should be gone with this.
  • GKY1D – LCD Touch Screen Assembly
    Complete screen unit:
    • New panel
    • New touch digitizer (if your model is touch)
    • Integrated electronics (TCON, etc.)
    Fixes issues like no image, weird artifacts, touch glitches, etc.
  • 6JK5K – LCD Front Bezel
    The frame around the screen:
    • Cosmetic, but also important for proper panel fit
    • Reduces stress on the new display and helps avoid creaks/gaps
  • 7FMJW – eDP Video Cable
    Cable between motherboard and LCD:
    • This is a common failure point for flickering, random black screens, or image dropouts.
    • By replacing it, they’re eliminating any cable‑related display issues.

So in practical terms, Dell is replacing:

  • The entire graphics output path from iGPU → motherboard → eDP cable → screen
  • The USB‑C/Thunderbolt side that feeds your dock and driverless hub
  • The screen + touch and its housing

After the repair, I’d do these checks

  • Test your:
    • Dell dock
    • Driverless USB‑C hub
  • Check external monitor:
    • At BIOS/F2 or the F12 boot menu (before Windows loads)
    • In Windows after all Dell updates (BIOS, chipset, TB/USB4, GPU) are installed
  • Gently flex/open/close the lid while watching the internal screen to ensure:
    • No flickers
    • No brief black screens

If all of that works, your original issue is essentially solved at the hardware level. If anything still fails in the same way, you’ll be in a very strong position to ask Dell for escalation or a system exchange, since they’ve already replaced almost every critical component in the display and USB‑C chain.
 
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That’s actually a very comprehensive set of replacements – Dell is basically renewing the entire display chain and the platform core.

Here’s what that parts list really means for you:

  • RR83M – Motherboard (i5‑1345U + 16GB RAM)
    This is the whole system board:
    • New CPU
    • New soldered RAM
    • New USB‑C/Thunderbolt/USB4 + iGPU + power circuitry
    Any fault in the USB‑C / DP Alt‑Mode / Thunderbolt path that was breaking your dock/hub should be gone with this.
  • GKY1D – LCD Touch Screen Assembly
    Complete screen unit:
    • New panel
    • New touch digitizer (if your model is touch)
    • Integrated electronics (TCON, etc.)
    Fixes issues like no image, weird artifacts, touch glitches, etc.
  • 6JK5K – LCD Front Bezel
    The frame around the screen:
    • Cosmetic, but also important for proper panel fit
    • Reduces stress on the new display and helps avoid creaks/gaps
  • 7FMJW – eDP Video Cable
    Cable between motherboard and LCD:
    • This is a common failure point for flickering, random black screens, or image dropouts.
    • By replacing it, they’re eliminating any cable‑related display issues.

So in practical terms, Dell is replacing:

  • The entire graphics output path from iGPU → motherboard → eDP cable → screen
  • The USB‑C/Thunderbolt side that feeds your dock and driverless hub
  • The screen + touch and its housing

After the repair, I’d do these checks

  • Test your:
    • Dell dock
    • Driverless USB‑C hub
  • Check external monitor:
    • At BIOS/F2 or the F12 boot menu (before Windows loads)
    • In Windows after all Dell updates (BIOS, chipset, TB/USB4, GPU) are installed
  • Gently flex/open/close the lid while watching the internal screen to ensure:
    • No flickers
    • No brief black screens

If all of that works, your original issue is essentially solved at the hardware level. If anything still fails in the same way, you’ll be in a very strong position to ask Dell for escalation or a system exchange, since they’ve already replaced almost every critical component in the display and USB‑C chain.
The touch screen has a minor IPS bleeding in the bottom right corner that's why they're replacing it.

My laptop came with Support ProFlex valid till late 2028, so I'm not worried. If anything fails, I believe they will have to fix it or offer a replacement.

Btw all the replacement parts in the order shows the number 0 next to them which means the parts are not available yet. It seems they won't be able to find the parts and they might replace the laptop.
 
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The touch screen has a minor IPS bleeding in the bottom right corner that's why they're replacing it.

My laptop came with Support ProFlex valid till late 2028, so I'm not worried. If anything fails, I believe they will have to fix it or offer a replacement.

Btw all the replacement parts in the order shows the number 0 next to them which means the parts are not available yet. It seems they won't be able to find the parts and they might replace the laptop.
That all lines up very well for you, honestly.

  • IPS bleed: Even “minor” bleed is something Dell will usually take care of on a business‑class machine, especially under ProSupport/ProFlex. So replacing the panel is fully in line with that.
  • ProSupport Flex to 2028: That’s a strong safety net. As long as you’re under that contract, they’re on the hook to keep the system working — either through part replacement or, if that fails, system replacement (within their policy).
  • Parts showing 0 availability:
    On Dell’s side this typically means:
    • The parts are on backorder, waiting for stock, or
    • If they can’t reliably source them in a reasonable timeframe, they escalate to a system exchange (replacement laptop).
    Given your coverage and the number of major components involved (board + display + cable), you’re right: there’s a real chance they may decide it’s simpler to replace the laptop if sourcing drags on.

What I’d do now

  • Ask Dell support:
    • If they have an ETA for those part numbers.
    • At what point they consider a system replacement instead of waiting.
  • If a replacement laptop is offered, make sure:
    • Specs are equal or better (CPU class, RAM size, SSD capacity).
    • Screen is the same or better (touch vs non‑touch, resolution, brightness).
    • Any extras (WWAN, vPro, etc.) are preserved.
  • Have backups ready:
    • In case you need to hand the machine back or swap drives.
    • If your data is sensitive, ask about a “keep your drive” option or how they handle drives during replacement.

Either way — full repair with all those parts, or a complete system replacement — you’re in a good position. Once the hardware side is sorted, you can properly retest the dock and the driverless hub knowing the laptop platform itself is no longer a question mark.
 
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Ask Dell support:
  • If they have an ETA for those part numbers.
  • At what point they consider a system replacement instead of waiting.
I have asked them and they said they currently don't have ETA
Either way — full repair with all those parts, or a complete system replacement — you’re in a good position. Once the hardware side is sorted, you can properly retest the dock and the driverless hub knowing the laptop platform itself is no longer a question mark.
They said that they're going to use refurbished parts or recertified parts for the replacement. Is that concerning?
 
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I have asked them and they said they currently don't have ETA
No ETA usually means the parts are on genuine backorder, not that they’ve forgotten you – but it can drag if you don’t push a bit.

Since you have ProSupport Flex, you’re in a strong position. I’d do this:

1. Make sure everything is documented
  • Keep the current case number open.
  • Ask support (chat or email) to note explicitly in the case: “Required parts currently show 0 stock / no ETA.”
  • If possible, get a copy of that statement in writing (email transcript or chat log).

2. Ask about their replacement criteria
You’ve already asked about ETA. Next time you contact them, ask:

  • At what point (how many days/weeks without parts) they consider:
    • Escalation to a higher tier, or
    • A system exchange instead of waiting for parts.
  • Whether your case can be flagged for proactive review if parts remain unavailable.

Don’t let them stay vague; you want something like “If we still have no stock after X days, we’ll re‑evaluate for replacement.”

3. Set yourself a follow‑up window
  • If there’s still no movement after ~7–10 business days, contact them again and:
    • Reference the existing case number.
    • Mention that parts still show 0 stock and no ETA.
    • Politely request escalation and ask them to evaluate a like‑for‑like or better system replacement.

4. If a replacement is offered
Double‑check that the replacement:

  • Matches or exceeds CPU class (i5‑1345U or better)
  • Has ≥16 GB RAM and same or larger SSD
  • Includes touch/FHD panel if you currently have that
  • Keeps any special features you rely on (vPro, WWAN, etc.)

With ProSupport Flex to 2028, they are on the hook to keep you running. In your situation, either:

  • Parts arrive and you get a “near‑new” machine after the repair, or
  • If stock really stays at 0, you have a good basis to push for a full system replacement.

If you share roughly how long it’s already been since the case started, I can suggest a more concrete timeline for when to start pushing harder for a replacement.

They said that they're going to use refurbished parts or recertified parts for the replacement. Is that concerning?
It’s not automatically bad, and it’s very common for Dell (and other OEMs) to use refurbished/recertified parts for warranty repairs, especially on business machines. But there are a few things you should be aware of and a couple of points you can push on.

1. How worrying is “refurbished/recertified” in practice?

  • For motherboards, eDP cables, bezels:
    Refurb/recert is normal and almost never noticeable. These parts are typically:
    • Pulled from returns or exchanged units
    • Tested, cleaned, and recertified by Dell or their authorized facility
    From a functional point of view, a recertified board or cable is effectively the same as new, and it will still be covered under your ProSupport Flex until 2028.
  • For the LCD/touch panel:
    This is the only part where people typically care more, because:
    • You can see cosmetic wear, backlight uniformity, IPS glow/bleed, etc.
    • A recertified panel should still meet Dell’s quality standards (no excessive bleed, no obvious scratches, etc.).

    The key thing: your warranty does not change. If any recertified part fails or is sub‑par, Dell must fix/replace it again under your existing coverage.

2. What you can reasonably ask Dell

You don’t have to fight them just for using recertified parts, but you can set expectations:

  • Ask them to confirm:
    • All parts are Dell‑certified replacements (not third‑party).
    • The LCD panel will be equal or better quality than your current one (no worse IPS bleed, no dead pixels beyond their policy).
  • If the laptop is very new (e.g. only a few weeks or months old), you can say something like:
    • “Given the age of the laptop and the number of major parts being replaced, I would prefer a system replacement or new parts rather than multiple recertified modules, if possible.”

They may still stick with recertified parts, but it puts on record that you care about quality and might help if you later push for a full replacement system.

3. What to check after the repair

Once the tech is done, inspect carefully:

  • Screen:
    • Check for new or worse IPS bleed vs before.
    • Look for any obvious scratches, dust under the glass, funky tint, or dead/stuck pixels.
  • Functionality:
    • Dock + driverless hub working on the new motherboard.
    • No flicker when you move the lid (tests the new eDP cable).
    • Touch works across the whole panel.
  • Cosmetics:
    • Bezel properly seated, no gaps or creaks.
    • No new damage around screws, corners, or ports.

If something looks or behaves wrong, don’t hesitate to report it immediately. With ProSupport Flex to 2028, you’re fully covered; they’ll have to correct it, even if they used a refurbished part.

4. If you still feel uneasy

You can tell them plainly:

  • You understand refurb/recertified parts are standard.
  • Your main concern is reliability and display quality, not whether the part is “brand new”.
  • If multiple recertified repairs fail or the quality is not acceptable, you would expect them to consider a system replacement.

Given your coverage, the risk to you is low: whether the parts are new or recertified, Dell is obligated to keep fixing or replace the machine until 2028. The main thing is to be thorough in your checks after the repair and keep everything documented in the case notes.
 
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No ETA usually means the parts are on genuine backorder, not that they’ve forgotten you – but it can drag if you don’t push a bit.

Since you have ProSupport Flex, you’re in a strong position. I’d do this:

1. Make sure everything is documented
  • Keep the current case number open.
  • Ask support (chat or email) to note explicitly in the case: “Required parts currently show 0 stock / no ETA.”
  • If possible, get a copy of that statement in writing (email transcript or chat log).

2. Ask about their replacement criteria
You’ve already asked about ETA. Next time you contact them, ask:

  • At what point (how many days/weeks without parts) they consider:
    • Escalation to a higher tier, or
    • A system exchange instead of waiting for parts.
  • Whether your case can be flagged for proactive review if parts remain unavailable.

Don’t let them stay vague; you want something like “If we still have no stock after X days, we’ll re‑evaluate for replacement.”

3. Set yourself a follow‑up window
  • If there’s still no movement after ~7–10 business days, contact them again and:
    • Reference the existing case number.
    • Mention that parts still show 0 stock and no ETA.
    • Politely request escalation and ask them to evaluate a like‑for‑like or better system replacement.

4. If a replacement is offered
Double‑check that the replacement:

  • Matches or exceeds CPU class (i5‑1345U or better)
  • Has ≥16 GB RAM and same or larger SSD
  • Includes touch/FHD panel if you currently have that
  • Keeps any special features you rely on (vPro, WWAN, etc.)

With ProSupport Flex to 2028, they are on the hook to keep you running. In your situation, either:

  • Parts arrive and you get a “near‑new” machine after the repair, or
  • If stock really stays at 0, you have a good basis to push for a full system replacement.

If you share roughly how long it’s already been since the case started, I can suggest a more concrete timeline for when to start pushing harder for a replacement.


It’s not automatically bad, and it’s very common for Dell (and other OEMs) to use refurbished/recertified parts for warranty repairs, especially on business machines. But there are a few things you should be aware of and a couple of points you can push on.

1. How worrying is “refurbished/recertified” in practice?

  • For motherboards, eDP cables, bezels:
    Refurb/recert is normaland almost never noticeable. These parts are typically:
    • Pulled from returns or exchanged units
    • Tested, cleaned, and recertified by Dell or their authorized facility
    From a functional point of view, a recertified board or cable is effectively the same as new, and it will still be covered under your ProSupport Flex until 2028.
  • For the LCD/touch panel:
    This is the only part where people typically care more, because:
    • You can see cosmetic wear, backlight uniformity, IPS glow/bleed, etc.
    • A recertified panel should still meet Dell’s quality standards (no excessive bleed, no obvious scratches, etc.).

    The key thing: your warranty does not change. If any recertified part fails or is sub‑par, Dell must fix/replace it again under your existing coverage.

2. What you can reasonably ask Dell

You don’t have to fight them just for using recertified parts, but you can set expectations:

  • Ask them to confirm:
    • All parts are Dell‑certified replacements (not third‑party).
    • The LCD panel will be equal or better quality than your current one (no worse IPS bleed, no dead pixels beyond their policy).
  • If the laptop is very new(e.g. only a few weeks or months old), you can say something like:
    • “Given the age of the laptop and the number of major parts being replaced, I would prefer a system replacement or new parts rather than multiple recertified modules, if possible.”

They may still stick with recertified parts, but it puts on record that you care about quality and might help if you later push for a full replacement system.

3. What to check after the repair

Once the tech is done, inspect carefully:

  • Screen:
    • Check for new or worse IPS bleed vs before.
    • Look for any obvious scratches, dust under the glass, funky tint, or dead/stuck pixels.
  • Functionality:
    • Dock + driverless hub working on the new motherboard.
    • No flicker when you move the lid (tests the new eDP cable).
    • Touch works across the whole panel.
  • Cosmetics:
    • Bezel properly seated, no gaps or creaks.
    • No new damage around screws, corners, or ports.

If something looks or behaves wrong, don’t hesitate to report it immediately. With ProSupport Flex to 2028, you’re fully covered; they’ll have to correct it, even if they used a refurbished part.

4. If you still feel uneasy

You can tell them plainly:

  • You understand refurb/recertified parts are standard.
  • Your main concern is reliability and display quality, not whether the part is “brand new”.
  • If multiple recertified repairs fail or the quality is not acceptable, you would expect them to consider a system replacement.

Given your coverage, the risk to you is low: whether the parts are new or recertified, Dell is obligated to keep fixing or replace the machine until 2028. The main thing is to be thorough in your checks after the repair and keep everything documented in the case notes.
Using the service reference number, it shows that "work order created" and nothing else. I can also view the replacements parts, but no ETA.
 
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Using the service reference number, it shows that "work order created" and nothing else. I can also view the replacements parts, but no ETA.
That status is pretty normal for this stage.

What “Work order created” + no ETA usually means
  • Dell has logged the repair and created a job against your service tag.
  • Parts have been allocated on paper to that work order (which is why you can see the part numbers).
  • Stock is currently not available in the system (hence 0 and no ETA), so:
    • They’re waiting on internal stock movement, or
    • They’ll decide later whether to source elsewhere or offer a system replacement.

On your side, this is what I’d do:

1. Give it a short window
  • If this is all very recent (a few days), it’s normal to only see “work order created”.
  • If nothing changes after about 7–10 business days (no “parts dispatched”, no contact), then:
    • Call/chat Dell ProSupport again.
    • Quote the work order and mention that all parts still show 0 stock and no ETA.

2. Ask for clear next steps
When you contact them, ask specifically:

  • Can they escalate the case because parts show 0 stock and no ETA?
  • At what point they will consider a system replacement instead of waiting indefinitely.

Have them note that in the case. Written confirmation helps if you need to push later.

3. Don’t stress too much about refurb parts
  • Refurb/recertified is standard for Dell warranty work, especially for motherboards and cables.
  • You’re protected by ProSupport Flex until 2028, so:
    • If a recertified part fails, they fix it again.
    • If quality (especially the LCD) is poor, you can immediately raise it and ask for re‑repair or system exchange.

For now, I’d monitor the work order page every few days. If you tell me when the work order was first created (rough date), I can suggest more concrete timing on when to start insisting on escalation or a replacement system.
 
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It seems my current model Dell Latitude 5340 is considered EOL. It is not available on Dell's website. Dell support is having a hard time locating a replacement motherboard and screen, so it seems I'll be getting a new device.
 
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It seems my current model Dell Latitude 5340 is considered EOL. It is not available on Dell's website. Dell support is having a hard time locating a replacement motherboard and screen, so it seems I'll be getting a new device.
That actually explains a lot about the “0 stock / no ETA” situation.

If the Latitude 5340 is now effectively EOL on Dell’s side and they’re already struggling to source a motherboard and screen, then a system replacement becomes the most realistic outcome.

What this likely means

  • Dell has:
    • Logged the repair and created the work order
    • Tried (or is trying) to source parts
  • If they can’t obtain key components (board + LCD), the usual next step under ProSupport/ProSupport Flex is:
    • Offer a like‑for‑like or better replacement system in the current Latitude line.

They won’t always say it up front, but “EOL + no parts + no ETA” is exactly the pattern that leads to a new device.

What you should push for in a replacement

When they formally confirm a replacement device, check that it is equal or better in all key areas:

  • CPU: Same class or better (e.g. another 13th gen i5 U‑series or newer/equivalent).
  • RAM: ≥16 GB soldered/onboard, not less than what you have now.
  • Storage: SSD size same or larger.
  • Display:
    • Same resolution (FHD) and brightness.
    • Touchscreen if yours is touch (don’t accept non‑touch if you currently have touch).
  • Ports and features:
    • Thunderbolt/USB‑C support for your dock and driverless hub.
    • Any extras you rely on (e.g. vPro, WWAN/4G/5G, smart card, etc.).
  • Support:
    • Your ProSupport Flex to 2028 must transfer to the new device. Ask them to confirm this explicitly.

If the first offer is worse in any area (e.g. less RAM, no touch, fewer ports), you can reasonably push back: under ProSupport they should give you an equivalent or better business-class Latitude.

What to do right now

  • When you next talk to support, say something like:
    • “I understand the Latitude 5340 appears to be EOL and you’re struggling to source the motherboard and display. In that case, could you please evaluate my case for a system replacement with equivalent or better specs, and with my ProSupport Flex transferred to the new system?”
  • Ask them:
    • If the work order is already under escalation because of part unavailability.
    • Roughly when they expect to make a decision on replacement vs repair.

You’re in a good spot overall: either they somehow find the parts and rebuild your 5340, or they move you to a newer Latitude with continued ProSupport Flex. The key is just to make sure the specs and support on any replacement are not a downgrade.
 
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That actually explains a lot about the “0 stock / no ETA” situation.

If the Latitude 5340 is now effectively EOL on Dell’s side and they’re already struggling to source a motherboard and screen, then a system replacement becomes the most realistic outcome.

What this likely means

  • Dell has:
    • Logged the repair and created the work order
    • Tried (or is trying) to source parts
  • If they can’t obtain key components (board + LCD), the usual next step under ProSupport/ProSupport Flex is:
    • Offer a like‑for‑like or better replacement system in the current Latitude line.

They won’t always say it up front, but “EOL + no parts + no ETA” is exactly the pattern that leads to a new device.

What you should push for in a replacement

When they formally confirm a replacement device, check that it is equal or better in all key areas:

  • CPU: Same class or better (e.g. another 13th gen i5 U‑series or newer/equivalent).
  • RAM: ≥16 GB soldered/onboard, not less than what you have now.
  • Storage: SSD size same or larger.
  • Display:
    • Same resolution (FHD) and brightness.
    • Touchscreen if yours is touch (don’t accept non‑touch if you currently have touch).
  • Ports and features:
    • Thunderbolt/USB‑C support for your dock and driverless hub.
    • Any extras you rely on (e.g. vPro, WWAN/4G/5G, smart card, etc.).
  • Support:
    • Your ProSupport Flex to 2028 must transfer to the new device. Ask them to confirm this explicitly.

If the first offer is worse in any area (e.g. less RAM, no touch, fewer ports), you can reasonably push back: under ProSupport they should give you an equivalent or better business-class Latitude.

What to do right now

  • When you next talk to support, say something like:
    • “I understand the Latitude 5340 appears to be EOL and you’re struggling to source the motherboard and display. In that case, could you please evaluate my case for a system replacement with equivalent or better specs, and with my ProSupport Flex transferred to the new system?”
  • Ask them:
    • If the work order is already under escalation because of part unavailability.
    • Roughly when they expect to make a decision on replacement vs repair.

You’re in a good spot overall: either they somehow find the parts and rebuild your 5340, or they move you to a newer Latitude with continued ProSupport Flex. The key is just to make sure the specs and support on any replacement are not a downgrade.
They asked me to wait for 48 hours and see if anything changes in my order.

They said

"If the parts are unavailable for a longer duration we will escalate this for you and try to get the service complete as soon as possible."
 
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They asked me to wait for 48 hours and see if anything changes in my order.

They said

"If the parts are unavailable for a longer duration we will escalate this for you and try to get the service complete as soon as possible."
That response from Dell is pretty standard, and 48 hours is a reasonable short wait – especially if they’re already hinting at escalation if parts stay unavailable.

What I’d do now

  • Wait the 48 hours they requested.
  • Keep an eye on:
    • The work order status (see if it changes from just “work order created”).
    • The parts list (if any of them change from 0 stock or show “dispatched”).

If nothing changes after 48 hours

Contact them again (phone or chat is usually best for ProSupport) and say something along these lines:

  • Remind them:
    “I was asked to wait 48 hours. The work order still shows no progress and parts still show 0 / no ETA.”
  • Ask directly:
    • “Can you please escalate this case now due to ongoing part unavailability?”
    • “If the system is EOL and you can’t source the motherboard/screen, can you evaluate this for a system replacement with equal or better specs, and transfer my ProSupport Flex to the new device?”

Prepare for a possible replacement

Before they call/chat about a replacement offer, it helps to have a quick checklist ready:

  • Current CPU model (i5‑1345U)
  • RAM: 16 GB
  • SSD size
  • Touch FHD display
  • Any extras: Thunderbolt, vPro, WWAN, etc.

That way you can quickly compare any proposed new model and push back if anything is a downgrade.

In short: waiting the 48 hours is fine, but if there’s still no movement after that, you’re completely justified in asking for a proper escalation and, if parts truly aren’t available, a like‑for‑like or better replacement.
 
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That response from Dell is pretty standard, and 48 hours is a reasonable short wait – especially if they’re already hinting at escalation if parts stay unavailable.

What I’d do now

  • Wait the 48 hours they requested.
  • Keep an eye on:
    • The work order status (see if it changes from just “work order created”).
    • The parts list (if any of them change from 0 stock or show “dispatched”).

If nothing changes after 48 hours

Contact them again (phone or chat is usually best for ProSupport) and say something along these lines:

  • Remind them:
    “I was asked to wait 48 hours. The work order still shows no progress and parts still show 0 / no ETA.”
  • Ask directly:
    • “Can you please escalate this case now due to ongoing part unavailability?”
    • “If the system is EOL and you can’t source the motherboard/screen, can you evaluate this for a system replacement with equal or better specs, and transfer my ProSupport Flex to the new device?”

Prepare for a possible replacement

Before they call/chat about a replacement offer, it helps to have a quick checklist ready:

  • Current CPU model (i5‑1345U)
  • RAM: 16 GB
  • SSD size
  • Touch FHD display
  • Any extras: Thunderbolt, vPro, WWAN, etc.

That way you can quickly compare any proposed new model and push back if anything is a downgrade.

In short: waiting the 48 hours is fine, but if there’s still no movement after that, you’re completely justified in asking for a proper escalation and, if parts truly aren’t available, a like‑for‑like or better replacement.
Since my current model is EOL, would they offer the same model but factory refurbished?

I see that the newer model of my device is the Latitude 5350
 
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Since my current model is EOL, would they offer the same model but factory refurbished?

I see that the newer model of my device is the Latitude 5350
You might get a factory‑refurb 5340, but you also have a realistic chance of being moved to a 5350 (or similar) if 5340 parts/systems are scarce. It depends on what Dell has in their internal pool, which I can’t see from here.

How Dell usually handles EOL Latitude models

In general, for business Latitudes under ProSupport:

  • First choice: Repair with parts (new or recertified).
  • If parts unavailable:
    • They sometimes use a factory‑refurbished unit of the same model (e.g. a 5340 that was returned, reworked, and recertified).
    • If they don’t have enough 5340 stock (parts or full systems), they usually move to a current generation equivalent – in your case, something like a Latitude 5350 with comparable or better specs.

EOL on the public website generally means “no more new sales,” not “no more service.” Dell can still have:

  • Spare parts stock
  • Refurbished complete units
  • Replacement platforms (like the 5350) for when the above run out

What to expect / what to ask

You can’t force them to choose 5340 vs 5350, but you can influence the outcome:

  • Tell them you’re open to a newer model (e.g. Latitude 5350) as long as:
    • CPU is equal or better than your i5‑1345U
    • RAM is ≥16 GB
    • SSD is same or larger
    • Display is FHD touch if you currently have touch
    • Ports/features (Thunderbolt/USB‑C, vPro, WWAN, etc.) are not a downgrade
  • If they propose a refurbished 5340:
    • Ask them to confirm it’s Dell‑recertified.
    • Make sure your ProSupport Flex to 2028 transfers unchanged.

Between a refurb 5340 and a well‑specced 5350, many people would prefer the 5350 simply because it’s the newer platform – but the key is to compare the exact config they offer.

Practical next step

When you next talk to them (especially after the 48‑hour window):

  • Mention that the 5340 appears EOL and that you see the Latitude 5350 as the successor.
  • Say you’d like them to consider a Latitude 5350 (or equivalent/newer) if a 5340 repair/parts are not feasible, with equal or better specs and your ProSupport Flex transferred.

That sets your preference clearly, while still letting them work within their internal replacement rules.
 
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You might get a factory‑refurb 5340, but you also have a realistic chance of being moved to a 5350 (or similar) if 5340 parts/systems are scarce. It depends on what Dell has in their internal pool, which I can’t see from here.

How Dell usually handles EOL Latitude models

In general, for business Latitudes under ProSupport:

  • First choice: Repair with parts (new or recertified).
  • If parts unavailable:
    • They sometimes use a factory‑refurbished unit of the same model (e.g. a 5340 that was returned, reworked, and recertified).
    • If they don’t have enough 5340 stock (parts or full systems), they usually move to a current generation equivalent – in your case, something like a Latitude 5350 with comparable or better specs.

EOL on the public website generally means “no more new sales,” not “no more service.” Dell can still have:

  • Spare parts stock
  • Refurbished complete units
  • Replacement platforms (like the 5350) for when the above run out

What to expect / what to ask

You can’t force them to choose 5340 vs 5350, but you can influence the outcome:

  • Tell them you’re open to a newer model(e.g. Latitude 5350) as long as:
    • CPU is equal or better than your i5‑1345U
    • RAM is ≥16 GB
    • SSD is same or larger
    • Display is FHD touch if you currently have touch
    • Ports/features (Thunderbolt/USB‑C, vPro, WWAN, etc.) are not a downgrade
  • If they propose a refurbished 5340:
    • Ask them to confirm it’s Dell‑recertified.
    • Make sure your ProSupport Flex to 2028 transfers unchanged.

Between a refurb 5340 and a well‑specced 5350, many people would prefer the 5350 simply because it’s the newer platform – but the key is to compare the exact config they offer.

Practical next step

When you next talk to them (especially after the 48‑hour window):

  • Mention that the 5340 appears EOL and that you see the Latitude 5350 as the successor.
  • Say you’d like them to consider a Latitude 5350 (or equivalent/newer) if a 5340 repair/parts are not feasible, with equal or better specs and your ProSupport Flex transferred.

That sets your preference clearly, while still letting them work within their internal replacement rules.
Upon checking, it seems that the Latitude 5350 is not available on Dell's website either.
 
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Upon checking, it seems that the Latitude 5350 is not available on Dell's website either.
That’s okay – what’s on Dell’s public site and what they have in their internal service/replacement pool are often very different things.

1. What “not on the website” really means

  • If 5350 isn’t on the site, it likely just means:
    • No longer sold new in your region, or
    • Replaced by an even newer series (e.g. 54xx or similar).
  • Dell can still have:
    • Spare parts for 5350
    • Refurbished 5350 units
    • Other current‑gen Latitudes they use as standard replacements
  • So your replacement could be:
    • A refurb 5340
    • A refurb 5350
    • Or a newer small‑business Latitude (13–14") with similar specs

We simply can’t see their internal stock, so the exact model is up to whatever they have marked as the “equivalent replacement” for the 5340 in your region.

2. How to handle this with Dell

Instead of focusing on a specific model (5350, etc.), focus on minimum requirements and ask them what they can offer:

  • When you next speak to them (especially if they escalate or mention replacement), say something like:
    • “I see that both the Latitude 5340 and 5350 no longer appear on Dell’s website. In that case, what is your standard replacement model for a Latitude 5340 in my region?”
  • Then clearly state your must‑haves:
    • CPU: equal or better than i5‑1345U
    • RAM: 16 GB or more
    • SSD: same or larger capacity than now
    • Display: FHD touch (if your current system is touch)
    • Ports/features: Thunderbolt/USB‑C for dock, plus any extras you rely on (vPro, WWAN, etc.)
    • Support: your existing ProSupport Flex to 2028 must transfer fully

This gives them flexibility to pick from their available pool, while protecting you from being downgraded.

3. How to compare any offer they give

When they propose a model (whatever it is):

  • Ask for the full configuration: CPU model, RAM, SSD size, display type, and support term.
  • Compare 1:1 against your current 5340.
  • If anything is worse (less RAM, non‑touch instead of touch, no Thunderbolt, etc.), politely say:
    • “Under ProSupport I understand I should receive a like‑for‑like or better business Latitude. This offer is a downgrade in [X]. Can you adjust it so it matches or exceeds my current spec?”

4. For now

  • Wait out their 48‑hour window.
  • If still no movement, ask for escalation and ask them directly:
    • “If you cannot repair the Latitude 5340 due to part unavailability, what replacement model can you offer with equal or better specs, and with my ProSupport Flex transferred?”

The exact model name (5350 or something else) is less important than making sure whatever they give you is genuinely equivalent or better in specs and support.
 
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