Let's start with the obvious, though frankly given how long it's lasted and how clean it is, I'm planning on seeing if I can "upgrade" it slightly (replace obvious wear items) and keep it as a -5V PSU:
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Then, with a name like PowerMan, you know it's gotta be good! I don't actually know that.
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The Zumax, frankly, I don't even know where I got it. I found it and stood there for a minute asking myself where it came from. It may have noticed all the other PSUs and moved in of it's own accord.
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I have all these tiny early ATX PSUs, they're just like 5-6 inches long and 3-4 wide, this is a good example of them. Well, "good."
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And, of course, one of the fun oddball post-AT and pre-ATX PSUs with an extra AT power plug and no switch.
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On that topic, I'd like to vent my spleen at the evil people who named ATX after AT and PCIe after PCI, probably with malice aforethought knowing how that would screw up internet searches in the future.
I am eager to see what other people are doing with regards to rebuilding or building new PSUs, I have been making approximately zero progress toward my goal of an all-new (possibly excepting some connectors) SFX-sized AT power supply, which can also be mounted inside at AT PSU's chassis. The reason I want to do the smaller one is because I have this goofy idea about making a rack for AT systems (and possibly AT, ATX, and generic platforms form things like Powermacs (like the famous PM8500 with the self-destructing plastic case) or even early pre-PCs or custom multi-board computers - all with a KVM (probably custom) that can handle MDA, CGA, EGA, VGA, AT, ADB, PS2, USB, etc. You'd probably actually need a server to be the KVM. Frankly it's a bit aspirational... and I like old case too...
But an AT SFX (small form factor PSU) would also be useful for test bench, or for custom cases or replacing PSUs in small form factor early PCs, Kaypros, terminals, etc.
There might already be something like that, but you can't search for it on an internet because an internet doesn't know the difference between AT and ATX.