I finally received the re-capped board of my IBM Model M2 keyboard in the mail and painstakingly put it all back together
Anyone who has ever opened one of these up knows it's a game of torture - it's VERY easy to get one of the butterfly springs to get dislodged while popping the cover back on which means removing ALL key caps again, carefully popping the case open again (which is a pain because it uses no screws but plastic (brittle) tabs), reseating every single spring one by one, closing it all carefully again, adding all the key caps once more, and testing every key again to see if all the springs are correctly in position.
BUT
After an hour and a half, it's all back together and I have an almost brand-new looking IBM Model M2 keyboard in fully working order, fully recapped with caps that will last for decades:
This is especially nostalgic for me because this was the very first keyboard I ever laid my hands on as part of the IBM 386 SX 25 PS/1 my father both back in early 1993. It was dead for decades, missing keys and damaged springs but I found a broken one for cheap and used it to replace the missing parts.
Retro game fanatic.
IBM PS1 386SX25 - 4MB
IBM Aptiva 486SX33 - 8MB - 2GB CF - SB16
IBM PC350 P233MMX - 64MB - 32GB SSD - AWE64 - Voodoo2
PIII600 - 320MB - 480GB SSD - SB Live! - GF4 Ti 4200
i5-2500k - 3GB - SB Audigy 2 - HD 4870
Yep, bless the French insisting on their own keyboard layout *rolls the eyes* and of course the French speaking Belgians had to copy the French so now us Flemish are stuck with a keyboard layout only used in two countries in the world. On the other hand, this keyboard is now VERY rare since there's very few AZERTY keyboards on the market as is (I've been looking for a decent affordable Model M azerty keyboard for ages but they sell for €300-400) but the M2 in working condition is much rarer than the older Model M.
Retro game fanatic.
IBM PS1 386SX25 - 4MB
IBM Aptiva 486SX33 - 8MB - 2GB CF - SB16
IBM PC350 P233MMX - 64MB - 32GB SSD - AWE64 - Voodoo2
PIII600 - 320MB - 480GB SSD - SB Live! - GF4 Ti 4200
i5-2500k - 3GB - SB Audigy 2 - HD 4870
Tested my Asus P2B-DS V1.06 that I just received in the mail.. next up is a BIOS update, FSB mod, and the dual Tualatin upgrade.
And I got my CMS upgrade for my CT1350B in today, however the seller packed them in just a regular greeting card envelope with 1mm of foam on the leg side of the chips. They arrived completely mangled, traveling here from Poland. I'm working with him on Ebay to resend. He seems reasonable and nice.
Yep, bless the French insisting on their own keyboard layout *rolls the eyes* and of course the French speaking Belgians had to copy the French so now us Flemish are stuck with a keyboard layout only used in two countries in the world. On the other hand, this keyboard is now VERY rare since there's very few AZERTY keyboards on the market as is (I've been looking for a decent affordable Model M azerty keyboard for ages but they sell for €300-400) but the M2 in working condition is much rarer than the older Model M.
If you use this French keyboard, but change the Windows keyboard layout to "English US" (for instance), does the A become the Q? or it keeps being the A even with the changed layout?
Helped my mom get to a Dr. appointment. She is 84, if that is not vintage then I do not know what is 😁
Hate posting a reply and then have to edit it because it made no sense 😁 First computer was an IBM 3270 workstation with CGA monitor. Stuff: https://archive.org/details/@horun
Vrm on my LS486E bit the dust. Decided not to boot one-day and after some checkups, showed the dead vrm symptoms of only booting with a 5v cpu.
I'm no repair person and have zero soldering skills so this board is going in the project bin till I pickup the skilll (I really have been needing to learn so badly but other things get in the way). I have a spare VLB board I was meaning to try out someday anyway so here's the excuse 😜
In the meantime I shall cherish my 486-100mhz Overdrive with its built in regulator.
..except now I'm paranoid that one is gonna burn out too! It's not even connected to the big heatsink on the chip. Are these VRMs ment to be heat resistant?
I put a fan on-top and the little chip I presume is the VRM is still hot to the touch!
Last edited by SodaSuccubus on 2020-06-11, 06:15. Edited 1 time in total.
I prefer the AZERTY layout over the QWERTY layout. I don't use Q/W/; and others as much, I don't need them cluterring the first two rows of letters.
AZERTY is superior for writing French. That was the point, after all.
Some say that QWERTY is better for programming. I do it everyday wtih C-like syntax... The difference is tiny, not worth switching over. A BEPO or Dvorak keyboard on the other hand...
If you use this French keyboard, but change the Windows keyboard layout to "English US" (for instance), does the A become the Q? or it keeps being the A even with the changed layout?
Nah, it changes everything. There's two big differences with AZERTY keyboards:
- the different letter layout (obviously) - especially the position of the M key
- the numbers on top are no longer numbers by default by rather characters - if I type the top row I get &é"'(§è!çà)- rather than 1234567890
In games this is a real bitch since quite some games are hardwired to use those number keys and I have to change keyboard layout to US for the games to work - in DOS, it's QWERTY in games by default so I can blindly type in both (barely even look at my keyboard anymore) but for Belgian kids that want that brand spanking cool mechanical RGB keyboard only to find out they never made an AZERTY version ... yeah it sucks.
Retro game fanatic.
IBM PS1 386SX25 - 4MB
IBM Aptiva 486SX33 - 8MB - 2GB CF - SB16
IBM PC350 P233MMX - 64MB - 32GB SSD - AWE64 - Voodoo2
PIII600 - 320MB - 480GB SSD - SB Live! - GF4 Ti 4200
i5-2500k - 3GB - SB Audigy 2 - HD 4870
I spent quite some time getting Might & Magic III and IV working with MT-32 music/sound on my P133.
I have three versions of these games: GOG releases, Ultimate Might & Magic Archives CD, and Might & Magic Trilogy (3-5+swords) CD.
Might & Magic III:
Every version I tried would reset my Sound Blaster AWE64 PNP mixer settings, muting the Line In volume. Why on earth would this game do this? I assume connecting the MT-32 to a dedicated MPU card resolves the issue? Anyway, my Roland speakers have a separate Line IN, so I just moved my MT-32 from my Sound Blaster to my speakers, and now it's fine.
Might & Magic IV:
This was a big pain!
- The GOG version is the CD release, and I didn't want to burn a CD just to play it (plus, the ISO is a stub with the CUE file pointing at a bunch of OGG files in a subfolder... BOO!).
- The Ultimate Might & Magic Archives version requires installation in Windows, which is extremely annoying. I installed on my Windows PC and copied over the folders to my DOS machine... but could not get the game to work no matter what. It would freeze up the moment any sound effects played, even with digital FX turned off.
- The M&M Trilogy CD was the solution! It installs through DOS and works fine. No problems at all... except for an "Exc. Checksum Error" message on the MT-32 (though music appeared to play fine...). A combination of SoftMPU with parameter to delay sysex and disabling CPU cache to bring my PC to low-end 486 speed seemed to do it. The animation was still too fast, so I used moslo to slow it down a bit more. Finally working 100%!!
Last edited by newtmonkey on 2020-06-11, 12:39. Edited 2 times in total.
I've been trying today (and yesterday) to get the network card in my Toshiba T5200 to work in DOS; I've got it working in WFW.
Now I'm trying to find the microsoft network client .
My retro activity today was to rewatch the 1998 Intercontinental Cup, Vasco da Gama 1:2 Real Madrid. In an attempt to understand the tactics used by Vasco da Gama there and replicate it in an old game: Championship Manager 3 (1998). 🤣
I have received HP Vectra 486/33 and 15" CRT monitor Highscreen MS 1585P.
When I have ordered them on the auction site, photos shown that the set is really dirty:
When the package arrived, I scared immediately. Everything looked a lot worse than on the photos. Every piece of the plastic was bloated with car oil and coal powder...
I decided to clean it immediately. I disassembled the PC and display. After some 2-3 hours of deep cleaning with hot water and car APC cleaning solution it's in pretty damn good condition now 😎:
Now I need to retrobright the PC's case, but it's not that bad so I can do that in the unspecified future.
After that I sent a message to seller with thanks (package itself has been secured perfectly) and asked where the PC was used because it looked like part of the car repair shop 🤔 The seller told me it was stayed in the boiler room. So that explains a lot of dirt and oil.
I really like the CRT display - it has a little backlit LCD which acts as OSD. It also realtime shows the resolution of the image (that's fukin' a w e s o m e) and some details like current refresh rate. Love it. Never seen that before.
The image is crisp, tube is from Philips. I have a lot of reserve of brightness and contrast, so I think it will work for a lot for years from now. Also worth to mention that image params can be edited digitally using buttons, but contrast and brightness are done by knob. That's very useful especially for night sessions, when the image is too bright and there's need to quickly decrease image brightness.
Reinstalled Windows 98SE and all drivers on my 1997 PC after the previous HDD died and I had to replace it. I also went ahead and installed PLOP Boot Manager for the first time, and it's FANTASTIC. Now I can boot between multiple drives and OS'es without having to mess with enabling/disabling drive detection in the BIOS.
Retronautics: A digital gallery of my retro computers, hardware and projects.