I received an rare tillamook socket 7 cpu with sspec SL34N.
Curious if I can find one of my (super) socket 7 boards willingly to work with it at speed and with cache 😀
I feel that regarding the Tillamook alot is still not clear how to get everything working.
I live in denver. All the snow goes to the mountains, all the tornados are hundreds of miles to the east, all the major heat is in the south, and all the super cold is in the north.
That said, we have enough people here, no more room. Expect to pay $1300+ a month for a 2bd/2bath in a non-shit neighborhood. And even in the bad neighborhoods are $1000+
Hah! Y'all come on down to Bama, southern hospitality at it's finest! Got lucky paying 350 a month rent in the "sticks" meaning no internet for 2bdrm/1bath house. Good thing though my landlord has a tornado bunker cause it's a necessity! No place is "utopia", take the good with the bad.
Asus P5N-E Intel Core 2 Duo 3.33ghz. 4GB DDR2 Geforce 470 1GB SB X-Fi Titanium 650W XP SP3
Intel SE440BX P3 450 256MB 80GB SSD Asus V7700 GF2 64mb SB 32pnp 350W 98SE
MSI x570 Gaming Pro Carbon Ryzen 3700x 32GB DDR4 Zotac RTX 3070 8GB WD Black 1TB 850W
Sadly it doesn't work and it's very hard to poke around inside so I'll have to do some checking over the weekend.
From what little I've managed to see so far there are no leaking caps or corrosion, however there is some noticeable oxidation on some of the ribbon cable contact points.
I received an rare tillamook socket 7 cpu with sspec SL34N.
Curious if I can find one of my (super) socket 7 boards willingly to work with it at speed and with cache 😀
I feel that regarding the Tillamook alot is still not clear how to get everything working.
Seconded - 25$ is a good price.
Be aware that if you pick the 100mhz cpu that you most likely won't be able to run it in this board. Also it's ISA only - so no "fast" games.
That's a 386 motherboard with 486DLC cpu. It only takes 386 pinout cpus. I'd buy it for $25 😉
Considering buying some of the below, would vogons help me with deciding which ones are worth having? Also is the motherboard/cpu/ram set worth $25?
That all depends on prices. The AMD CPUs are worth around $6 - $7 each. Cyrix $6 - $8. The unknown 486 I would gamble on it being one of the more common, around $6. Any more and you could be disappointed.
The MB/CPU/RAM is definitely worth $25
See my graphics card database at www.gpuzoo.com
Constantly being worked on. Feel free to message me with any corrections or details of cards you would like me to research and add.
What is this 486 CPU? I have same with same heatsink but cant identify without removing.
Impossible to say exactly what it is without removing the heatsink and seeing the markings.
See my graphics card database at www.gpuzoo.com
Constantly being worked on. Feel free to message me with any corrections or details of cards you would like me to research and add.
I received an rare tillamook socket 7 cpu with sspec SL34N.
Curious if I can find one of my (super) socket 7 boards willingly to work with it at speed and with cache 😀
I feel that regarding the Tillamook alot is still not clear how to get everything working.
Do you have a picture of it?
Will those two be enough? 🤣
On the top it still has the thermal pad from how it was mounted in the notebook it came out so nothing to see there so far.
Seconded - 25$ is a good price.
Be aware that if you pick the 100mhz cpu that you most likely won't be able to run it in this board. Also it's ISA only - so no "fast" games.
That's a 386 motherboard with 486DLC cpu. It only takes 386 pinout cpus. I'd buy it for $25 😉
Oops - I guess it's worth something after all, given one has a use for such systems.
@Appiah4:
Just stick the cpu with the heatsink into an "expendable" board and press the power button ...with bated breath of course.
I would at least buy the Am486DX4 for the heck of running it at 40x3 or 60x2 + it's one with WriteBack cache contrary to the DX2-66.
Bought this the other week, it's a Acorn BBC micro Model B, 32K, 2MHz 6502 CPU. It has a MMC SD that acts as a 1 GB hard disk with a load of games(over 420) installed. This is an issue 3 motherboard from early 1983. The BBC computer was built around a early initiative to make the UK computer literate, it's original cost was £399 in 1982, equivalent to £1200 today. It was the machine installed in most schools here in the UK during the 1980's, eventually selling over 1.5 Million units. Acorn the designer and manufacturer of the BBC micro then went on to develop the ARM CPU in 1985, the backbone of today's computing world.
286 20MHz,1MB RAM,Trident 8900B 1MB, Conner CFA-170A.SB 1350B
386SX 33MHz,ULSI 387,4MB Ram,OAK OTI077 1MB. Seagate ST1144A, MS WSS audio
Amstrad PC 9486i, DX/2 66, 16 MB RAM, Cirrus SVGA,Win 95,SB 16
Cyrix MII 333,128MB,SiS 6326 H0 rev,ESS 1869,Win ME
Nvm1 wrote:Will those two be enough? :lol: […] Show full quote
Will those two be enough? 🤣
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On the top it still has the thermal pad from how it was mounted in the notebook it came out so nothing to see there so far.
Interesting... Why would a laptop manufacturer convert a MMC1 processor into socket 7, instead of having MMC1 on the laptop side?
Before Tillamooks laptops just had regular desktop sockets for Pentiums, so I'm guessing it's so manufacturers wouldn't have to re-do or modify their PCBs