Reply 28540 of 53114, by retropol
ok, now makes sense...
you got 525 in 2004 comp, because you are retro-guy 😉
ok, now makes sense...
you got 525 in 2004 comp, because you are retro-guy 😉
wrote:wrote:HanJammer,
somebody used 5.25 in p166 machine? strange...This computer was upgraded from 486DX2 (original specs from are on the printed sticker in the case) - motherboard, cpu and graphics card was replaced. Also I still had 5,25" floppy in my computer in 2004...
Holy shit. I've usually had a pack of 3.5 floppies in my bag in 2004 (I was in middle school, and my home PC was a 486DX2/Win95 laptop for a while, so I've used floppies to bring homework and download abandonware games in computer class) and that kind of seemed odd to everyone. But 5.25?..
wrote:Some idiot had to destroy the motherboard intentionally with the screwdriver - slots I would fix (I've seen this dammage on the […]
Some idiot had to destroy the motherboard intentionally with the screwdriver - slots I would fix (I've seen this dammage on the auction pics), but there are also deep screwdriver scratches acros several traces, so it's beyond repair.
Also somebody removed the BIOS and other chips from the cards...
Fortunatelly CT1350B looks fine other than removed OPL2 which has several bent pins and one broken pin 🙁
S3 Trio has the BIOS removed and one of the vram sockets is dammaged.
Teac Floppy Drives hopefully will be allright. (There is also 1,44MB drive, Caviar 2250 and some CD-ROM)
Case is intact other than missing stands but that's not really a problem for buyers from what I've seen so far...
If CT1350B, CPU, floppy drives and PSU works then I will still make some profit out of it.
Hmm, that's not so nice. You need quite a bit of luck to get your money back on those parts, let alone to make a profit. Why would someone cause so much damage to a pc? Maybe someone was fed up with Windows 95 BSOD's 😊
I bought THIS
Don't eat stuff off a 15 year old never cleaned cpu cooler.
Those cakes make you sick....
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001100 010010 011110 100001 101101 110011
wrote:wrote:HanJammer,
somebody used 5.25 in p166 machine? strange...This computer was upgraded from 486DX2 (original specs from are on the printed sticker in the case) - motherboard, cpu and graphics card was replaced. Also I still had 5,25" floppy in my computer in 2004...
I also had a 5.25 fdd in my 386, but later i put it to the cabinet (nobody used it) and I’ve never had a 3.5 drive 😀 we always used hdd to copy stuffs.
actually i put the floppy drives to the retro pcs because of the period correct feeling, I don’t have any floppies, i’ve never missed it.
Picked up some free stuff today.
wrote:Holy shit. I've usually had a pack of 3.5 floppies in my bag in 2004 (I was in middle school, and my home PC was a 486DX2/Win95 laptop for a while, so I've used floppies to bring homework and download abandonware games in computer class) and that kind of seemed odd to everyone. But 5.25?..
Yeah, same here. I've been using 3,5" floppies for smaller files mostly. 5,25" floppy drive was installed in my PC back then because I still had alot 5,25" floppies from my 286 era, and I wanted to read them from time to time (like once every half of year)… so that was only reason…
wrote:Hmm, that's not so nice. You need quite a bit of luck to get your money back on those parts, let alone to make a profit. Why would someone cause so much damage to a pc? Maybe someone was fed up with Windows 95 BSOD's 😊
I don't know… maybe the same reason people cut power wires from the devices they bring to a scrap yard...
Anyway, CT1350B works! I corrected the OPL2 pins (the one pin I thought is broken was just bent in half 180* ;/ ) Creative diagnostic tools wouldn't find the card, but games had music and voice. Quick inspection of both the intel chip and CT1336A revealed that two pins on both chips were bent a bit and had a gap under them... I corrected them and card works perfectly fine... also it's less noisy than my other CT1350Bs (perhaps because it's more recent revision).
So here is a photo of cleaned up CT1350B again and two other cards I bought today… I have high expectation for this Opti/Analog Devices/OPL3 thing… I already have a plan where I want to use it too.
New items (October/November 2022) -> My Items for Sale
wrote:Picked up some free stuff today.
Those AudioDrives!
New items (October/November 2022) -> My Items for Sale
Bought a NIB 120GB HDD at a thrift store. This is the third NIB hard drive purchase at a thrift store.
Original receipt:
All of its glory:
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Systems from the Compaq Portable 1 to Ryzen 9 5950X
Twitch: https://twitch.tv/retropcuser
I had that exact same drive back in the day. First new drive I ever owned.
It is a mistake to think you can solve any major problems just with potatoes.
Prices on eBay for this size drive is higher than what I paid. Heck, the price I paid was 8%-10% (with or without the $20 off coupon applied).
Discord: https://discord.gg/U5dJw7x
Systems from the Compaq Portable 1 to Ryzen 9 5950X
Twitch: https://twitch.tv/retropcuser
wrote:wrote:Then again betwween HX and TX what was the point of VX altogether 🤣.
The VX and the HX were launched together as part of the Triton II family. The TX (Triton III) came out a bit later, and did not have a high-end counterpart. It's considered the successor to the VX, not the HX.
The VX was actually quite a popular. For most users, at the time the HX was overkill. HX was workstation/server grade for people who wanted SMP and stupid amounts of RAM, both of which was almost completely useless as nothing needed more than 32MB of RAM, and practically no consumer software used two CPUs. I seem to recall that the HX didn't support SDRAM (only EDO DIMMs), and the VX did, but only one slot and probably not more than 32MB on a DIMM. Almost 100% of VX users used SIMMs. DIMMs are wasted on anything pre Super Socket7 in my opinion. If you're building a classic Pentium system, a VX based motherboard is a solid choice.
Are you sure about VX supporting only 1 DIMM slot? I do remember the support being max 32MB per DIMM (and only the low density, afaicr), but the DIMM was a bit of a new thing back then, partially a marketing gimmick (as only 1 DIMM slot "for future upgrades" was not really that practical due to the actually more limited amount of memory that could be upgraded to, and because SDRAM went to a higher density which was not supported by VX or at least not officially) as it wasn't very practical back then.
Most VX boards I seen that actually have a DIMM slot (because many VX boards don't have any DIMM slot whatsoever) had only 1, but there may be boards which have 2 DIMM slots.
It's like 4am here now, I may go through my own stash of boards later in daylight to see if I can find such a board as apparently th99 doesn't list all chipsets by name, only by manufacturer.
True about almost 100% of VX users back then using SIMMs, if only so they could recycle their older 72p SIMMs.
And HX indeed supported DIMM slots, but not SDRAM.
wrote:Bought a NIB 120GB HDD at a thrift store. This is the third NIB hard drive purchase at a thrift store.
Original receipt:
All of its glory:
we used to sell a bunch of those back when i worked at Egghead Software. I remember the 340mb versions especially failed.. a LOT.
I have no clue what I'm doing! If you want to watch me fumble through all my retro projects, you can watch here: https://www.youtube.com/user/MrDavejustdave
wrote:Also a picture of the Roland JV-35 I picked up earlier:
So, it turns out this keyboard is based on the SC-55 Mk. II. 😀
wrote:Are you sure about VX supporting only 1 DIMM slot?
Of course it's not true…
New items (October/November 2022) -> My Items for Sale
wrote:Are you sure about VX supporting only 1 DIMM slot?
Perhaps some VX mobos only had 1 SDRAM slot, but some had two... Take for example my Shuttle HOT-555A, it has two DIMM slots, but is capped to 32mb, per DIMM.
Proud owner of a Shuttle HOT-555A 430VX motherboard and two wonderful retro laptops, namely a Compaq Armada 1700 [nonfunctional] and a HP Omnibook XE3-GC [fully working :p]
wrote:wrote:Are you sure about VX supporting only 1 DIMM slot?
Perhaps some VX mobos only had 1 SDRAM slot, but some had two... Take for example my Shuttle HOT-555A, it has two DIMM slots, but is capped to 32mb, per DIMM.
Iirc most didn't have any DIMM slots and if they did, they had just 1.
I actually thought 2xDIMM slots was more a TX thing until I saw a VX board with 2 DIMM slots, but it was easy to think VX boards simply came with only 1, if at all.
wrote:What is the chipset of the paradise? Ark2000?
So yes, it is detected as an ARK2000PV chipset. It only has 1MB (exp. to 2MB), but man, in benchmarks this thing is only a hair slower than the 4MB Matrox Millennium which is one of my best DOS PCI performers. Both of them outpace the 32MB Savage 4 in DRHARD benchmarks.
The early ceramic P60 has cost me an arm and a leg but at least my Socket 4 collection is growing.
wrote:wrote:wrote:Are you sure about VX supporting only 1 DIMM slot?
Perhaps some VX mobos only had 1 SDRAM slot, but some had two... Take for example my Shuttle HOT-555A, it has two DIMM slots, but is capped to 32mb, per DIMM.
Iirc most didn't have any DIMM slots and if they did, they had just 1.
I actually thought 2xDIMM slots was more a TX thing until I saw a VX board with 2 DIMM slots, but it was easy to think VX boards simply came with only 1, if at all.
Overstatement.
Many boards had two DIMM slots.
Another VX sample (DTK PAM-0065I) arrived today (and a rather early one for that matter). 2 DIMM slots...
New items (October/November 2022) -> My Items for Sale