Reply 30000 of 52914, by oeuvre
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- l33t
wrote:wrote:I have one similar to that, except 2 ISA, 5 PCI, 1 AGP, and 4 RAM slots (up to 1GB supported), P2B-F, except the board is erratic at times: 1 long beep, pause, repeat, or no beeps. Need to replace the RAM and CPU slots and I flashed the BIOS chips with different build numbers.
Might be bad capacitors?
Possibly, but it looked like it was recapped or the caps remained the same. I'm planning on doing a recap soon and I need to jot down the capacitance, voltage, and size of said caps (length) in mm, cm or inches.
Discord: https://discord.gg/U5dJw7x
Systems from the Compaq Portable 1 to Ryzen 9 5950X
Twitch: https://twitch.tv/retropcuser
this absolute beauty arrived today 😀, I was anxious about having it shipped, but it was packed very well and survived the jorney across countries just fine it seems 😀
unfortunately I could find almost no information whatsoever about this monitor ... but it has a composite and SCART rgb input, apparently supports both 50&60Hz according to the controls and seems to have a green text mode, I guess it's from the mid-eighties?
edit: that particular style sanyo logo was used up until 1987 apparently... so sometime before that ^^
edit2: it seems to be very similar to the Sanyo CD3195C that has a bit more info online but is lacking RGB input and the 50/60Hz selector.
I just really like the industrial design, which is the main reason I got it.
I wish I could find a manual how to remove the front glass holders, cause the top right one seems to be mounted upside down, and I don't want to break anything ^^
edit2: ah it's in the CD3195C manual ...fixed 😀
Aztech AT6800W ISA sound card. Works great.
HP Z420 Workstation Intel Xeon E5-1620, 32GB, RADEON HD7850 2GB, SSD + HD, XP/7
It looks like one of these Modem/Sound Card combos, just like IBM's M-Wave cards. I wonder if the modem part of the card is actually a voicdmodem.
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]
I'm not sure exactly if it is a voice modem but the FM synth is pretty good.
The Quantum Fireball 6.8GB drive came today and after installing Windows 95 it started making weird noises... write to C: errors, bam. RIP.
HP Z420 Workstation Intel Xeon E5-1620, 32GB, RADEON HD7850 2GB, SSD + HD, XP/7
My 3.2GB Fireball makes a beeping noise and there are more bad sectors than I thought. I used VIVARD to check for bad sectors and found a lot of them (possibly because the platters need to get cleaned off), but it zeroes out without any issues.
Discord: https://discord.gg/U5dJw7x
Systems from the Compaq Portable 1 to Ryzen 9 5950X
Twitch: https://twitch.tv/retropcuser
Quantum fireball drives for the most part are pretty terrible for retro builds.
I have half a dozen in near perfect work condition, but I can't stand having them run for more than an hour with their high pitched bearing whine. I use newer Seagate/WD drives with fluid bearings in most of the retro PCs,
wrote:Quantum fireball drives for the most part are pretty terrible for retro builds.
I have half a dozen in near perfect work condition, but I can't stand having them run for more than an hour with their high pitched bearing whine. I use newer Seagate/WD drives with fluid bearings in most of the retro PCs,
I love the bearing whine. I have an old 5 GB Quantum Fireball that just never quits; I reformatted it dozens of times when I was a kid and it's still kicking.
World's foremost 486 enjoyer.
I have a Maxtor 6GB HDD from a busted PowerMac G3 that has loud bearings, my dB chart read 140.
Discord: https://discord.gg/U5dJw7x
Systems from the Compaq Portable 1 to Ryzen 9 5950X
Twitch: https://twitch.tv/retropcuser
My 8-bit high density floppy drive controller turned up today. Can't be bothered mucking around with 360k media any more so gone modern.
There's a glitch in the matrix.
A founding member of the 286 appreciation society.
Apparently 32-bit is dead and nobody likes P4s.
Of course, as always, I'm open to correction...😉
IME a lot of very old drives are functional, until you ship them. For whatever reason many late MFM/early IDE or early SCSI drives get *brutalized* by shipping, and the survival rate is pretty low.
If you find it in a local attic you're much better off. There's probably a proper way to pack and ship them, like packaging with lots of flex that never lets anything impact the drive (the huge plastic or paper pyramids they used to ship Maxtor drives in, for example).
*Too* *many* *things*!
wrote:I'm not sure exactly if it is a voice modem but the FM synth is pretty good.
The Quantum Fireball 6.8GB drive came today and after installing Windows 95 it started making weird noises... write to C: errors, bam. RIP.
Of course the FM synth is pretty good. They licensed the OPL3 from Yamaha so it is a genuine Yamaha OPL3 that is integrated into it as far as I am aware.
wrote:Quantum fireball drives for the most part are pretty terrible for retro builds.
I have half a dozen in near perfect work condition, but I can't stand having them run for more than an hour with their high pitched bearing whine. I use newer Seagate/WD drives with fluid bearings in most of the retro PCs,
Seller gave me a refund so I went with a Western Digital AC36400 for the same price as the other one. Same seller.
HP Z420 Workstation Intel Xeon E5-1620, 32GB, RADEON HD7850 2GB, SSD + HD, XP/7
I have a couple of Quantum Fireballs and yes, they're kind of loud, but those are nothing compared to my IBM 450MB SCSI drive, which despite having little use (I got it new for free a few years ago) it's like having a 747 taking off inside my house.
wrote:They exist. I remember once being rather disappointed that a case I opened contained some OPTi 924-based card and not the GUS I' […]
wrote:wrote:but what you suspect?
Gravis Ultrasound? Unless there is another sound card with the same layout I'm unaware of.
They exist. I remember once being rather disappointed that a case I opened contained some OPTi 924-based card and not the GUS I'd been hoping for...
Edit:
Got myself a unicorn too, better still, for a good price and from exactly the same seller I got the last one from: a second SGI Multilink. Which I need as my other one is dying (possibly dud caps, but not sure) and I have two SGI 1600SW monitors anyway. I'd hoped to run the system connected to them with video cards with native 1600SW/OpenLDI support, but I wanted to run a modern OS on them and turns out that they not only lack recent Windows drivers, but are unusable in Linux too as the 2D acceleration architecture their driver uses has been deprecated. So I desperately need another Multilink. Just as I reached that depressing conclusion, the same bloke I bought the last one from found another in his attic and posted it online. I should have it Thursday 😀
Annnnnnd...
Fail.. Acer FX-16 ISA sound based on a ESS 1868F. At least the case has a MHz display though.. 🤣
oh no... I mean it's still a nice sound card 😀
wrote:oh no... I mean it's still a nice sound card 😀
It's like they did it on purpose so in the future retro computing fans will mistake their cards with GUS 😉
Anyway, GUS jack sockets are placed closed together and don't have any inscriptions above them.
New items (October/November 2022) -> My Items for Sale
wrote:Quantum fireball drives for the most part are pretty terrible for retro builds.
I have half a dozen in near perfect work condition, but I can't stand having them run for more than an hour with their high pitched bearing whine. I use newer Seagate/WD drives with fluid bearings in most of the retro PCs,
That's exactly what I was thinking as I'm currently going through a lot of old hard disks taken from late '90s / early '00s machines. Were ALL the hard disks from this era dreadful? 😵 Not even speaking of reliability: Fujitsu, Quantum, Maxtor, they all sound pretty bad, with IBM being the worst offender. From that lot, only a Caviar 80Gb from WD seem to not have this annoying high-pitched whine...
That's because of drying-out ball bearings. None of these drives were made to be used 20 or more years later.