chinny22 wrote:I'm liking this system!
Similar to you I went from a Apple IIe which never really interested me at the time to a DX2 66 VLB arou […]
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I'm liking this system!
Similar to you I went from a Apple IIe which never really interested me at the time to a DX2 66 VLB around 1995, and got into computers in a big way.
I also lived in Genoa Italy for a short while so really want a video card for other nostalgic reasons 😀
Actually really like the black case as well! get a black 5 1/4 floppy drive and think it would look awesome
Looking forward to seeing the system up and running
So cool that you lived in Genoa for a bit! There's not a ton of info on this brand, but I do like that both of their components are in such good shape, and it turns out, perform admirably.
I was very tempted to move back to the black case after spending a couple of hours working out the grounding issue I was having with this beige one (it would go away when I ran the system on the bench, then come back when I assembled into the case). Really? I've never had such an issue until now. On the case, if you look on the opposite side of where the motherboard screws in,you will see little slits where the bottom of each expansion card comes through when you plug it into the board. There are little grounding tabs there that were bent to the point where they were making intermittent contact with the expansion card slot covers, which in turn would cause the system to not POST intermittently when I moved the system around a bit. Pushing those tabs up enough that they made solid contact fixed the problem.
Note the hard-to-see red rectangle outlining the problem area.
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So I've got the system together (minus an ATX shield, mounted power switch, turbo, etc) and have been benchmarking it. I couldn't be happier with the performance so far. Here's a progression of BIOS cache timing adjustments:
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I had stability issues with DRAM Write CAS at 1T, and since it made no difference in performance, I leave it at 2T. Same with DRAM Write Cycle at 0 W/S. Where I saw good increases was going to 'Fastest' DRAM Speed Option, dropping Cache Write Cycle from 3T to 2T, and finally dropping Cache Burst Read Cycle from 2T to 1T. Just with those three settings, Doom FPS went up 11.8%. If you look at Phil's VGA Benchmark Database, that improves this system from an average 486 to one of the fastest.
But, part of the magic of 486 systems is the variety of speed profiles you can run by manipulating Turbo, L1 and L2 cache, and BIOS timings. I'm not going to use this system to run demanding games. My Pentium already does this. I'm going to use the 486 to try to hit speed profiles that my Pentium can't. That includes 486 33-66Mhz and speeds between a fast 286 and a 386sx-40.
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Temporarily, I've got the case power switch connected to the Turbo header, which lets me turn turbo on as long as I hold the power button in. 😀 Not very convenient for benchmarking Doom with caches disabled...
Anyway, some photos of its current state... (note the homage to a Vogoner who sold me an I/O card at a sane price)
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