VOGONS


Reply 11120 of 27350, by wiretap

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Instead of purchasing a new $37-$50 battery for my Sony Vaio UX280P, I just replaced the old Sanyo 2600mAh cells in it with some new 18650 Samsung 3000mAh cells. It was a little tougher than I had anticipated because the solder pad was huge at the ends of the batteries, so I had to crank up the soldering iron temp with a wide flat tip. The tolerances are tight inside the battery pack, so you have to solder in the exact right spot to make it all fit back in there again. Less than half the price spent to repair this one versus a new battery pack.

Opening it up:
jj1FOTsl.jpg

One new cell in place:
QEMCBWVl.jpg

Both new cells in place:
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All buttoned up:
UNYTu9Pl.jpg

Yay, it charges now 😁
zMRTdx2l.jpg

My Github
Circuit Board Repair Manuals

Reply 11121 of 27350, by SpectriaForce

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Blew up a tantalum capacitor of an IBM PC XT (again), this time at an unusual place next to an ISA slot. The PC still worked fine with the blown up tantalum haha (didn't have a card installed in the ISA slot). Usually only the ones next to the XT power connector or on the floppy drive explode 😊 Although the computer worked, I have disassembled it and I am only going to sell the parts that are 100% good.

Reply 11122 of 27350, by SpectriaForce

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dionb wrote:
SpectriaForce wrote:

I have collected a small size car load of classic IBM hardware today. Even some original packagings are included. Quickly tested some things; unfortunately a 8518 color monitor is (almost) dead, but the two PS/2 model 80’s did power up. I have some more things to test.

Nice!

Pics in Bought these (retro) hardware today 😀

Everything that's good enough for sale will end up on my website soon.

I have already sent the IBM 8518 to e-waste, it made a ticking noise with power on, which usually indicates a bad flyback or a short in the CRT. The CRT was probably weak anyway (most of these have seen quite a few hours of use). Fortunately I also have a small 8513 CIB, will test it tomorrow 😊

Reply 11123 of 27350, by ultra_code

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SpectriaForce wrote:

Blew up a tantalum capacitor of an IBM PC XT (again), this time at an unusual place next to an ISA slot. The PC still worked fine with the blown up tantalum haha (didn't have a card installed in the ISA slot). Usually only the ones next to the XT power connector or on the floppy drive explode 😊 Although the computer worked, I have disassembled it and I am only going to sell the parts that are 100% good.

Why not replace the capacitor yourself? Assuming you have around $60-70 worth of basic soldering equipment you can replace the one bad cap and replace it with a new one (you can do it for less, but it makes the task much harder).

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Reply 11124 of 27350, by Muppets4

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I installed Windows 98SE on an IBM Netvista P3 866 I bought a few weeks ago. The harddrive was faulty and refused starting up half of the time. So I've added an IDE to CF adapter and a 32Gb card. Ran into problems with the installed Creative Labs CT4700 (PCI128) card. The IBM won't let me play with the IRQ-s. So when entering DOS mode I get an error stating that the IRQ can't be set. Oh well, I've a good solution for that: this will be a Win98SE PC only 😊

The Netvista is rather quiet. That was a pleasant surprise. Tomorrow I will play with my new 17 inch CRT monitor. After a good cleaning first. And after that my hands too..... some of the stains 🤣

Reply 11125 of 27350, by dkarguth

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Blew up my XT. Or rather, my XT blew up itself. Will be searching for replacement tantalum capacitors this weekend.

"And remember, this fix is only temporary, unless it works." -Red Green

Reply 11126 of 27350, by SpectriaForce

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the_ultra_code wrote:

Why not replace the capacitor yourself? Assuming you have around $60-70 worth of basic soldering equipment you can replace the one bad cap and replace it with a new one (you can do it for less, but it makes the task much harder).

The good parts loose are worth more than a complete working (common) PC XT. I also don’t have tantalum caps on stock plus I don’t like soldering.

Reply 11127 of 27350, by Predator99

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SpectriaForce wrote:

The good parts loose are worth more than a complete working (common) PC XT. I also don’t have tantalum caps on stock plus I don’t like soldering.

😒 😒 😒

Reply 11128 of 27350, by NostalgicAslinger

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the_ultra_code wrote:
Quick question. […]
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Quick question.

I noticed that with my Voodoo5 5500, when in game, if I try to take a "printscreen" screenshot, I get this:
yTAKrWC.png

Now, I believe this is because of the fact that the card has its two VSA-100 chips in SLI, and this is just an unfinished picture from that SLI config.

I don't have this problem on the desktop - when you take a screenshot, it looks just as it should.

Does anyone know any way to side-step this problem using the "printscreen" screenshot, or any software that I can use in lieu of that method to take in-game screenshots?

I'm using the latest official beta driver version 4.12.01.0666 under Windows 98SE.

I use my capture hardware for making screenshots of the 3dfx voodoo cards.

Reply 11129 of 27350, by bofh.fromhell

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Made a small bracket so i can secure a Socket A cooler on my VS440FX Pentium Pro board.
Funny how the heatsink is a perfect fit (minus the bracket), it even leaves room for the ATX connector !

A hillarious overkill for a <40 watt CPU (running at a blazing 233MHz !).
But i like to be nice to my old gear.

o8iVyMTl.jpg

Reply 11130 of 27350, by Muppets4

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I just investigated on an industrial PC I bought a while ago. It contains a Celeron 850 and was used to control a hydro system in an agricultural company. Had some altered version of Windows 98 on it. It boots only half of the time and I do not have use for it, so it goes on Ebay.

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Reply 11131 of 27350, by looking4awayout

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After studying a bit how to use WPCREDIT, I have done some little tweaks to the RAM in order to work at 2-2-2-5, while previously it used to run at 2-2-2-6. The entire system feels even faster and responsive than it already is, and so I've done a benchmark on the memory with Sandra, here's the score compared to similar chipsets of the era:

Mem-Bench.png

I've successfully beaten the 440BX with a VIA 694T, by a little margin yeah, but feels satisfactory.

My Retro Daily Driver: Pentium !!!-S 1.7GHz | 3GB PC166 ECC SDRAM | Geforce 6800 Ultra 256MB | 128GB Lite-On SSD + 500GB WD Blue SSD | ESS Allegro PCI | Windows XP Professional SP3

Reply 11132 of 27350, by SpectriaForce

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Predator99 wrote:

😒 😒 😒

😀 The power supply is also dead (only got it running because I have working spares). It's just a PC XT, nothing fancy, I can still buy one almost every week in my country if I wanted to. Besides, with the spare parts I keep other computers going 😉

Reply 11133 of 27350, by Merovign

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bofh.fromhell wrote:
Made a small bracket so i can secure a Socket A cooler on my VS440FX Pentium Pro board. Funny how the heatsink is a perfect fit […]
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Made a small bracket so i can secure a Socket A cooler on my VS440FX Pentium Pro board.
Funny how the heatsink is a perfect fit (minus the bracket), it even leaves room for the ATX connector !

A hillarious overkill for a <40 watt CPU (running at a blazing 233MHz !).
But i like to be nice to my old gear.

Excellent! Been thinking of doing similar things and gathering some heatsinks from dead C2D systems and the like to make mounts for. Was thinking of some options but it occurs to me now a modified (strong enough) hole punch could punch a square notch through thin spring steel and blammo, you have a heatsink mount.

I was also thinking of making a (superfluous) LED HSF setup for a 386 or 486 system I want to build in a modern mobile gaming case. Probably from a video card, because size.

*Too* *many* *things*!

Reply 11134 of 27350, by Merovign

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Been testing hard drives all day and all night. Last one running a little slow but no errors (I think it's an eco-drive anyway, so probably inherently a little slow).

Next up on the bench, 10 video cards that need testing. One of them is missing a GPU fan so I'll have to rig something.

Oh, wait, 11 cards. I'll have to dig out an AGP system.

*Too* *many* *things*!

Reply 11135 of 27350, by kaputnik

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Got my 3D printer assembled and up and running the other day, been working on a simple 3D printable I/O shield this morning. First blank prototype printed:

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Now off to fine tune size, hadn't taken thermal expansion into account, and make connector cutout templates.

Oh, and will gladly share the models once they're done 😀

Reply 11136 of 27350, by red_avatar

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kaputnik wrote:
Got my 3D printer assembled and up and running the other day, been working on a simple 3D printable I/O shield this morning. Fir […]
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Got my 3D printer assembled and up and running the other day, been working on a simple 3D printable I/O shield this morning. First blank prototype printed:

io2.jpg
io1.jpg

Now off to fine tune size, hadn't taken thermal expansion into account, and make connector cutout templates.

Oh, and will gladly share the models once they're done 😀

Last week, I wondered about exactly such a thing - one of my PCs (a Pentium III running Windows 95) has only one shield remaining out of 3 and I only need one optical drive - right now I have to keep a second optical drive in there just to keep the hole plugged which is silly. Either I get a replacement plate or I'll have to look into adding something else to the front panel - maybe add my X-Fi which has a front panel which I've never used before.

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

Reply 11137 of 27350, by brostenen

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Playing with SCSI. I get just under 8ms seek time and some 33 to 35 megabyte a second transfer rate, on these IBM Ultrastar 9gb 10k RPM's running on a Pentium-166. I used a 68pin cable and an Asus PCI Controller.

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Don't eat stuff off a 15 year old never cleaned cpu cooler.
Those cakes make you sick....

My blog: http://to9xct.blogspot.dk
My YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/brostenen

001100 010010 011110 100001 101101 110011

Reply 11138 of 27350, by Munx

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kaputnik wrote:
Got my 3D printer assembled and up and running the other day, been working on a simple 3D printable I/O shield this morning. Fir […]
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Got my 3D printer assembled and up and running the other day, been working on a simple 3D printable I/O shield this morning. First blank prototype printed:

io2.jpg
io1.jpg

Now off to fine tune size, hadn't taken thermal expansion into account, and make connector cutout templates.

Oh, and will gladly share the models once they're done 😀

Nice! Looking forward to seeing this finished 😀

My builds!
The FireStarter 2.0 - The wooden K5
The Underdog - The budget K6
The Voodoo powerhouse - The power-hungry K7
The troll PC - The Socket 423 Pentium 4

Reply 11139 of 27350, by appiah4

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kaputnik wrote:
Got my 3D printer assembled and up and running the other day, been working on a simple 3D printable I/O shield this morning. Fir […]
Show full quote

Got my 3D printer assembled and up and running the other day, been working on a simple 3D printable I/O shield this morning. First blank prototype printed:

io2.jpg
io1.jpg

Now off to fine tune size, hadn't taken thermal expansion into account, and make connector cutout templates.

Oh, and will gladly share the models once they're done 😀

Oh nice, what material are you printing it with?

Would be very happy if you would share the model for blank, AT and old style ATX backplates 😀

Retronautics: A digital gallery of my retro computers, hardware and projects.