Reply 1040 of 3035, by yawetaG
Here's a pic of my retro gaming rig, which is mostly original.
Gateway 2000 G6-266:
- Gateway 2000 tower case. For a case from 1998 this thing is great. Sound-proofed, easy access and easy to work on, no sharp corners. My only complaint is that it's a bit tight behind the CD-ROM drives.
- Pentium II 266 MHz, not overclocked
- 440BX chipset, Intel OEM board.
- OEM Ensoniq Soundscape AudioPCI sound card
- original Mitsumi 18 speed CD-ROM drive (starts to get tired).
- Philips DVD-ROM/CD-writer out of an Apple eMac 1GHz. Just works, despite lacking a front plate.
- Original 4 Gb harddisk, to which I added a Maxtor 40 Gb harddisk that was supposedly failing in a newer AMD Duron-based system (that was 10 years ago... 🤣 )
- 320 Mb RAM, 64 Mb + single-sided 128 Mb + half-recognized single-sided 256 Mb stick. The latter two sticks didn't work under the original BIOS revision (P08), so I updated the BIOS to version P18 (when Gateway's site still existed). It's stable. A nice and interesting side-effect of the high RAM amount is that this system can play DVDs without hardware acceleration, despite supposedly being too slow for that (PowerDVD takes 194 Mb of RAM)
- Asus Nvidia TNT2 Riva M64 AGP videocard, replacing the original Nvidia TNT AGP card.
- ISA ISDN modem that I never removed from the system.
- FDD.
- USB 250 Mb ZIP-drive.
- original Gateway speakers
- I still have the original 17" monitor (HUGE heavy beast), but it has been replaced by a Dell flat screen
- Windows 95 (USB support) updated to Windows 98 SE
I still have a Adaptec ISA AHA-1542B SCSI-2 adapter I'll probably install into this machine, since Win98SE is the last OS that still has compatible drivers (I think...).