Finally almost after 8 months I've gotten around to put this system together. This is what I ended up using:
- PCChips M571 motherboard
- 32 MB EDO DRAM (4x8MB sticks)
- S3 Trio64V+ PCI video card (I particularly like this one)
- Sound Blaster AWE64 Value CT4380 ISA sound card
- Seagate Medialist 4 GB IDE hard disk
- Sony CD-ROM drive and floppy drive that came with the case
- Mitac 150W PSU that came with the case
- Windows 95 OSR2
All put together:

I haven't managed to find compatible plastic feet by cannibalizing other cases so I stuck the closest ones I could find on the back. It makes the case slant a bit to the back but at least it doesn't wobble like crazy anymore.
Instead of a PC speaker I used some prototyping leads to run the PC speaker signal to the sound card, which is much better since I can control the volume through software.
I managed to find one of those "ATX form cards" and with that I got PS/2 and USB ports without looking for a compatible PCI add-in card. With a generic driver I got USB thumb drives working on Windows 95 so I couldn't be happier. 😀
Back:

...and here's the complete system in all its oldschool glory:

Keyboard/Mouse:

The A4Tech serial mouse was a lucky flea market find and the keyboard was a nice gift from a friend who knows that I love old keyboards (also a flea market find). It's a KPT-102 manufactured in Feb. 1994 and it's certainly more than meets the eye. It's got mechanical key switches and a hidden XT/AT switch under one of the stands. The dual pipe/backslash key layout instead of nothing/Windows keys is very peculiar too, electrically they're different keys! On the US English layout both produce pipe/backslash but on the Spanish layout (which I grew up with and use) the left key corresponds to greater than/less than and the right one to Ç, which is awesome. The only problem is that the 'I' key lost its clickyness, I might try to fix that someday. 😀
By the way this is how the keyboard looked when my friend gave it to me:

The monitor and the speakers are shared among my retro rigs. The CRT is a Samsung SyncMaster 591s from 2004 which I 'disguise' with an anti-glare screen filter to make it look older than it is. Not only finding a real vintage CRT is getting harder every day, but they almost always have weak picture tubes (and I don't want to think about how many of them I threw out over the years). Modern CRTs are too curved and stylized but this Samsung is boxy enough for my taste and the picture tube is in top notch condition.
I used to hate anti-glare filters back in the day when everyone and their dog had one hanging in front of their screens to filter the Evil Martian Communist Radiation™ emanating from the CRT, usually going "Don't do that! You'll burn your eyes out!" when I lifted them up, such rationale irked me to no end. Now I seem to like them because they bring me pleasant memories from a bygone era and they make a nice cover-up for modern CRTs. 😵
Overall I'm pretty happy with the results! 😊
sebaz_ri wrote:@133Mhz Could you please post a pic of which Cif you used because here in where i live we have different types of that?
Better late than never!
I use regular Cif which comes in a white bottle:

There's also Cif with bleach on a green bottle but that should be avoided since chlorine weakens the plastics in the long term.