Reply 5180 of 56708, by Lukeno94
The southbridge caught fire ratfink? How the hell did it manage that?
The southbridge caught fire ratfink? How the hell did it manage that?
wrote:Very nice! I have the BX version of this very board with a single 500 in it. I haven't gotten around to it, yet butI have a pa […]
Very nice! I have the BX version of this very board with a single 500 in it. I haven't gotten around to it, yet butI have a pair of 500's and 850's or so that I could drop in this thing. I've never been interested in the whole Slotket scene so I won't touch on that, but I'd love to get this up and running on Win2K... or should it get NT 4.0? It's a little old and I don't remember what would be better on that rig. Maybe I could turn it into a router with a linux distro. *shrug*
Good find in any case! I love SuperMicro.
-Matthew
wrote:This beautie. New in Box. ~23 Euro buyout. Also included 2x550 MHz P3 550 (used), Unspecified amount of memory (used). […]
This beautie. New in Box. ~23 Euro buyout.
Also included 2x550 MHz P3 550 (used), Unspecified amount of memory (used).Seems someone planned a build a long time ago...
Windows 2000 would be good on a P3. Nt4.0 is frustratingly limiting (no modern directX, no device manager)
NT4.0 would be a total waste on a PIII, that's for sure; it's better off on a P1 or Pentium Pro.
wrote:That's a nice 286!
Thanks Phil! Do you or anyone know whether you can just plonk a new CPU in an old 286 mobo and it works? Or do you need matching oscillators or the like? Just wondering whether it's possible to upgrade it to a 286-16 by just switching out CPU's? 😀
wrote:Thanks Phil! Do you or anyone know whether you can just plonk a new CPU in an old 286 mobo and it works? Or do you need matching oscillators or the like? Just wondering whether it's possible to upgrade it to a 286-16 by just switching out CPU's? 😀
I can only speak for 386 machines, because I don't have anything 286, but with a 386 the oscillator determines the clock speed (for some reason it is double the clock speed, so 80 MHz for a DX-40 and 66.6 MHz for a DX-33). And yes, just swap the processor. I imagine it will be similar with a 286, providing the board and memory and all of that is meant to run at 16 MHz...
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Ahhh okay thanks for the quick response and info guys, for the sake of keeping it old school original I'll leave the 286-10 in place 😀
For those of you who remember DK's 286 build, it's almost the same case except I lucked out and didn't get an LCD display with mine (286 Build).
Probably should have noted in my original post it came pre-installed with DOS 4.01 and Windows 3.0. Hardware appropriate 😀
I actaully sold my 286 on ebay a year or so ago - I simply wasn't using it.
i kinda flipped out for a second because I thought you might have bought it! It is a very similar case, although the HDD I put in it was double-height 5.25".
If you are squeamish, don't prod the beach rubble.
wrote:The southbridge caught fire ratfink? How the hell did it manage that?
It went like this:
- smell of burning. Was that a crackle? Computer shut down, wouldn't turn on for a while.
- turned back on, smell of burning, crackling, it turned off again.
- decided most likely culprit was my psu, so swapped it.
- started up with case open next to me. lots of smoke and blue flashes and crackling from under the southbridge heatsink...
- under that heatsink, chips charred, motherboard charred.
- really is dead now!
No real idea why it happened. I was playing WoW at the time. I'd been using this board for 2 years, the same cards for at least a year except for adding a Killer NIC a few months ago. I don't overclock. I did recently swap for a 1920x1200 monitor from my 1600x1200 crt [which I ran WoW at 1280x960 on iirc] so the graphics would have been doing more. But I thought the southbridge dealt with peripherals, usb etc.
Other than that, HWMonitor used to report 60 degrees C for one of the tmpin sensors which seemed to be socket temperature. Could never work out whether to worry or not as the cpu and core temps were normally around 40.
It was a 790fx/sb600 chipset, so for what it's worth I've decided to avoid that combination - the replacement has an nvidia chipset [doesn't seem as fast in fact 5-10% slower]. My other am2+ is an asus with sb750.
My experience of the MCP61 chipset was that it had utterly woeful SATA speeds in a Dell Inspiron 531... oh, how I really don't miss that heap of OEM rubbish.
wrote:I went and picked up 286-10 today. Complete and still working, although I promptly removed the barrel battery which surprisingly hasn't leaked.
Nice one! Was half thinking of bidding on that one as well 😀 does it have a co-pro?
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wrote:Nice one! Was half thinking of bidding on that one as well 😀 does it have a co-pro?
Heheh nah no co-pro and the 1.44MB was dead on it as I just found out now. The floppy disks weren't very exciting either mainly a bunch of random shareware disks including "Cake Maker" and "Recipes" 😀
I don't know if this could be considered "retro" but my core 2 quad q9550 arrived today
Now to attempt to install it. Fingers crossed
I hope the CPU heatsink can take the extra heat
I got these plus a Dell 1707fp for ten bucks. I never had a copy of Doom 3, all I ever played was the demo back in 2004/5, so I'm a bit excited to try it on modern hardware.
PacBell 386sx
Gateway 2k P75
HP Pav 7360 MMX200
SE440BX-2, P2 450
3 Modernish Dell Precisions
wrote:I got these plus a Dell 1707fp for ten bucks. I never had a copy of Doom 3, all I ever played was the demo back in 2004/5, so I'm a bit excited to try it on modern hardware.
I hope you like System Shock! (I kid, I kid, it's not NEARLY as good as System Shock)
wrote:I got these plus a Dell 1707fp for ten bucks. I never had a copy of Doom 3, all I ever played was the demo back in 2004/5, so I'm a bit excited to try it on modern hardware.
I'm already envious of that TM F-16 FLCS score for such a low price!
Now all you need is an F-16 TQS and some gameport pedals...
$6.50 off ebay, works fine. No performance tests yet, just basic functionality tests. Popped it in my AMD K6-III/550 machine, came on fine and went through some basic dos test software just fine, even ran a color palette test and it went fine.