First post, by MattRocks
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PSUs are among the least sexy components in retro computing.
My first PC had an AT/ATX transition board in an AT case with AT PSU.
Soon I had an AT/ATX boards in an ATX case, and an oddity of that transition era is that nobody supplied 44mm x 159mm ATX connector backplates featuring a single hole for an PS1 keyboard socket - so anyone mixing AT/ATX had a huge cavity in the back of the PC (maybe with a DIY filler).
Lesson: AT motherboard in ATX case = airflow compromised
Today I am faced with those exact components, realising there is more nuance than just AT and ATX standards. We can't really use new ATX PSUs that need their larger ATX plug physically cut, and are optimised to deliver SATA and PCIe devices - electrically, the pressures shifted from 5V to 3.3V to 12V .
Lesson: New ATX PSU in AT case = electrically compromised
Luckily, I have an original ATX PSU from the AT/ATX transition era. I was putting that ATX PSU into an AT case by simply remapping the reset button to ATX power button. But, I'm glitched - the world is upside down! The ATX PSU doesn't actually fit the AT case because the inside intake vents that should face-off to the CPU are facing-off to the top of the case.
Lesson: Old ATX PSU in AT case = airflow compromised
How was Intel's AT/ATX transition era supposed to work? No wonder Intel didn't give ATX a trademark or own up to anything about it - because doing that would have been reputational suicide! It's right up there with AGP shared memory textures, or Netburst, or AC'97 ...
Lesson: I don't know. Intel, why do you do crazy shit?
And given the PSUs have changed, and many flavours are no longer made, should old PSUs now be given more TLC? Should I even be repairing my AT PSU?