First post, by appiah4
- Rank
- l33t++
I have recently acquired this for a pretty penny..
I have a lot of builds (in my signature) that are fairly era specific and take up lots of space (mostly mid-full tower cases); so I thought I could check out what this PC has inside and maybe build it in a way that could serve me as a compact, silent retro PC I can keep on my computer desk under my current monitor (which conveniently has multiple inputs). Basically, the goal is to build a Win98SE PC that can play DOS and Win98 games at up 800x600 or 1024x768 from as wide a period of time as possible.
When buying the PC I was told that it had received some upgrades. The original configuration of this PC as it is reported to be shipped is as below:
Dell Socket 370 motherboard with Intel 810E Chipset
Onboard VGA Intel DVM 4MB
Riser card with 3 PCI slots
Pentium III 667 (133MHz FSB, 256KB Cache)
128MB NonECC SDRAM
15GB IDE HDD
LG 48x CD-ROM
3.5" Floppy Drive
Sound Card CRTV 64
Windows 98SE
And here is the configuration I found it in:
Dell Socket 370 motherboard with Intel 810E Chipset
Onboard VGA Intel DVM 4MB
Riser card with 3 PCI slots
Pentium III 733 (133MHz FSB, 256KB Cache)
256MB NonECC SDRAM (2x128MB)
Seagate 20GB IDE HDD
Lite-On 48x CD-ROM
3.5" Floppy Drive
Creative Sound Blaster PCI 128 CT4750
S3 Virge/DX PCI
Windows XP SP3 (Sloooooooooow...)
Obviously some of the hardware is pretty close to what is in the manufacturing log, but not quite. I do believe the 733MHz CPU is a factory replacement for the 667MHz one, the Lite-On is a factory replacement for the reported LG, the 20GB is a factory replacement for the 15GB, the PCI 128 is a factory replacement of the PCI 64 (all upgrades made because the original model hardware was probably OOP), and the 256MB memory was factory installed being matching sticks with Dell labels on them. So that means we are pretty much still in stock configuration, perfect!
Now, my question is whether I should roll back those updates, keep them, or replace them with other hardware altogether.
Specifically:
Riser Card: This unit has an optional riser card that has 2 PCI and 1 ISA slots. I'm not sure how easy this is to obtain, but if an ISA sound card would really help with era flexibility I may hunt this down (probably ties in with my sound card question)
CPU: Pentium III 733 is neither blinding fast nor too slow, sounds like a fair CPU for this build.. I can slow it down to a Celeron 400 or up to a
RAM: I don't have 256MB SDRAM sticks and to be honest I don't see this system needing more than 256MB
HDD: 20GB is nothing to write home about and after dumping a fair bit of ISOs into it, it will fill up. I'm seriously considering replacing this with a 40GB or 80GB HDD.
Optical: The CD-ROM on the unit is nicely yellowed like rotten teeth, and a DVD-ROM seems fitting for a unit of this era, I'm considering replacing it with one.. Thoughts?
Sound: This one is a tough call. Some GX110 models have the AD1881 AC97 Codec onboard which I think is SB Pro compatible, but not this. It has the CT4750 SB PCI 128 add-on card installed. I have a few options here: a) Stick with it, b) Switch to a spare DELL OEM SB Live! Value I have, c) Replace the MX300 in my Voodoo 3 PC with the Live! Value and use the MX300 in this system. Part of me wants to stick with the SB128, but I have no idea how good its software wavetable is (SF2 compatible? Up to how many MB?) or how good its SB16 emulation or DOS drivers are. I know that Live! is pretty garbage in Pure DOS mode but under Win98 it's fairly good and has good software MIDI synthesis. MX300 has awesome SB Pro compatibility but I'd rather keep it in my Voodoo 3 PC.
VGA: The onboard Intel DVM 4MB is pretty terrible so the S3 Virge PCI upgrade is most welcome. However, although this will probably be pretty good for DOS games, it's likely to suck for anything 3D. Options: a) Revert to Intel DVM to go back to stock, b) keep S3 Virge, c) Use spare ATI Rage Pro PCI, d) Tear out 2nd Voodoo 2 12MB in SLI MMX system (honestly, that is a huge waste of the thing..) to use here, e) Hunt down Vogons' preferred graphics card for this system
OS: Still has its original Win98SE cd-key sticker on it, so back to Win98SE we go!
Thanks for reading so far, and thanks for all future inputs.