Reply 27340 of 49300, by keropi
- Rank
- l33t++
Some nice stuff there dionb , very good!
Some nice stuff there dionb , very good!
wrote:[...]
Indeed, the listing I was looking at was for a boxed complete card.
So the card itself is still probably worth 3 to 400 dollars/
Possibly. It's worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it.
The bigger picture though is that things like these are out there, and at a much lower price, because the vast majority of vintage PC stuff is sitting unknown and uncatalogued in someone's attic, basement or storage box, both the crappy uninteresting things and the truly rare, valuable or otherwise sought after.
So don't sit there being envious, get out and bring hardware out of the shadows and into our light! You won't find unicorns every time but persevere and they will be in there. You are online, you have a truck - that's all you need.
wrote:Found the driver for it: http://minuszerodegrees.net/manuals/unknown/s … ersion_1.01.zip […]
wrote:This 8 bit ISA mystery soundcard: (sellers pictures)
<snip>
Found the driver for it:
http://minuszerodegrees.net/manuals/unknown/s … ersion_1.01.zipFrom this page:
http://minuszerodegrees.net/manuals.htm
Great, thanks!
There is a little info in the zip:
JUNE 2015 […]
JUNE 2015
From alecv of the Vintage Computer Forums:
"This card is SB Pro-like and contains rudimental 'mixer'. By default (after reset) all channels are muted.
Card itself works, but produces silence. This 'driver' just enables 'mixer'.The SCSI pard is standard TMC-950."
1982 to 2001
wrote:Possibly. It's worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it. […]
wrote:[...]
Indeed, the listing I was looking at was for a boxed complete card.
So the card itself is still probably worth 3 to 400 dollars/
Possibly. It's worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it.
The bigger picture though is that things like these are out there, and at a much lower price, because the vast majority of vintage PC stuff is sitting unknown and uncatalogued in someone's attic, basement or storage box, both the crappy uninteresting things and the truly rare, valuable or otherwise sought after.
So don't sit there being envious, get out and bring hardware out of the shadows and into our light! You won't find unicorns every time but persevere and they will be in there. You are online, you have a truck - that's all you need.
Wow that lot is pretty awesome. Was this advertised on the interwebs (i.e. didn’t I do my homework properly)? 😊
wrote:[...]
Wow that lot is pretty awesome. Was this advertised on the interwebs (i.e. didn’t I do my homework properly)? 😊
Yep. Although tbh, it was advertised very obscurely, initially with no pics and with a seller actively trying to convince me it was worthless and not worth my time to come pick it up. The more details he gave to convince me not to, the more convinced I became I did want to - although the only interesting bits I knew about in advance were the Model M and the GA-BX2000 😉
wrote:wrote:Possibly. It's worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it. […]
wrote:[...]
Indeed, the listing I was looking at was for a boxed complete card.
So the card itself is still probably worth 3 to 400 dollars/
Possibly. It's worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it.
The bigger picture though is that things like these are out there, and at a much lower price, because the vast majority of vintage PC stuff is sitting unknown and uncatalogued in someone's attic, basement or storage box, both the crappy uninteresting things and the truly rare, valuable or otherwise sought after.
So don't sit there being envious, get out and bring hardware out of the shadows and into our light! You won't find unicorns every time but persevere and they will be in there. You are online, you have a truck - that's all you need.
Wow that lot is pretty awesome. Was this advertised on the interwebs (i.e. didn’t I do my homework properly)? 😊
I was wondering the same thing. Although I promised my wife (and myself) to not buy big lots like this any more. And this was too far away for me to pick up.
1982 to 2001
wrote:wrote:[...]
Wow that lot is pretty awesome. Was this advertised on the interwebs (i.e. didn’t I do my homework properly)? 😊
Yep. Although tbh, it was advertised very obscurely, initially with no pics and with a seller actively trying to convince me it was worthless and not worth my time to come pick it up. The more details he gave to convince me not to, the more convinced I became I did want to - although the only interesting bits I knew about in advance were the Model M and the GA-BX2000 😉
The Asus Socket 4 motherboard is an awesome find, a thing I will put on my wanted list from now on. What cpu came the mobo with?
I envy you a bit for finding another awesome lot! 🤣 🤣
wrote:[...]
The Asus Socket 4 motherboard is an awesome find, a thing I will put on my wanted list from now on. What cpu came the mobo with?
P60 SX948 - no FDIV bug as far as I can see.
Agree that this is probably the best bit in the find. My first own PC had been a P60, with an MSI motherboard with SiS 501 chipset. I'd been vaguely looking for one for a while, and recently just missed out on an Intel Premiere/PCI. But this is better - i430LX is an extremely underwhelming chipset, in fact the only thing I would have been happier with is the MSI board I used to have (slightly smaller PCB with 6 SIMM slots, otherwise functionally identical, up to the crap CMD640 IDE chip). If this thing works, I'm using it for my multi-sound card build. I had an So7 i430FX board with either P133 or Cyrix PR166+ in it, but in terms of CPU any Pentium-class CPU would be fine, and this board is definitely more interesting.
I envy you a bit for finding another awesome lot! 🤣 🤣
Put that envy on hold until I've tested whether any of this actually works. The older motherboards were a scorched pile of battery juise. The P5SP4 just has a DS1287 RTC which needs replacing. Fortunately I have two potential replacements, but it might still have other issues.
wrote:Put that envy on hold until I've tested whether any of this actually works. The older motherboards were a scorched pile of battery juise. The P5SP4 just has a DS1287 RTC which needs replacing. Fortunately I have two potential replacements, but it might still have other issues.
What is the model number of that Asus socket 4 board? Man, I'd sell a kidney to get one 😁
wrote:wrote:Put that envy on hold until I've tested whether any of this actually works. The older motherboards were a scorched pile of battery juise. The P5SP4 just has a DS1287 RTC which needs replacing. Fortunately I have two potential replacements, but it might still have other issues.
What is the model number of that Asus socket 4 board? Man, I'd sell a kidney to get one 😁
PCI/I-P5SP4
Managed to finally find a decent case for my planned 386 build. Well happy with this as AT cases are really hard to come by in good condition.
wrote:I'll leave you with a pic of the worst corroded motherboard, I'd love to get this working as I don't have any other boards small enough for that tiny case - but I'm not optimistic.
Just look at that green area to the right of the keyboard connector. All the brown colour has been eaten from the PCB 😢
Very nice lot! 😎
Let me know if this board is not running, I think have several 386 boards of this size...
wrote:Managed to finally find a decent case for my planned 386 build. Well happy with this as AT cases are really hard to come by in good condition.
Good looking case.
Discord: https://discord.gg/U5dJw7x
Systems from the Compaq Portable 1 to Ryzen 9 5950X
Twitch: https://twitch.tv/retropcuser
wrote:Managed to finally find a decent case for my planned 386 build. Well happy with this as AT cases are really hard to come by in good condition.
That is a very pretty case! No yellowing!
1982 to 2001
wrote:happy with this as AT cases are really hard to come by in good condition.
Nice case!
wrote:wrote:I'll leave you with a pic of the worst corroded motherboard, I'd love to get this working as I don't have any other boards small enough for that tiny case - but I'm not optimistic.
Just look at that green area to the right of the keyboard connector. All the brown colour has been eaten from the PCB 😢Very nice lot! 😎
Let me know if this board is not running, I think have several 386 boards of this size...
Thanks for the kind offer but...
...despite looking even worse today - *something* green was even re-crystallizing out of the green PCB bit - it was dry enough so I gave it a go, and it booted perfectly first try. Only things it complains about are the CMOS settings, which is sort of understandable 😉
What's better than a Suntac based 286 motherboard?
Two Suntac based 286 motherboards!
PS: And couple of slightly less interesting items…
New items (October/November 2022) -> My Items for Sale
wrote:WP_20190218_16_01_12_Proa.jpg
Battery on this one looks a little pinched or it's just me... Cool Cyrix DX40!
It's not you. I see it as well.
Discord: https://discord.gg/U5dJw7x
Systems from the Compaq Portable 1 to Ryzen 9 5950X
Twitch: https://twitch.tv/retropcuser
I got a slightly mis-labeled M919, which appears to have a pretty nice CPU stuck to it 😁
This looks like 1996 / 1997's serious budget PC build, since it looks like it wasn't upgraded during its lifetime and the chips all say they're from mid 1996. I mostly got it because it actually has the cache board attached, but the CPU was a welcome surprise.
Does this look like a Super Socket 7 board though? Because that's the only manual I got...
Also got a big fat SC55, which works pretty nicely, some really dodgy looking repair work inside though, I dread to think what happened to it, it sort of looks like one of the voltage regulators shorted - though thankfully it's not battery related, already fixed that thanks to the thread in the sound forum.