Always a pleasure Artex! Glad to see you haven’t lost the collectors bug, but are you still building machines?
Thanks!!! Definitely haven't lost the bug but my time is much more limited with my 2.5 year old running around! I also moved last summer and I've been spending any available time organizing my builds vs building them.
I have a shiny new AT desktop case with triple-digit display just waiting for my Cyrix 5x86 133/4x setup - just gotta find time to do it!
pepino_169 wrote:Tseng EVA-480, ET2000
One of first cards that emulates EGA (IBM EGA compatible), 256kB RAM
Graphic resolution 640x480, 16 colors […] Show full quote
Tseng EVA-480, ET2000
One of first cards that emulates EGA (IBM EGA compatible), 256kB RAM
Graphic resolution 640x480, 16 colors (from 64 color palette)
Hardware zoom/pan
Zilog Z80 (4MHz) makes card fully CGA/Hercules compatible.
I think, this is late revision with Z80 integrated on single board. Former revision had Z80 on daughterboard.
I'm glad it went to a Vogoner. Have you been able to test it yet? Does it work?
See my graphics card database at www.gpuzoo.com
Constantly being worked on. Feel free to message me with any corrections or details of cards you would like me to research and add.
@Artex. Very nice. Now I am sure I should have bought a house with a basement.
Edit: I have this bizarre item on the way.
Back in the day, I had a thing that was supposed to help overclocking socket 7 CPUs. Basically, you slid it on the CPU pins before putting the CPU in the socket. All it was was a thin plate with a bunch of extra smd capacitors on it. Guessing it was supposed to help make the power going to the CPU cleaner. Not sure if it actually helped or not.
cyclone3d wrote:@Artex. Very nice. Now I am sure I should have bought a house with a basement. […] Show full quote
@Artex. Very nice. Now I am sure I should have bought a house with a basement.
Edit: I have this bizarre item on the way.
1.jpg
2.jpg
Back in the day, I had a thing that was supposed to help overclocking socket 7 CPUs. Basically, you slid it on the CPU pins before putting the CPU in the socket. All it was was a thin plate with a bunch of extra smd capacitors on it. Guessing it was supposed to help make the power going to the CPU cleaner. Not sure if it actually helped or not.
Now that is actually something I have never seen before. How strange.
Back in the day, I had a thing that was supposed to help overclocking socket 7 CPUs. Basically, you slid it on the CPU pins before putting the CPU in the socket. All it was was a thin plate with a bunch of extra smd capacitors on it. Guessing it was supposed to help make the power going to the CPU cleaner. Not sure if it actually helped or not.
If it had power to it the it was probably a peltier cooler.
I remember those being sold for that back then. (With a lot of hype.)
GRUMPY OLD FART - On Hiatus, sort'a
Mann-Made Global Warming. - We should be more concerned about the Intellectual Climate.
You can teach a man to fish and feed him for life, but if he can't handle sushi you must also teach him to cook.
Guessing it was supposed to help make the power going to the CPU cleaner.
Looks like a separate VRM, probably with voltage jumpers somewhere. I think you can fit Pentium MMX or AMD K6-2 into motherboard without split-rail voltage (430FX) with this thing.
I must be some kind of standard: the anonymous gangbanger of the 21st century.