Compaq Prosignia 500. I bet this things weighs more than 20kg, it's built like a tank. Pentium 150MHz, 16+32MB RAM, 2xPCI, 4xEISA slots, onboard SCSI and an EISA SCSI controller, SCSI CD-ROM and some kind of tape drive (maybe DAT? would be interesting to test drive it, if i find suitable software and cassettes). Very cool machine, but I have no idea what to do with it. I already have a decent Pentium class machine. Paid 20€ for it. It would have been for free, but that didn't feel right.
It's in really nice condition. Interior is totally dust free, it's like it came from the factory yesterday. I guess it might have been used as a spare machine, just waiting for use powered off. Only thing that bothers me is that owner sticker. It is plastic, with strong glue, and doesn't hold together, it just crumbles. I wonder how to remove it cleanly without damaging the case.
Power button is something I haven't seen before. There's a plastic shield in front of it and you have to poke it with a pen through the holes. Also first EISA machine for me.
"I wonder how to remove it cleanly without damaging the case." Isopropol alcohol should dissolve the glue and allow you to cleanly remove that sticker.
"We do these things not because they are easy, but because we thought they would be easy."
Not sure if this really counts as "retro" but maybe right on the border and the fact they're not made anymore, though it's more of a "gotta get it because it's just awesome" acquisition. A Logitech G27 wheel complete in the box, "lightly used" as described by the seller, and anybody who keeps the original box and packing material including the plastic bags is definitely the person I want to buy from, because that's exactly what I do, and I'm very meticulous about my stuff. 😁
I must gripe though about people who ship in the product box, rather than put the product in a bigger box and pack it well. Yeah it's a big box but come on. Pretty obvious what's being shipped and higher chance of it "disappearing" in shipment because some shady individual decided they want it more.
Anyway, pictures:
Also received my first Aureal 2 sound chip today in a Monster MX300. Now to decide which of my retro systems gets it.
Brawndowrote on 2021-11-06, 00:37:Not sure if this really counts as "retro" but maybe right on the border and the fact they're not made anymore, though it's more […] Show full quote
Not sure if this really counts as "retro" but maybe right on the border and the fact they're not made anymore, though it's more of a "gotta get it because it's just awesome" acquisition. A Logitech G27 wheel complete in the box, "lightly used" as described by the seller, and anybody who keeps the original box and packing material including the plastic bags is definitely the person I want to buy from, because that's exactly what I do, and I'm very meticulous about my stuff. 😁
I must gripe though about people who ship in the product box, rather than put the product in a bigger box and pack it well. Yeah it's a big box but come on. Pretty obvious what's being shipped and higher chance of it "disappearing" in shipment because some shady individual decided they want it more.
Anyway, pictures:
Also received my first Aureal 2 sound chip today in a Monster MX300. Now to decide which of my retro systems gets it.
I pulled a couple of Monster MX300s from ewaste, but those slot covers never held up. Watch out for rust.
Those old MSI boards have a special place in my heart
A coupon of years later I had a K8N Neo2 Platinum which I swear was one of the best socket 939 boards out at the time, unfortunately overshadowed by Abit, Asus and DFI, but nonetheless a very stable overclocker. I paired mine first with a 3000+ then a 3700+ and had great results before upgrading to an A8N32-SLI Deluxe and then a LanParty of my own…
Those old MSI boards have a special place in my heart
A couple of years later I had a K8N Neo2 Platinum which I swear was one of the best socket 939 boards out at the time, unfortunately overshadowed by Abit, Asus and DFI, but nonetheless a very stable overclocker. I paired mine first with a 3000+ then a 3700+ and had great results before upgrading to an A8N32-SLI Deluxe and then a LanParty of my own…
libbywrote on 2021-11-06, 06:40:they'd probably foam at the integral one I have which has both 4MB and is also a framegrabber all on one board […] Show full quote
those tseng ET6000s are really neat but the WRAM modules to up them to 4MB are very, very rare
middle one's an 8MB voodoo banshee, I guess
Ah, so that's why I have had 4 (!) people make me offers via Vogons on my half-dead Tseng card (with the modules), after posting a picture of it 😀
they'd probably foam at the integral one I have which has both 4MB and is also a framegrabber all on one board
it's in a case right now and I don't want to dig it out at the moment though
here's a pic of it from some website I found
integral_et6100.jpg
If were showing ET6000's, this is my one. Picked it up last year. Can't remember what I paid for it but it wasn't that much, I think it was about $50 or so. I don't think it card is anything special but the 4MB is nice. I also have 2MB version by STB somewhere.
Bought today and paid a bit though it was bundled with a SB16/DB50XG. Hoping the varta damage is not final and that there is a 386 lurking under the heatsink/fan for a 486/386 combo.
Interesting Glint card which I need to find more details on.
Something I never thought I would find... my AGP 4/8x motherboards all cried out in pain 😁
ATOP brand name , makes me think of Xenia Onatopp 🤣
CrFrwrote on 2021-11-05, 19:49:Compaq Prosignia 500. I bet this things weighs more than 20kg, it's built like a tank. Pentium 150MHz, 16+32MB RAM, 2xPCI, 4xEIS […] Show full quote
Compaq Prosignia 500. I bet this things weighs more than 20kg, it's built like a tank. Pentium 150MHz, 16+32MB RAM, 2xPCI, 4xEISA slots, onboard SCSI and an EISA SCSI controller, SCSI CD-ROM and some kind of tape drive (maybe DAT? would be interesting to test drive it, if i find suitable software and cassettes). Very cool machine, but I have no idea what to do with it. I already have a decent Pentium class machine. Paid 20€ for it. It would have been for free, but that didn't feel right.
It's in really nice condition. Interior is totally dust free, it's like it came from the factory yesterday. I guess it might have been used as a spare machine, just waiting for use powered off. Only thing that bothers me is that owner sticker. It is plastic, with strong glue, and doesn't hold together, it just crumbles. I wonder how to remove it cleanly without damaging the case.
Power button is something I haven't seen before. There's a plastic shield in front of it and you have to poke it with a pen through the holes. Also first EISA machine for me.
IMGP2126_.jpg
Processor board is easily modified to run at 66MHz instead of 60MHz and will take 60ns FPM instead of 70ns. Relocating the resistor to another two empty pads. I have it detailed that somewhere in this vogons.
CrFrwrote on 2021-11-05, 19:49:Compaq Prosignia 500. I bet this things weighs more than 20kg, it's built like a tank. Pentium 150MHz, 16+32MB RAM, 2xPCI, 4xEIS […] Show full quote
Compaq Prosignia 500. I bet this things weighs more than 20kg, it's built like a tank. Pentium 150MHz, 16+32MB RAM, 2xPCI, 4xEISA slots, onboard SCSI and an EISA SCSI controller, SCSI CD-ROM and some kind of tape drive (maybe DAT? would be interesting to test drive it, if i find suitable software and cassettes). Very cool machine, but I have no idea what to do with it. I already have a decent Pentium class machine. Paid 20€ for it. It would have been for free, but that didn't feel right.
It's in really nice condition. Interior is totally dust free, it's like it came from the factory yesterday. I guess it might have been used as a spare machine, just waiting for use powered off. Only thing that bothers me is that owner sticker. It is plastic, with strong glue, and doesn't hold together, it just crumbles. I wonder how to remove it cleanly without damaging the case.
Power button is something I haven't seen before. There's a plastic shield in front of it and you have to poke it with a pen through the holes. Also first EISA machine for me.
IMGP2126_.jpg
Hey, I have one of these! Mine is almost the same, except with a 120MHz Pentium and no EISA SCSI controller. You paid a lot less than I did, mine cost me $100USD!
If were showing ET6000's, this is my one. Picked it up last year. Can't remember what I paid for it but it wasn't that much, I think it was about $50 or so. I don't think it card is anything special but the 4MB is nice. I also have 2MB version by STB somewhere.
PXL_20201224_031310515.jpg
I have similar looking ET6100 with 4,5MB... But again - that's overkill for those cards.
Also the 3dfx card I've shown on my pic is Velocity 100 not Banshee. Dead unfortunatelly (replacing broken caps didn't helped)... Oh well, not that I paid any significant amount for it...
Received this very cool (pun intended) socket A heatsink/fan combo by Masscool today. Looks more capable than most of the socket A coolers I've seen, and it takes a standard 80mm fan, so easy enough to replace.
If were showing ET6000's, this is my one. Picked it up last year. Can't remember what I paid for it but it wasn't that much, I think it was about $50 or so. I don't think it card is anything special but the 4MB is nice. I also have 2MB version by STB somewhere.
PXL_20201224_031310515.jpg
I have similar looking ET6100 with 4,5MB... But again - that's overkill for those cards.
Also the 3dfx card I've shown on my pic is Velocity 100 not Banshee. Dead unfortunatelly (replacing broken caps didn't helped)... Oh well, not that I paid any significant amount for it...
I've got a 6100 as well no idea on the brand though.
My 6000 is a Jaton video magic though I'm pretty sure
I've got some information about the jumper settings, but still am not sure how to set the jumpers correctly (e.g. for a Celeron 1300/256/100/1.5 / SL5VR).
b) a removable Harddisk frame with two drive caddies
Building my own PCs since 1991 - for my retro builds it's "no CF-disks, no Floppy emulators, no modern cases etc.", only the real and authentic stuff whenever possible.