Reply 43800 of 56707, by Cuttoon
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asdf53 wrote on 2022-04-09, 17:33:I wouldn't even have noticed the missing back panel - did most cases from that era have one?
Good question, that backplate.
They became less common after, say, 1990.
And I think, they were more common on full towers than else - maybe simply because full towers tended to be very expensive rigs.
I own at least one ESCOM full tower that still has its plate, one like that:
https://i.ebayimg.com/00/s/MTYwMFgxMDQ3/z/3ac … piEvnX/$_59.JPG
Mine is a Pentium but they used it for quite some time around 1990-94.
The backplate usually gets lost because the mounting posts get brittle and break off. So it's a bit of the holy grail for old cases.
The d-sub plugs sticking out of the plate like that without any mechanical protection would have been regarded as very bad engineering. Hence the backplate as a frame.
asdf53 wrote on 2022-04-09, 17:33:What I found a bit strange is that the seller had sold a sound card as tested and working, but seemed to lack the knowledge to test this PC. That made me a bit suspicious.
Yep, some merit to that theory. Can't hurt to check the ratings with sellers like that.
Then again, if it does not boot, very few will investigate any further, which I can perfectly understand. Positive test to boot screen - matter of minutes. The opposite, rabbit hole.
And if not, oftentimes it's a fucked PSU, loose cable, missing jumper, or minor mobo component to replace. While all other parts will be OK.
I like jumpers.