VOGONS


HP Vectra VL/400 MT, Pentium-lll , 1ghz.

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Reply 20 of 38, by theiceman085

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Sorry, the digging out that old topic but got a question. My initial plan was and still is to build for own first retro gaming Win 98 machine but a good buddy of mine also said that I might should look into some already completed machines. While browsing around I found a HP VECTRA VL 400 with 1GZ and a Matrox gf450 at a local action platform at a good price.

What P3 1ghz is normally used by these hp machines? Coppermine or Tualatin.

Would you say that these hp machines make good win 98 games (from 97 to the end of 2000) in general or not?

Have not considered getting a Matrox card for example but they seem not to be that bad according to the reviews in the German gaming press.

I was personally aiming a bit higher spec-wise (Athlon XP, Athlon 64, and gf 3 or Geforce 4) but the offer of the hp pc is too good to not consider it at least.

Would be pleased if some of the owners of the hp machines could share their impressions.

Reply 21 of 38, by Intel486dx33

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Yes, these HP computers work great. I use to run dual 20" Sony CRTs with a Dual head Matrox G400 or G450 video card. Worked great. Never had any problems. I think I was running Win-2000-pro.
I am not sure but it might be a coppermine CPU. But any case its a Solid CPU and Motherboard. Never gave me any problems. HP Vectra and Kayak was HP top of the line PC's.
Designed for businesses. ( Workstations ).

All you need is 128mb or 256mb of RAM for Optimal performance.

The CPU is Good, I am not sure if all models have AGP however. You might want to check.

Last edited by Intel486dx33 on 2023-06-04, 10:25. Edited 1 time in total.

Reply 22 of 38, by theiceman085

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Intel486dx33 wrote on 2023-06-01, 01:18:
Yes, these HP computers work great. I use to run dual 20" Sony CRTs with a Dual head Matrox G400 or G450 video card. Worked gre […]
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Yes, these HP computers work great. I use to run dual 20" Sony CRTs with a Dual head Matrox G400 or G450 video card. Worked great. Never had any problems. I think I was running Win-2000-pro.
I am not sure but it might be a copper mine CPU. But any case its a Solid CPU and Motherboard. Never gave me any problems. HP Vectra and Kayak was HP top of the line PC's.
Designed for businesses. ( Workstations ).

All you need is 128mb or 256mb of RAM for Optimal performance.

The CPU is Good, I am not sure if all models have AGP however. You might want to check.

Thanks a lot for your reply. I will also check out if the motherboard has AGP or not.I am not sure yet if I would be interested in changing the gpu or not. In case I am happy with the Matrox G450 I might just keep it.

As I have said the reviews I have read about the Matrox G450 were promising.

Reply 23 of 38, by Intel486dx33

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I am NOT really a gamer from that PC era so I don’t really know what you want to play ?
But this HP computer is a good reliable computer for its time.

You might want to make a list of the games you want to play and then ask in the forums which CPU/Motherboard/Video card combo would be best for playing those games.

Reply 24 of 38, by theiceman085

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Intel486dx33 wrote on 2023-06-01, 15:33:

I am NOT really a gamer from that PC era so I don’t really know what you want to play ?
But this HP computer is a good reliable computer for its time.

You might want to make a list of the games you want to play and then ask in the forums which CPU/Motherboard/Video card combo would be best for playing those games.

That's good advice. I might do that. The games I want to play are nothing peculiar though. Just the classics from 97 to 2000 like c&c 3, half life plus add ons diablo 1 and 2, unreal, unreal tournament, dune 2000, age of empires and so forth.

Reply 25 of 38, by chinny22

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Looks like its using a motherboard with the Intel 815 chipset. Intel have good 9x drivers so nice stable base to build a win98 PC.
P3 1Ghz is pretty good for 9x games (Most my games are happy with a 600MHz) Anything that struggles on the 1Ghz would be better off on a XP build anyway.
The G450 is roughly the same performance wise as a TNT2, so bit of a bottleneck but as you seem mostly into RTS's it's cleaner picture is probably more important then raw speed.
The G450 also benefits from EMBM support which some games used.
https://www.vogonswiki.com/index.php/List_of_ … th_EMBM_support

Reply 26 of 38, by theiceman085

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chinny22 wrote on 2023-06-02, 13:00:
Looks like its using a motherboard with the Intel 815 chipset. Intel have good 9x drivers so nice stable base to build a win98 P […]
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Looks like its using a motherboard with the Intel 815 chipset. Intel have good 9x drivers so nice stable base to build a win98 PC.
P3 1Ghz is pretty good for 9x games (Most my games are happy with a 600MHz) Anything that struggles on the 1Ghz would be better off on a XP build anyway.
The G450 is roughly the same performance wise as a TNT2, so bit of a bottleneck but as you seem mostly into RTS's it's cleaner picture is probably more important then raw speed.
The G450 also benefits from EMBM support which some games used.
https://www.vogonswiki.com/index.php/List_of_ … th_EMBM_support

Thanks for info. That sounds quite promising about the Matrox G450. EMBM also sounds like a neat feature which would be nice to have.

And yeah I am most int RTS games beside the occasional shooters like Unreal and Half Life. I also might be interested in trying out games like Thief 1 and 2.

Reply 27 of 38, by dc_carguy

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I have the desktop version of the Vl400 with the same board. Intel 815, P3 1k coppermine and 384mb ram.
It uses the earlier version of the i815 chipset, thus has the slower version of ata ide. I believe the vl400 is a coppermine only board even with the latest BIOS. Finding the isa add on would be nice.

For video, my system currently has a radeon 9600pro installed (likely overkill for w98). I have also used a Geforce2 Gts, unfortunately it was dying with display errors. I also have a Voodoo 3 3500 that will be tested now that I have the correct Vga adapter. Lots of video options with this system.

Reply 28 of 38, by theiceman085

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dc_carguy wrote on 2023-06-03, 20:16:

I have the desktop version of the Vl400 with the same board. Intel 815, P3 1k coppermine and 384mb ram.
It uses the earlier version of the i815 chipset, thus has the slower version of ata ide. I believe the vl400 is a coppermine only board even with the latest BIOS. Finding the isa add on would be nice.

For video, my system currently has a radeon 9600pro installed (likely overkill for w98). I have also used a Geforce2 Gts, unfortunately it was dying with display errors. I also have a Voodoo 3 3500 that will be tested now that I have the correct Vga adapter. Lots of video options with this system.

Thanks for sharing your impressions. Good to know that there are many video options for the build gives it way more flexibility. While I am sure that there is nothing wrong with the Matrox G450 i am still interested to max out the video optionso f the system as far as possible. Going into the Geforce 2 or Radeon 8000/9000 territory is definitely an interesting thing to try.

Getting a Voodoo 3 card to fulfill a childhood /early teen dream would be another nice matter to consider. But considering the prices at the moment a Voodoo 3 would not be first choice for video card.

Reply 29 of 38, by technoid

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Thermalwrong wrote on 2019-08-15, 22:16:

That connector that resembles a very long IDE connector at the bottom of the board can give you 2 ISA slots if you find the HP part "5065-4211", that's an ISA bridge board.

I found the ISA bridge board then found the VL-400 board, it works great for providing ISA sound capability.

I have 2 of these VL400 towers, gotten for free as a system bundle (incl. monitor, printer, software, etc) over 2 decades ago when I used to work at Intel Corp, & a decade or so ago I was also looking for that bridge board & found them on eBay back then but did not buy one. But OMG today I was looking on the web for these bridges again & they have bumped the prices up into the $300 to $500 range, wtf. I don't remember the price 10-20 years ago but I think they were affordable back then, geesh.

Reply 30 of 38, by technoid

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theiceman085 wrote on 2023-06-04, 06:59:

Thanks for sharing your impressions. Good to know that there are many video options for the build gives it way more flexibility. While I am sure that there is nothing wrong with the Matrox G450 i am still interested to max out the video optionso f the system as far as possible. Going into the Geforce 2 or Radeon 8000/9000 territory is definitely an interesting thing to try.

Getting a Voodoo 3 card to fulfill a childhood /early teen dream would be another nice matter to consider. But considering the prices at the moment a Voodoo 3 would not be first choice for video card.

My 2 VL400's from Intel (see my previous comment above) came factory-installed with G450's (G45+MDHA16D/OE5), but as I was a PC gamer back then (and still am), playing Battlezone II (BZ2) in those days with a G450 was a little bit hampering. You have to keep in mind that around 2001, BZ2 was still relatively new & it was a pioneering PC game that needed high hardware requirements of that era. One reason that BZ2 wasn't received well at that time around Y2k, was because of debut release bugs, as well as minimum & recommended hardware, of which recommended, or higher, hardware of that time was still also expensive for most. Today, modern hardware can run circles with BZ2. And BZ2 did have bump mapping capability built-in & I recall the G450 took advantage of that & made things look beautiful. However, with the hardware of that time, Matrox bump mapping also slowed things down again a notch & reduced the framerate a little more. Eventually I was not satisfied with the G450 & eventually moved to the nVidia Ti-4600, of which one of my VL400's still has installed today. In 2002, I chose the Ti-4600 because it was the best video card of that time for its price:performance ratio, nVidia or otherwise. The higher speed & power of the Ti-4600 compared to the G450 was very noticeable. And also had its own bump mapping. My other VL400 eventually became my home theater PC in 2008 with a fanless DVI nVidia graphics card & quiet powersupply to keep noise down further, as my projector already was too much noise, heh. Unfortunately, the VL400 with the Ti-4600 is down right now due to a lightning strike a couple years ago, which killed the prior powersupply but the motherboard requires a connector that the previous powersupply had but the newer supply doesn't have so I am still looking into that. And I still have both of the G450 cards.

Reply 31 of 38, by theiceman085

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technoid wrote on 2023-06-16, 23:10:
theiceman085 wrote on 2023-06-04, 06:59:

Thanks for sharing your impressions. Good to know that there are many video options for the build gives it way more flexibility. While I am sure that there is nothing wrong with the Matrox G450 i am still interested to max out the video optionso f the system as far as possible. Going into the Geforce 2 or Radeon 8000/9000 territory is definitely an interesting thing to try.

Getting a Voodoo 3 card to fulfill a childhood /early teen dream would be another nice matter to consider. But considering the prices at the moment a Voodoo 3 would not be first choice for video card.

My 2 VL400's from Intel (see my previous comment above) came factory-installed with G450's (G45+MDHA16D/OE5), but as I was a PC gamer back then (and still am), playing Battlezone II (BZ2) in those days with a G450 was a little bit hampering. You have to keep in mind that around 2001, BZ2 was still relatively new & it was a pioneering PC game that needed high hardware requirements of that era. One reason that BZ2 wasn't received well at that time around Y2k, was because of debut release bugs, as well as minimum & recommended hardware, of which recommended, or higher, hardware of that time was still also expensive for most. Today, modern hardware can run circles with BZ2. And BZ2 did have bump mapping capability built-in & I recall the G450 took advantage of that & made things look beautiful. However, with the hardware of that time, Matrox bump mapping also slowed things down again a notch & reduced the framerate a little more. Eventually I was not satisfied with the G450 & eventually moved to the nVidia Ti-4600, of which one of my VL400's still has installed today. In 2002, I chose the Ti-4600 because it was the best video card of that time for its price:performance ratio, nVidia or otherwise. The higher speed & power of the Ti-4600 compared to the G450 was very noticeable. And also had its own bump mapping. My other VL400 eventually became my home theater PC in 2008 with a fanless DVI nVidia graphics card & quiet powersupply to keep noise down further, as my projector already was too much noise, heh. Unfortunately, the VL400 with the Ti-4600 is down right now due to a lightning strike a couple years ago, which killed the prior powersupply but the motherboard requires a connector that the previous powersupply had but the newer supply doesn't have so I am still looking into that. And I still have both of the G450 cards.

Thanks for sharing your impression. That was interesting to read. I came to late to get hp vectra and ended up with something completely different.

A good old P2 400 MHZ System with a Aus P2 motherboard and the Riva TNT 2.

Reply 32 of 38, by dr.wily

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Bump this topic. I recently found an ISA extender board ( HP 5065-4211 or "PWA-CAPRI / ISA EXT BD") but I couldn't get it to work. I made myself a P8/P9 connector to power the board and I buy a 64 pin ribbon cable from ebay.

None of my ISA card are detected. The BIOS of an ISA SCSI card does not show up either.

There is a special tweak or something to enable the extender board ? There is nothing in the motherboard BIOS or dipswitch. Is the original ribbon cable has a special pinout and is not a simple straight cable ?

I checked the card and the voltages are fine, the 7905 regulator is supplying -5v and the capacitors are fine too. Is it possible that the ISA to PCI bridge chip is burnt out? (I doubt it).

I must have missed something, can anyone who has this ISA extension help me ?

Last edited by dr.wily on 2026-02-01, 15:21. Edited 1 time in total.

Reply 33 of 38, by PC Hoarder Patrol

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dr.wily wrote on 2026-02-01, 13:43:
Bump this topic. I recently found an ISA extender board ( HP 5065-4211 or "PWA-CAPRI / ISA EXT BD") but I couldn't get it to wor […]
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Bump this topic. I recently found an ISA extender board ( HP 5065-4211 or "PWA-CAPRI / ISA EXT BD") but I couldn't get it to work. I made myself a P8/P9 connector to power the board and I buy a 65 pin ribbon cbale from ebay.

None of my ISA card are detected. The BIOS of an ISA SCSI card does not show up either.

There is a special tweak or something to enable the extender board ? There is nothing in the motherboard BIOS or dipswitch. Is the original ribbon cable has a special pinout and is not a simple straight cable ?

I checked the card and the voltages are fine, the 7905 regulator is supplying -5v and the capacitors are fine too. Is it possible that the ISA to PCI bridge chip is burnt out? (I doubt it).

I must have missed something, can anyone who has this ISA extension help me ?

Far as I can tell from this listing (not mine), both the data & power connectors are straight thru with no twists or crossovers... https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/155456679313 . Have you checked all the contact ends on both for continuity. Also, none of the VL400 manuals indicate a setting is required to enable the ISA Extension Kit.

Reply 34 of 38, by dr.wily

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All 64 pins of ribbon cable are good. I notice there is some scratch on the PCB and the resistance R24 is missing.

I replaced it with a new 8.2 Kohm one, but this value is only an assumption based on the others resistors below it.

Does anyone have this card and a multimeter to measure the value of R24 ?

Reply 35 of 38, by Intel486dx33

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I love these HP workstation computers.
HPUX , Microsoft Windows, Linux, Solaris x86 UNIX, Novell Server, etc,.
They work out of of the box with just about every Operating system.

“Enterprise Ready”

That was the Slogan back in 1990’s about HP Products.
Your ONE Stop Solution for all your business needs.

The HP workstations are Quality Built to Operate 24/7/365 days a year.

I First Started using HP computers back in 1997 and Never went back
I have been using HP workstations and printers ever since.
Great customer support too.
If you ever have a problem with their products as long as it is still
Covered under their service agreement they will send you out a replacement ASAP.
They are a Class act company that runs a very tight professional ship
Back in the 1990’s they were the Silicon Valley company everyone wanted to be like.
If you had HP computers experience on your Resume you were in High demand.
Back in 1990’s HP was the #1 computer company in the World in Sales.
You cant go Wrong with an HP computer.

Last edited by Intel486dx33 on 2026-02-03, 08:48. Edited 1 time in total.

Reply 36 of 38, by Winstonwolfe

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Got the same case, love it. Unfortunately, the whole spec inc the motherboard has been changed.

MSI BX Master/P3 1000 Mhz/512MB/2xVoodoo 2 12MB SLI/GeForce 4Ti 4800SE/SB64 Gold/

Reply 37 of 38, by Jasin Natael

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I think that HP is still number 2 in sales at present. Passed only by Lenovo, with Dell trailing in third place.
It is worth mentioning that HP Enterprise is not to be confused with their more consumer oriented division.
HPe is a totally different animal and their products and support are still quite good to excellent to this day.

Their consumer products are as hit or miss as any OEM be it Dell, Lenovo Acer etc.
In my opinion mostly miss. Their laptops tend to be about as cheap and nasty as they come these days.
Of course the consumer division is what is driving their sales numbers, so there is that to consider.

Reply 38 of 38, by Thermalwrong

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dr.wily wrote on 2026-02-01, 18:15:

All 64 pins of ribbon cable are good. I notice there is some scratch on the PCB and the resistance R24 is missing.

I replaced it with a new 8.2 Kohm one, but this value is only an assumption based on the others resistors below it.

Does anyone have this card and a multimeter to measure the value of R24 ?

Sure, I'll pull it out tomorrow and check it out. On each of the Vectra VL400 boards I've tried it with (2 or 3 now I think), the ISA extender is detected automatically and just works.

I wonder if it depends on BIOS version?