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Retro 3D print topic

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Reply 100 of 106, by Major Jackyl

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I worked on this yesterday:

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I usually use this and this to test boards:

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But I thought I could have a more permanent solution.
My "modern" computer is up high and the case buttons are even higher. My wife is unable to reach hers without a stool. I'll be able to use this not only for testing, but total FP relocation. I'm currently out of beepers, so I can't put one in yet, but my test beeper fit, so it should be a workable item. Left room for a turbo/AUX LED, could be useful.

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The LEDS fit very nice. Different switches I tried fit only slightly differently, but all fit pretty tightly. The buttons also seem to grab the cores well, so it's just pressed together and has good action. I was going to hot-glue it all in, but it's tight, so I'll conserve the glue. I rotated the zip-tie holder already, so only one will be needed (didn't even think about that, 🤣)
I wonder how it's going to print on other printers? The STPs I generate tend to be more reliable, as Inventor 2012 can leave the exported STL files with weird geometry. Creality Print(5.0) never has the right scale when I use my own generated STLs, only the STPs come out perfect every time. I'm pretty satisfied how it turned out.

Main Loadout (daily drivers):
Intel TE430VX, Pentium Sy022 (133), Cirrus Logic 5440, SB16 CT1740
ECS K7S5A, A-XP1600+, MSI R9550
ASUS M2N-E, A64X2-4600+, PNY GTX670, SB X-Fi Elite Pro
MSI Z690, Intel 12900K, MSI RTX3090, SB AE-7

Reply 102 of 106, by douglar

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People often destroy the drive cage with the drives before sending a computer to recycling

Here's a new cage for an AST Bravo LC 5100

https://www.tinkercad.com/things/htmEv03s86d-ast-lpx-cage

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Reply 103 of 106, by Major Jackyl

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We've all probably had a situation like this: You're assembling a PC and put the CPU heatsink on. Power on. It's the noisiest thing in the PC (whole room). That little 60mm (or 50) struggling to keep that larger AthlonXP cool. It's taking all it's got and it's amost not enough, so slowing it down isn't an option.

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INTRODUCING: 60->120MM adapter!

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I'm still experimenting at this stage, but wanted to share some progress. I made a few I'm working on printing right now, so I can run some test-fits/powered tests. Low static pressure 120mm fans do not seem to be able to push enough air through such a serious reduction. High Static pressure fans do, but are noisy and start to defeat the purpose. A typical noisy 120 is still quieter than most any 60, in my experience.

The thing to be waiting for is the adapter I made to convert 120 (made a 92 as well) to Slot1 50mm or Slot1 50x2! I probably won't have a prototype of that until tomorrow. Should be awesome!

Main Loadout (daily drivers):
Intel TE430VX, Pentium Sy022 (133), Cirrus Logic 5440, SB16 CT1740
ECS K7S5A, A-XP1600+, MSI R9550
ASUS M2N-E, A64X2-4600+, PNY GTX670, SB X-Fi Elite Pro
MSI Z690, Intel 12900K, MSI RTX3090, SB AE-7

Reply 104 of 106, by Ozzuneoj

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Major Jackyl wrote on 2025-04-11, 15:58:
We've all probably had a situation like this: You're assembling a PC and put the CPU heatsink on. Power on. It's the noisiest th […]
Show full quote

We've all probably had a situation like this: You're assembling a PC and put the CPU heatsink on. Power on. It's the noisiest thing in the PC (whole room). That little 60mm (or 50) struggling to keep that larger AthlonXP cool. It's taking all it's got and it's amost not enough, so slowing it down isn't an option.

The attachment 20250411_104152.jpg is no longer available

INTRODUCING: 60->120MM adapter!

The attachment 20250411_104253.jpg is no longer available
The attachment 20250411_104318.jpg is no longer available

I'm still experimenting at this stage, but wanted to share some progress. I made a few I'm working on printing right now, so I can run some test-fits/powered tests. Low static pressure 120mm fans do not seem to be able to push enough air through such a serious reduction. High Static pressure fans do, but are noisy and start to defeat the purpose. A typical noisy 120 is still quieter than most any 60, in my experience.

The thing to be waiting for is the adapter I made to convert 120 (made a 92 as well) to Slot1 50mm or Slot1 50x2! I probably won't have a prototype of that until tomorrow. Should be awesome!

Nice! Back in the early 2000s I used to buy 60mm to 80mm adapters that looked almost exactly like this (except the ones I had were bright orange). I used one for several years on an XP 2400+ K7S5A setup. That extra 20mm seemed to make a huge difference in cooling efficiency. I'm sure a 120mm will be even nicer... just keep the RPMs low or the turbulence and air resistance will probably create some pretty undesirable noises. 😀

EDIT: These ones are very similar to what I used to use: https://www.ebay.com.sg/itm/186860587347

Now for some blitting from the back buffer.

Reply 105 of 106, by StriderTR

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Major Jackyl wrote on 2025-02-04, 23:32:
I worked on this yesterday: […]
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I worked on this yesterday:

The attachment 20250204_164604.jpg is no longer available
The attachment 20250204_164545.jpg is no longer available

I usually use this and this to test boards:

The attachment 20250204_172732.jpg is no longer available

But I thought I could have a more permanent solution.

I was in the same boat. Came up with something simple, but works. Better than the bare harness I was using for many years.

I may make another one, add speaker and USB. 😀

Major Jackyl wrote on 2025-04-11, 15:58:
We've all probably had a situation like this: You're assembling a PC and put the CPU heatsink on. Power on. It's the noisiest th […]
Show full quote

We've all probably had a situation like this: You're assembling a PC and put the CPU heatsink on. Power on. It's the noisiest thing in the PC (whole room). That little 60mm (or 50) struggling to keep that larger AthlonXP cool. It's taking all it's got and it's amost not enough, so slowing it down isn't an option.

The attachment 20250411_104152.jpg is no longer available

INTRODUCING: 60->120MM adapter!

The attachment 20250411_104253.jpg is no longer available
The attachment 20250411_104318.jpg is no longer available

I'm still experimenting at this stage, but wanted to share some progress. I made a few I'm working on printing right now, so I can run some test-fits/powered tests. Low static pressure 120mm fans do not seem to be able to push enough air through such a serious reduction. High Static pressure fans do, but are noisy and start to defeat the purpose. A typical noisy 120 is still quieter than most any 60, in my experience.

The thing to be waiting for is the adapter I made to convert 120 (made a 92 as well) to Slot1 50mm or Slot1 50x2! I probably won't have a prototype of that until tomorrow. Should be awesome!

I was looking at doing this to my Athlon XP system as well!

Was thinking of making a similar adapter to fit my smaller case.

Retro Blog & Builds: https://theclassicgeek.blogspot.com/
3D Things: https://www.thingiverse.com/classicgeek/collections
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Reply 106 of 106, by ssshadow

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From time to time, I need a way to replace old IDE HDDs with modern SATA SSDs. The most annoying issue is usually figuring out how to properly mount the SSD and SATA-to-IDE converter in place of a 3.5" IDE drive. So, I designed a 3D model that holds both the converter and the SSD in a single enclosure.
It’s published on Thingverse: https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:7013624.
The smallest converter I found is available on AliExpress is https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005005066835576.html