Mondodimotori wrote on 2025-02-23, 11:57:
it's just that it's saddens me to throw away hardware that can be fixed, even if it's not economically convenient to do so... It would just end up in a landfill.
So here's a solution then: don't throw it away. 😉 😁
I'm the same way, so what I do with these things (when they stop working and I can't fix them anymore) is either one of the following:
- go on my wall in the computer room as decoration
- used for spare parts to fix other hardware... and even when I do, that actually still doesn't include it from becoming a wall decoration 🤣
- sell it for parts (online or locally), stating everything that was done to this piece of hardware
Most end up in category 1 or 2 above, though. I only sold very few pieces of retro PC hardware.
Mondodimotori wrote on 2025-02-23, 11:57:I hope it's not a problem with the PCIe slot...
No, bad PCI-E slot won't cause artifacts. It will cause loss of PCI-E lanes, which means your GPU will be detected at lower PCI-E mode (i.e. 1x, 4x, or 8x) or just not detected at all.
So it's not that, rest assured.
nd22 wrote on 2025-02-20, 07:20:
Max means max not turning something down or off!
Well, I respectfully disagree. 😀
In some games, like NFS Underground 2 for example, I *always* turn OFF motion blur, because it's a shitty visual [d]effect that makes the game look much worse. Same for "light trails" and a few other stupid ones like that.
Also, I rarely use AA, since I still have a small stash of CRT monitors, and I find AA pointless on those, unless I'm going with a really low resolution.
AF, on the other hand, I always try to push up as far as possible, as that really improves the textures (and overall visual) of games.
AlexZ wrote on 2025-02-20, 08:12:
Same reason why we don't install extra HDDs and DVD drives that we don't need even though there is space in the case 😉
Well, for some of the cheap used cases I've been buying/finding lately, it's often cheaper and easier to buy an extra optical drive than try to look for or buy or make optical drive bay covers. So for these cases, I've been just shoving in extra optical drives to "plug the holes", so to speak. 🤣
It's also nice to know I have a spare / backup optical drive handy nearby, haha.
AlexZ wrote on 2025-02-20, 08:12:
I'm playing Quake 4 at 1280x1024@85Hz on CRT with max settings except for AA as I don't turn it on for any games.
YAY for using a CRT! 👍
NAY NAY for using 1280x1024. 👎
Seriously, I don't know why that resolution ever made it into the firmware of most CRTs... and more so, why so many people used it. I can understand on an LCD that has this resolution as its native one. But remember, 1280x1024 is 5:4 ratio and not 4:3. Yes, the difference is small and hard to notice (certainly not as bad as stretching 4:3 onto 16: 10... or heavens forbid, 16: 9 🤣 ). But it's there.
My suggestion: drop to 1280x960. The mere drop in the vertical resolution will be absolutely impossible to notice on any CRT. On the other hand, your CRT might just let you go up a notch on the refresh rate. And even better, your games should get an ever-so-slightly better framerate.
AlexZ wrote on 2025-02-20, 08:12:1600x1200 makes little sense on my CRT as I get 72Hz only and image is less sharp.
I agree.
I own several 21" CRTs, and even on these, I rarely push anything to 1600x1200, despite all of them actually looking pretty sharp at that resolution and not blurring.
But I rather get silky-smooth 85 FPS all the time without dips at 1280x960 than 60-75 FPS at 1600x1200.
FWIW, I still find 1280x960 @ 85 Hz on a CRT to look less blurry when there is lots of movement on the screen than most average 1080p 120/144hz LCD gaming monitors even today.
Mondodimotori wrote on 2025-02-21, 12:54:
PS, I have a Syncmaster 750s, wich supports a maximum resolution of 1280x1024 at 60hz, but unless the game can't go over 60fps, I use it at the suggested res of 1024x768 at 85hz.
Solid choice for a 17" CRT! 😉
I have the Dell -equivalent of that CRT... well, more or less (Dell M782, IIRC.) I also it at 1024x768 @ 85 Hz on quite a few games, but occasionally bump it "up" to 1152x864 @ 75 Hz for slower-paced games, where the slightly higher resolution is preferable over the higher refresh rate. Don't think I have any game set to 1280x960 on this monitor, simply because it's a 17" CRT, and I find that most don't look any sharper at this than 1152x864.
Trashbytes wrote on 2025-02-22, 13:01:
I even have a rare EVGA 790i SLI FTW PWM digital board with fixed BIOS for full 16GB DDR3 support.
As nice as those boards are, nVidia has permanently left a very sour taste for me when it comes to the reliability of their chipsets. Simply put, they run hot and don't last worth a damn. I have the EVGA 780i SLI (but not the FTW version) and absolutely hate how hot the Northbridge runs, despite upgrading its stock (an very loud) 50mm fan to a higher-airflow & high pressure 70 mm fan. FWIW, these boards are known for dying, and I have seen more dead ones on Ebay in all of my years looking for one than I have working ones. What's funny is mine was also from Ebay and listed as broken, but it just had a burned out transistor on one of the sys_fan headers and a bunch of scraped SMD ceramic caps on the back of the CPU (which I never bothered to fix.) Not what I've used it in a system and tested it thoroughly, I'm pondering whether I should part it out and sell it. As cool as it might have been at the time, I don't think I'll ever setup a 3-way SLI with it. Perhaps I could do a MEME mid-range system with it with a mid-tier C2D and 3x XFX GeForce 8600 cards (aproprietly chosen from the same bumpgate era 🤣 ).
AlexZ wrote on 2025-02-19, 20:39:I would buy more DDR RAM but it isn't available.
Most of my RAM comes from scrap lots on Ebay. Yes, I've had a few modules that didn't work... but they were very very few compared to the lots I got. And since I do all kinds of repairs, I was actually able to get most of the non-working ones working too (mostly cracked or broken SMDs.) Even if I didn't get these fixed, though, the value I got from these scrap lots was still 10x what I would have paid if I got individual RAM sticks instead.