Not that many interesting finds here for the last few weeks/weekends... but here you go anyways:
- Biostar G31D-M7 socket 775 board with unknown CPU and stock slim Intel push-pin cooler... $2. Has a bulged cap and needs a wash. Not tested yet.
- Athlon II CPU of some sort (forgot model #), but figured it's worth a try for $1 (got it discounted when buying with the above motherboard)
- AsRock AB350M-HDV (socket AM4) mobo in unknown condition for $0.50... I'll eat my socks if this one actually works 🤣
- no-name PCI sound card with a dodgy-looking YMF724 chip on it - untested and dirty for the fair scrap price of $0.50
- three PC cases for $0.50 each (more or less), one of them being an old heavy beige AT/ATX case with side-mounting PSU... and lots of dead roaches inside (YUCK!) The other two cases are nothing to write home about - both relatively more modern with black front bezles and made of very cheap and thin steel. One of these is complete (has the sides and even a Samsung IDE DVD drive). The other is completely empty, with the sides missing and the front bezzle broken off, plus very bent on one side... so probably only good as a "parts holder" box. 🤣 Believe it or not, I have a use even for such things.
- 5x Deep Cool 3-pin 90 mm fans for $0.50 each
- A PCI Wi-Fi card (802.11 B/G only, IIRC) with the antenna for $0.50
- about 20-30 ft. of Cat5.e cable for $0.50 total
- FREE!! 20" (Philips?) LCD monitor... with FREE!! dead roaches inside. 🤣 Ah, why do I keep doing this to myself?! 😁 No live ones or any egg sacks, though... as far as I could tell after taking it apart outside. Time will tell... but I ain't bringing it inside any time soon.
- and lastly... lots of free CDs and DVDs again for my "vintage data hoards"- some pirated software, a few PC Magazine ones from the early 00's with nifty software/trialware/drivers, and even a few games (Need For Speed Vrally??). Also, a few mixed data DVDs (someones data backup?) with mostly terrible quality 128 kbps MP3s, shitty movies, and... if you guessed it... early 00's porn!! 🤣 🤣 - About the most stereotypical example of 2000's P2P garbage.
Trashbytes wrote on 2025-04-19, 07:17:
Couldnt resist buying these two lovely looking HIS IceQ 4 4850 cards for 20 bucks each, if they both work ok then I have a plan to build a X-Fire machine around them with a Blue and Gold motif.
HIS did make some lovely looking cards and the IceQ coolers were pretty good at cooling these GPUs.
Nice find and at pretty good price, all retro things considered these days.
HIS cards almost always got the coolers right, unlike many other "competitors".
The HD4850 is rated for a little over 100 Watts TDP (max) (IIRC, 115W). The reference single-slot cooler wouldn't have been so terrible if ATI/AMD didn't fit such a small and tiny/whiny fan... on top of using an overly-passive cooling profile (wait for the GPU temps to get up to 80C, then crank up the fans? -WTF??!!)
But these dual-slot IceQ coolers with dual-heat pipes - now that's a lot more proper for the TDP of that card!
FWIW, you should still probably check the fan cooling profile, though. I sugges to keep the running temps below 60C (under load), if that's possible... or if not, then at least under 65C. 4850/4870 GPUs are pretty tough and will last a long time if ran cool. Sadly, the reference cooler and stock fan profile in BIOS do not do this, which is one reason so many of these ended up dead.
Trashbytes wrote on 2025-04-19, 07:17:
I have a soft spot for the HD4000 series, I have a pair of 2gb Sapphire 4890s which were monster cards for their price ..well monsters till the 8800 Ultra came in and crushed every other GPU on the market.
??
IIRC, nVidia 8000 series came way before the ATI/AMD HD4000 series.
IIRC (x2), ATI/AMD was the first to release a DX10 -capable GPU, and that was with the HD2000 series. Then nVidia quickly followed up with the 8000 series, which did indeed crushed everything else... and by a good margin. Then ATI/AMD tried to turn that around with the HD3000 series.... but still couldn't knock the G80 from the top... which soon got refreshed as the G92 (i.e. 9800 GT/GTX and 8800 GTS 512). Then team red came up with the HD4k series... which once again got crushed by team green's cards (GTX 200 series.)
IIRC (x3?), the HD4850 slots is somewhere between the GTS250 (i.e. roughly on par with the 9800 GT/GTX) and GTX260.
That said, I also have a soft spot for the HD4000 series, with the HD4670 probably being my favorite - it has a fairly low power requirement (and thus heat output), yet will run most XP era games pretty well. It's only got 8 ROPs, though, so not exactly a great card for high resolutions and AA cranked up. I do frequently pair this card with my CRTs, though - 1152x864 and 1280x960 are high enough resolutions not to need AA on a 17" or 19" CRT.
I also have a soft spot for the HD3000 series as well - particularly for the HD3870. These give about the same performance (FPS) as the HD4670, but due to having twice the number of ROPs (16), higher resolutions don't bring these cards down to their knees... not as easily, anyways. The lower TMU count compared to the HD4670 doesn't allow the 3870 to quite fully utilize all of its shaders properly.
Trashbytes wrote on 2025-04-28, 13:54:
So heres hoping this delayed retirement of 939 puts more of them on to the market for more reasonable pricing. Im sure as hell not paying 400 USD for a FX57.
Me neither!
But then, I don't have to - I already got one. 😀
I got in many years back when people jumped on the multi-core Intel bandwagon (1st and 2nd gen i-series... and late Core 2 Quads), making those 939 boards too new to be considered "interesting retro gear" and to old in terms of performance. Granted I did have to fix 3 broken pins, and they weren't in the easiest of spots to get to... + straighten about 936 other pins. 🤣 But it was worth it, IMO. It's a pretty snappy single-core CPU even at the stock speed. Doesn't OC that well, though, at least on the board I tried it on and without increasing the core voltage (which I don't like to do.) Going the opposite way, it can work at the stock frequency with about 0.1V less V_core (IIRC), so I can shave off a few degrees / Watts at max load.
Horun wrote on 2025-04-29, 03:49:
Not a fan of all the 12v lines but still looks good.
I'm the opposite - I don't like the single strong 12V rail designs. Generally, it's not an issue with PSUs under around 350-400 Watts. But above that, when the current rating on the 12V seriously starts to go over 30 Amps, it can become a bad fire hazard risk. The 18-25 Amp rail ratings make sure that if any of the 12V lines on a connector gets shorted, the PSU short-circuit protection should be able to catch that and not melt the wires... or burn huge holes through PCBs when something shorts out. Regarding the latter, I still remember the sparks show we saw from a GTX 780 (or perhaps it was a 980, I forget) in the repair shop I worked - all in a matter of 2-3 seconds of time. Before the tech could even reach for the power button on the back of the PSU, the video card already had multiple layers on its PCB burned and fused together.
Cga.8086 wrote on 2025-04-16, 02:26:
bought this
never had a KT266 nor a KT333, but its supposed to be a good board for a voodoo5 ?
Depends on the CPU, I suppose.
I have mine paired with an ASUS Radeon 9550 GE, only because that video card has the same bright orange PCB color.
I kinda wish orange DDR modules were a thing too. Could make for an "orange box" build. 😉
Munx wrote on 2025-04-10, 07:07:
An AGP Geforce 7800 GS.
Not a "true" AGP card, but unlike ATI, Nvidia had the decency to add cooling to the bridge chip.
Nice find!
And better yet, it's from a known brand (Point-of-View) rather than a Chinesium 7800/7900GS with shitty Sacon FZ caps waiting to pop at any moment on unsuspecting owners.