VOGONS


Bought these (retro) hardware today

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Reply 57520 of 57530, by AndreaColombo86

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AndrettiGTO wrote on 2025-09-27, 00:15:

Like that Rampage and wondering if you got the LAN/Audio card with it. Combined with the 980x and XFire, it would make a fun 4.2+ Ghz Win7 box 😀

The Rampage comes with its original box and should be complete. As an audio card I’ll be using an X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Champion, though. The machine will dual-boot Win7 and WinXP 😀

Reply 57521 of 57530, by sgraffite

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Picked up an IBM Thinkpad 355C this morning. 486SX 33MHz with 12MB of RAM and 250MB hard drive.

Reply 57522 of 57530, by Hans Tork

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I got some of them from thrifting and some from ebay for a really good bargain. My first 3dfx card and I have one more coming up which is to be put in my yet to be assembled Win 95 system.

Intel i7-3770/MSI Z-77 G45/MSI GTX 980 Ti/X-Fi Titanium SB 0880 - WinXP
Intel P4(Prescott)/Gigabyte GA-8I915PL-G/ATI X800/Audigy 2 ZS - Win98

Reply 57523 of 57530, by TechieDude

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So, I got some stuff today. Flea markets are something else in the weekends. Let's start with something normal:

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A USB floppy drive. Perfect to write floppy images on my modern PC, so I can finally install DOS on my 486. Luckily, it's in perfect working order, and even works as-is on modern Linux (never tried that before TBH). I wanted one for YEARS, but I didn't really need it when I didn't even HAVE PCs old enough to actually need them. All in all, a nice convenience boost, until I get a Gotek or two 😁

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A PCI IDE controller with the ITE IT8212F chip. A quick search shows that it's a low-end IDE/RAID controller chip, but it supports UDMA-6 speeds, and has BIOS updates and driver support ranging from DOS and Win9x, all the way to Vista, so it can't be that bad. Who knows, maybe I'll put it in a newer system that doesn't have IDE, or an older system that has limited IDE in terms of speed or capacity. Of course, I might have to find a proper bracket, since someone removed it, but I'll figure something out.

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A Realtek PCI NIC. Nothing too interesting, it just has Gigabit Ethernet, while also having proper drivers for Win98.

Had to split the post due to the attachment limit, so the Oddware is in the next.

Reply 57524 of 57530, by TechieDude

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Time for the weird ones:

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Not sure if it even counts as retro (does December of 2008 count? I wasn’t even a teen, and now I’m nearing 30, so I think it should), but it's definitely odd: an OCZ 250GB SATA II SSD, but with an extra miniUSB connector! Since it's SATA II, it's obviously an early one, so it must have been VERY expensive when it was new with that capacity. It's functional, haven't really checked its health. Whoever had it used it as an external SSD, and filled it with kids' movies. I'm surprised it didn't have Shrek. Maybe I should fix that 🤣

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A third-party PS2 controller by Logic3. Normally I wouldn't go get one when working official ones are still relatively cheap and plentiful (just avoid the 'H' ones like the plague, 'A' are fine), but this is made of METAL. Also kinda heavy, not sure what they were thinking, or what alloy it is, but it sure looks cool. Sadly, it's kinda wonky, especially when I press the cross. I'll look into it later, I guess.
I also got a somewhat broken PS3 controller just to reshell it with a chrome silver aftermarket shell, but I seem to have lost the shell...

Reply 57525 of 57530, by Living

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sgraffite wrote on Yesterday, 16:32:

Picked up an IBM Thinkpad 355C this morning. 486SX 33MHz with 12MB of RAM and 250MB hard drive.

i cant use more than 5 minutes a DSTN panel, let alone play something other than solitarie or something that dont have much movement.

Reply 57526 of 57530, by NeoG_

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I bought an SB16 SCSI off ebay to replace an ES1869 with an SB16 compatible card with real OPL (and have a SCSI interface for whatever piques my interest)

Retro Rig: BabyAT AladdinV, K6-2+/550, V3 2000, 128MB PC100, 20GB HDD, 128GB SD2IDE, SB Live!, ES1868F, PicoGUS, WP32 McCake, iNFRA 6000 CD

Reply 57527 of 57530, by zuldan

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Got this beautiful rare Asus V9280S (Geforce 4 Ti-4200 8x AGP) for Parts / Repair. Hopefully I can get her going again.

From hothardware.com “Taking a closer look at the specs, we find that this is attributable to a 10% increase in the GPU clock (250 to 275MHz) and a 20% increase in the memory clock (500MHz to 600MHz)”

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Performance is pretty good for a 4200

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Reply 57528 of 57530, by tehsiggi

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zuldan wrote on Today, 10:52:
Got this beautiful rare Asus V9280S (Geforce 4 Ti-4200 8x AGP) for Parts / Repair. Hopefully I can get her going again. […]
Show full quote

Got this beautiful rare Asus V9280S (Geforce 4 Ti-4200 8x AGP) for Parts / Repair. Hopefully I can get her going again.

From hothardware.com “Taking a closer look at the specs, we find that this is attributable to a 10% increase in the GPU clock (250 to 275MHz) and a 20% increase in the memory clock (500MHz to 600MHz)”

The attachment E4A64932-6F1E-47C1-B02C-752233001B71.jpeg is no longer available

Performance is pretty good for a 4200

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Nice thing! It has the Ti4800 reference board by the looks of it. In case you look for schematics.

AGP Card Real Power Consumption
AGP Power monitor - diagnostic hardware tool
Graphics card repair collection

Reply 57529 of 57530, by Living

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zuldan wrote on Today, 10:52:
Got this beautiful rare Asus V9280S (Geforce 4 Ti-4200 8x AGP) for Parts / Repair. Hopefully I can get her going again. […]
Show full quote

Got this beautiful rare Asus V9280S (Geforce 4 Ti-4200 8x AGP) for Parts / Repair. Hopefully I can get her going again.

From hothardware.com “Taking a closer look at the specs, we find that this is attributable to a 10% increase in the GPU clock (250 to 275MHz) and a 20% increase in the memory clock (500MHz to 600MHz)”

The attachment E4A64932-6F1E-47C1-B02C-752233001B71.jpeg is no longer available

Performance is pretty good for a 4200

The attachment 3BDBECB1-8725-43D2-B5D4-1E60C86CF441.jpeg is no longer available

i sold the V9280 (the difference is minimal) for u$s 60 last week.

Been sitting on top of a lot of stuff with no use and i feel is the right time to let it go.

Reply 57530 of 57530, by wiibur

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I've been using an old PS/2 Packard Bell keyboard with horrible key rollover on my SS7 PC for years, but I finally hunted down a good replacement. I used SearchTempest to find this Steelseries 7G PS/2 keyboard for cheap on Craigslist in a city across the country and got them to ship it to me. That was closer than the only other one I found for sale...in Australia. In my head it seems like it released late in the PS/2 era of keyboards but fairly early in the mechanical keyboard craze, although this quote in a release article about it shows the industry was already heading in a certain direction...

"Somewhere the industry took a wrong turn when it came to gaming peripherals. It became more important to add colorful lighting and features that have no impact on professional gaming, than to create high quality products, " says Tino Soelberg, Head of R&D for SteelSeries. TechPowerUp Nov. 14, 2007

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The shipping quality was not great but thankfully it arrived unbroken, although a lot of keycaps had popped off. I'm overall really impressed with it. The Cherry MX Black linear switches are luxurious compared to the worn out rubber domes in my other keyboard. The big enter key is similar to my Packard Bell 's big enter key. The backslash is in a goofy spot next to Backspace, but my Packard Bell also had the backslash in a goofy spot - to the right of the right shift key - so I can live with that quirk. It perfectly passes the double-shift-quick-brown-fox rollover typing test, meaning I can finally run diagonally in DOOM using modern WASD bindings. It's surprisingly heavy and doesn't shift around on my desk too much. For what it's worth, it also has audio and USB passthrough, and I got the Curtis mousepad as a bonus too.

Pixel 3D Bobbin by Neil Chapman