Reply 20 of 43, by SquallStrife
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- l33t
I found one of these on Gumtree (copy of CraigsList) for $60:
For connecting all my gizmos to one set of speakers.
VogonsDrivers.com | Link | News Thread
I found one of these on Gumtree (copy of CraigsList) for $60:
For connecting all my gizmos to one set of speakers.
VogonsDrivers.com | Link | News Thread
The first 2 channels are for microphones, so you can't use them for a line level signal. One stereo line level input is certainly one pair of the white/red rca connectors, and probably some of the silver 1/4" jack inputs. But you're going to need a few adaptors in order for that to work.
The "MIC" sockets will automatically adjust to accept line-level input. I use the two mics together as a single stereo in.
Alongside those, the two rightmost inputs are stereo line-in, there's a stereo "Tape" in, and a stereo "AUX" in. Total 10 channels, or 5 stereo inputs. There are also two stereo outputs (main out, and headphone out) so I could play to speakers, and simultaneously record audio to my laptop.
I hand-made all the connecting cable, using RG-6 quad shield, and heavy-duty metal plugs everywhere. It's very swanky. 😀
VogonsDrivers.com | Link | News Thread
Well if that's the case, well done!
In my room, where the lack of space is obvious, I have a good hi-fi system with two line inputs, and I use a couple of these, in order to connect more machines :
.
Maybe it's not the best solution, but it gets the job done for the time being...
aaaah a jackstick splitter 😀 nice 😀
I like that Dell. The Panasonic changer and dual floppy drive are a total throwback to 90s. What's in that system?
wrote:I like that Dell. The Panasonic changer and dual floppy drive are a total throwback to 90s. What's in that system?
Dell has the full specifications on their website:
http://support.dell.com/support/edocs/dta/486MTE/
A brief rundown is as follows:
Microprocessor type: 33/50/66/100-MHz Intel486 (66-MHz DX2 installed)
Memory: 4MB - 64MB (16MB installed)
External cache: 128-KB, direct-mapped SRAM
Expansion slots: 6 full-length, 16-bit ISA / 2 optional VL-Bus
Video chipset: Cirrus CL-GD5429
I don't plan to install any VLB cards, so, assuming I transfer everything over from the Gateway (except for the Matrox Millenium...), and fill the remaining two ISA slots with parts on-hand, the allocation will probably look like this:
Slot 1 - Gravis UltraSound PnP Pro
Slot 2 - Creative Game Blaster
Slot 3 - Creative AWE32 (CT3900), w/Roland SCB-55
Slot 4 - Roland LAPC-I
Slot 5 - IBM Music Feature Card
Slot 6 - HardSID ISA
wrote:aaaah a jackstick splitter 😀 nice 😀
"Jackstick"? Now you're overdriving. Next gang use a wordbook!
Hardly worth mentioning, but I swapped-out the homemade S/PDIF bracket with a Creative bracket. My first change to the Gateway system in over six years. Oh, boy!
Put the Adlib Gold in and that's a 5000$ 486!
(...)
An IMFC with breakout box for $50! Awoooooooooooo...
Is this an AWE64 Gold S/PDIF bracket? Looks pretty alike.
Here you can get fantastic wallpapers created by a friend of mine: patreon.com/Unpocodrillo
wrote:Is this an AWE64 Gold S/PDIF bracket?
Yes, indeed.
How do you connect it to a CT3900 and avoid your receiver being damaged? I am sure that AWE64 Gold outputs 0.5V through S/PDIF header, while AWE32 does 5V.
Here you can get fantastic wallpapers created by a friend of mine: patreon.com/Unpocodrillo
wrote:
I thought my question was a bit dumb so i deleted it thinking HardSID had nothing to do with the SID chip. 🤣
You got my attention!! Is the hardSID a clone of the Innovation SSI, or totally different sound card? Does it have better game support than the Innovation, or any game support at all?
This crap is pretty exciting!
Pretty cool stuff!!
HardSID is not a clone of Innovation SSI. It also carries a SID chip onboard, but as far as I have heard it is incompatible with SSI.
Here you can get fantastic wallpapers created by a friend of mine: patreon.com/Unpocodrillo
wrote:How do you connect it to a CT3900 and avoid your receiver being damaged? I am sure that AWE64 Gold outputs 0.5V through S/PDIF header, while AWE32 does 5V.
I'd spent a bit of time researching this very issue, and while there's plenty of internet conjecture about the risk of potential damage due to incompatible voltage levels, the general consensus is that the majority of RS-422 and DAC implementations will work just fine with 5V TTL levels. In any event, I have the AWE32's S/PDIF output routed into a Klipsch DD-5.1 decoder/pre-amp, and use a Roland UA-1D for digital audio captures, and both devices are compatible with the 5V signal.
All of my recordings in the "Technically impressive FM synth music" thread are digital captures from the AWE32, incidentally.
wrote:HardSID is not a clone of Innovation SSI. It also carries a SID chip onboard, but as far as I have heard it is incompatible with SSI.
Exactly. The nice thing about the HardSID is that a handful of Commodore 64 emulators and SID music players support it as a passthrough device.
the day care i went to as a kid had a gateway 2000... that piece of shit wasn't worth the materials it was made of. it constantly locked and froze and needed rebooting and was slow. it was from i understand these days a 486 and i know for a fact it had 95. every one always used the new 98 machine which at the time was built by the computer shop i now work at. at the time i usually hogged it and played StarCraft. 😈 sorry for going so off topic.
wrote:the day care i went to as a kid had a gateway 2000...
So, a 486 system of unknown speed and quantity of RAM...
...running Windows 95...
...in 1998...
...along with whatever other software/malware/adware was present in what was surely a highly-regulated environment...
= Gateway sucks.
Please forgive me for being completely dismissive of your well-formed opinion. 😀