I’ve made a few changes to this machine recently that were worth sharing… I thought.
To keep things interesting I’m switching out the SB Pro 2.0 for a PAS16 - the ‘studio’ variety. This was advertised as new-old-stock and does appear unused despite being sold as a bare card. The lack of original driver disks isn’t trivial with these things in my experience because there are a number of different versions floating around on the interwebs. Using the wrong version can result in anything from the card nearly working but suffering from funky mixer incompatibilities, to completely refusing to initialise. This one works like a dream with the drivers on Vogon Drivers and is a quality piece of hardware once you master the mixer and tame the hiss:

I really do like the PAS16 after some initial bad vibes due to using the wrong drivers. It’s a very capable card and had some very nice DOS / Windows 3.1 software bundled with it. I had one as a kid and remember being disappointed that it didn’t do stereo Sound Blaster emulation (SB 2.0 only), but in hindsight it’s mostly a non-issue - a lot of games from the early 90’s with stereo FX supported the PAS16 natively anyway.
I’m still using a WD90C33 based VGA card in this machine, despite having some other nice VLB cards vying for the job. Where previously this WD has been on the slower end of the spectrum, some experimental jumper switching has brought its performance into line with my S3, ATi, and Cirrus Logic based cards, which is quite acceptable. And when I factor in my requirements for DOS compatibility and decent Windows 3.11 drivers / image quality, then the WD90C33 wins hands down – the clear, vibrant image this thing produces in Windows 3.1 is really something to behold.

I’ve switched out the Winbond IO card for an equivalent NOS example I found cheaply a while back:

For authentic HDD grinding sounds I’ll continue to use a WD Caviar 1270 HDD for DOS 6.22 and Windows 3.11, but for anything I want to easily back-up - games, benchmarks, etc - I’ve added an IDE->CF adapter. These things work really well in my experience and eliminate the need for floppys and CDs, which is a huge bonus. Implementing a 4GB Transcend in this machine was quite painful though because my OPTI 495SLC - which I'm very fond of - is BIOS limited to 504MB HDD's. The drive overlay software that came with my new Winbond didn't work at all, and while EZ-Drive seemed to work well, I finally realised that the random floppy and mouse issues I was experiencing was being caused by EZ-Drive meddling with the BIOS.
In the end I went for the Ontrack DDO - also found on VogonDrivers - and although it takes ~6k of upper memory, it works very nicely... with everything except Ultima 7 of course. U7's memory check code drops its bundle when it comes across a DDO cloaking itself, and reports not enough memory to run regardless of how much you have free. So eventually I resorted to creating a boot disk for U7 which bypasses Ontrack, but that of course means that I don't have access to the CF HDD when booted that way. More than any other game I can think of, U7 would probably benefit from running off a CF drive given the amount of HDD thrashing it does, but whatever. As always there are compromises to be made.

And lastly a new Startech AT PSU – it’s pretty hard to get excited about a power supply but I think it’s worth the effort – I have one of these in a couple of my machines now:

I had another 486 in my collection for a while, made with arguably much better parts - 72 pin RAM, BIOS support for large HDD's, etc - but this machine more closely matches my idea of a real 486. The OPTI 495SLC motherboard is classic early 90's inventiveness (can do 386 and 486), the 486SX 33 is a classic Intel marketing scam, and the non-ZIF socket inhibits my upgraders urge to switch it out for a 66MHz, then 133, then a POD. The case is really nicely made too – very solid, stylish, and easy to work with.
Here it is all back in one piece with Windows 3.11 installed, in the processes of being enhanced with some must-have Windows add-ons:



Life? Don't talk to me about life.