MCGA wrote:Very cool! Thanks! It's only 13 bucks for a XP 3200 on eBay! But then I'd have an extra CPU, and then I'd feel the need to make […]
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Ozzuneoj wrote:Yes, the "Barton" is just the last generation of the Socket A Athlon XP. They are cooler running, faster and usually able to be […]
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Yes, the "Barton" is just the last generation of the Socket A Athlon XP. They are cooler running, faster and usually able to be overclocked better than most other XPs (though the Thoroughbred B cores were amazing too).
Thankfully, this page with modded BIOS files for the K7S5A seems to still work:
http://www.ocworkbench.com/2002/ecs/k7s5abios/cheepobios.htm
Mine has had the CheepoBIOS on it for 7-8 years. Back then I upgraded the CPU to a 2400+ cheaply (thanks to eBay) installed a Geforce 4 ti 4200 and a Turtle Beach Santa Cruz, gave it a gig of DDR and had a decent basic XP system for my mom to use.
Very cool! Thanks! It's only 13 bucks for a XP 3200 on eBay! But then I'd have an extra CPU, and then I'd feel the need to make it whole. 😀
I'm not sure what I'm going to do with this system yet. If anything an early to mid 2000s gaming PC with whatever AGP 4x is best and see how far I can push it with overclocking using a newer CPU.
Anyways, I attached a pick of the board from the damaged Gateway I bought yesterday. The CPU cooler is from the other Gateway, but I might swap them out, because the larger one that came with this one is freaking loud even after putting mineral-oil in it! ( I'm going to have to buy a quieter cooler. ) And the GPU is Gateway's Vanta, so a low-end TNT2 I've gathered. And the case wires had been cut, but whoever owned this prior taped some of them back together -- but with the wrong colors, but I'm able to boot it up using this hack. AND, if you look closely at the corner of the PSU, you can see where I bent it out.
To be honest, I don't remember what CPUs you can run on a BIOS modded K7S5A... it might only do 266Mhz FSB chips. I know there must have been a reason that I went with a 2400+ at that time.
Also, if you know how to replace capacitors, I'd definitely replace the ones on that board. The taller green ones look to have rounded tops, which is what happened to mine. The rest of the board seems to be built like a tank though. It survived having a damaged CPU installed (which we thought killed the board and it sat in a cupboard for 2 years before I tried it again and found that it worked fine), it lived through a lightning strike that blew up the PSU it was connected to (the ATX connector on the board even has a slight brownish tinge to it in some places), then years later my Mom used it till the caps went bad, I replaced those and it kept plugging along until another cap that I should have replaced at the time (rookie mistake... they were all the same!) finally went bad.
I'd highly recommend not using the integrated audio though. I remember it being pretty bad.
EDIT: Oh, and to keep on the subject of the thread... I received a small but nifty purchase today. The lot cost me less than $15 shipped on fleabay.
In it was an assortment of RAM... nothing too interesting, aside from a decent looking 2x512MB SuperTalent DDR-400 kit...
The attachment 2016-07-16 9800Pro 001 (1280x960).jpg is no longer available
... and a pristine looking Radeon 9800 Pro with the manual! 😀
I hope the card works obviously, but I won't be surprised if it doesn't. It is in a good shape and is quite clean, but all of the stuff was packed terribly. A little bit of crumpled news paper wrapped around the whole pile of stuff with nothing actually around them aside from some random plastic bags and clam shell packages on some of the ram sticks. *facepalm*