Reply 24280 of 54413, by Intel486dx33
External Apple 300 plus cdrom drive for my old macs.
Going to make my life allot easier.
External Apple 300 plus cdrom drive for my old macs.
Going to make my life allot easier.
Recieved this beauty yesterday, I have yet to try it, hoping for the best. 😀
@Vegge
Looking quite mint for its age! Congrats.
Bought this bunch from an electronics junk/pawn shop for $30. I need help with some questions regarding what I bought:
This is the card that got me buying stuff. Notice the 110MHz 12MB memory and Ver.3 PCB. It had some bent legs making contact on one of the chips, and after straightening them slightly, it seems to be working. Made the whole purchase worthwhile IMO.
I also grabbed a Dimond Monster3D 4MB but it has a missing cap that I think should be a 16V 10uF SMD capacitor and has this very strangely mounted crystal - is this normal? I did not dare try this card yet.
Then there was also this Banshee card, which I grabbed but it's also lacking a 16V 10uF SMD capacitor. One of the solder plates is completely gone though, is this fixable?
The least interesting card of the bunch, it appears to be a Dell OEM TNT2 16MB PCI; I bought it because I think it's a nice card to put in my GX110 (Passive cooling, Dell Branded, etc.) alongside the Dell OEM Sound Blaster Live! Value.
I did not own an Opti sound card before and this looked nice, with a clone OPL3. Anyone know much about it?
Retronautics: A digital gallery of my retro computers, hardware and projects.
^
Yes, the voodoo1 missing cap is a 10uf/16v one and that xtal mounting is normal there is a small sponge under it - you can straighten the cap or leave it like this it does not affect anything
The banshee missing pad is a b*tch though - it seems to go into an internal layer - if it's just a decoupling cap then the card could work just fine without it. Maybe you can scratch at the missing via area, if you are lucky there could be some copper left so you can add a cap - a tantalum 10uf/16v
The missing solder pad on the Banshee can be fixed. It is kind of a pain to do, but entirely possible. I've only done it in IPC training classes and was successful there, but I have not needed to do it yet on anything of value. There are a lot of good YouTube tutorials, or you can download some IPC manuals which are an excellent reference to do it properly.
I ordered an 8k SRAM chip from China and it showed up. It's old, retro, but for my Sega Genesis.
Now I need a decent soldering station( hobby affordable ), lots of practice, and I'm hoping i can find a socket to put this in.
The solder pad fix looks like too much of a pain for a card I already have one more of and am very unlikely to ever use so I will just test it as is and see what happens. Hopefully it is just for decoupling *fingers crossed*
I already sources the replacement cap for the Voodoo 1 though, that ought to prove much easier..
Retronautics: A digital gallery of my retro computers, hardware and projects.
bought this for 10 bucks with sempron 2800 and cooler. because i thought this motherboard was the first gaming motherboard i had when i was very young. replaced 5 caps that were blown and when i turned it on.....i see the logo with the " deluxe" version.
the one i has was not deluxe. god damn it
even the boot screen is different with the one i had
so many memories from that time, geforce3, geforce4 ,radeon9800pro
half life2, and windows Xp
wrote:Found on Craigslist for the price of $0. These machines are heavy AF. looks like the dvd model, upgraded to 1gb of ram. Not e […]
Found on Craigslist for the price of $0. These machines are heavy AF. looks like the dvd model, upgraded to 1gb of ram. Not exactly something I care about (macs in general) but the price was right.
That's an eMac, correct? Looks pretty good for its age.
Discord: https://discord.gg/U5dJw7x
Systems from the Compaq Portable 1 to Ryzen 9 5950X
Twitch: https://twitch.tv/retropcuser
wrote:wrote:Found on Craigslist for the price of $0. These machines are heavy AF. looks like the dvd model, upgraded to 1gb of ram. Not e […]
Found on Craigslist for the price of $0. These machines are heavy AF. looks like the dvd model, upgraded to 1gb of ram. Not exactly something I care about (macs in general) but the price was right.
That's an eMac, correct? Looks pretty good for its age.
About 20 kgs of Mac 🤣 . If it makes funny noises at the start-up chime (or has trouble with power), check the power supply and motherboard for bad caps.
a sbpro2 with sony controller (ct1690) in a superb condition
and a not too nice more common ct1600
First post in this thread for me.
Hybrid 386/486 SiS461 Full-length Isa SBC by Macrotek Inc.
Model written on board: Vertex M1
L2 Cache:256kb
Cpu and Cache jumper settings written on the back, unfortunately the I/O jumper settings are missing and Macrotek does not exist anymore evens if their website is still up and running. It's in very good conditions, almost like new, if not for a pcb corner which got damaged in the shipping.
Still nice for 35 euros.
Nice card @Madowax
wrote:This Compaq Deskpro was for sale at a walking distance from where I live, it set me back only $10 so I grabbed it. […]
This Compaq Deskpro was for sale at a walking distance from where I live, it set me back only $10 so I grabbed it.
No idea what to expect in it, or what the exact model is for that matter. Anyone familiar with this case and generation of Compaqs?
Common Windows 2000 machine from early 2000's. Probably bad/swollen caps...
I bought an IBM 300PL a while ago, turned out to be dead. Today I stripped it and was pleased to find it had a 6GB HDD! I was expecting much bigger. This will be useful for my DOS projects. HDD Tune benchmarked and health checked out fine.
feel the speed
What makes you think it's totally dead ?
Trying to identify old hardware ? Visit The retro web - Project's thread The Retro Web project - a stason.org/TH99 alternative
Totally dead as in beyond my capabilities to repair. It won't post or power up at all, with everything disconnected and with a new power supply. The caps are pretty bad which makes me suspect those. Swapped a few different CPUs and tried several different sticks of memory 🙁
486 VLB board