Reply 35240 of 56726, by Cyrix200+
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OMORES wrote on 2020-07-28, 15:17:This Soyo Super Socket 7 board which looks like new:
<snip>
Should be a nice board! What CPU did you get with it?
1982 to 2001
OMORES wrote on 2020-07-28, 15:17:This Soyo Super Socket 7 board which looks like new:
<snip>
Should be a nice board! What CPU did you get with it?
1982 to 2001
Wow that board looks like it's never been out of it's box and it also has the ps/2 and serial port bracket. That's a excellent find my friend
Cyrix200+ wrote on 2020-07-28, 15:33:OMORES wrote on 2020-07-28, 15:17:This Soyo Super Socket 7 board which looks like new:
<snip>
Should be a nice board! What CPU did you get with it?
Well, the CPU is from another movie... a Pentium-S 100 Mhz. (And I had a K6-2+ 550Mhz (with 128K on chip cache) I gave it for free....)
Meanwhile I tested the board - everything works fine... I plugged a PCI-SATA and booted from SSD with no fiddling around...
My latest video: NT 4.0 running from M.2 PCI-E AHCI SSD.
OMORES wrote on 2020-07-28, 16:24:Cyrix200+ wrote on 2020-07-28, 15:33:OMORES wrote on 2020-07-28, 15:17:This Soyo Super Socket 7 board which looks like new:
<snip>
Should be a nice board! What CPU did you get with it?
Well, the CPU is from another movie... a Pentium-S 100 Mhz. (And I had a K6-2+ 550Mhz (with 128K on chip cache) I gave it for free....)
Meanwhile I tested the board - everything works fine... I plugged a PCI-SATA and booted from SSD with no fiddling around...
Imagine: a Pentium 100 with SDRAM and AGP. Clock for clock faster than you'll expect 😀
Stuck at 10MHz...
alienmannequin wrote on 2020-07-28, 11:28:So, it's Compaq-specific. I have the square-shaped piggyback module - there are quite a few numbers on it that are mostly hidden. Have taken more photos of the layout of the board, as well as the oxidation of sorts - haven't done cleaning yet. Wasn't keen to remove the upgrade module yet - looks as if there might be some brittle plastic flathead bolts holding it on, however managed to wedge the camera for a partial shot of the underside.
That partial shot clearly captured the text "4MB - 32 B - M MODULE" which quite surely mean "4 Megabyte 32-Bit Memory Module". That's interesting, as the base card is a 16-bit memory card (unsurprising for a 386SX machine). So it seems the square-shaped piggyback modules might be the same for both the 32-bit base card and the 16-bit base card. And indeed, the 32-bit Compaq Deskpro 386/20 configuration guide at http://ps-2.kev009.com/ohlandl/PS2_MOST/ACROR … PAQ/2005010.PDF actually lists the part number as well. It seems not all modules are interchangable, though.
Bought another one of these Pioneer slot drives. This is the third one I've bought. Two others died quite soon after purchase. Maybe this will last 😁
I just like how they look. Bit different than typical PC drives, somewhat eyecatching when someone has one of these in their machine.
CrFr wrote on 2020-07-28, 22:08:Bought another one of these Pioneer slot drives. This is the third one I've bought. Two others died quite soon after purchase. Maybe this will last 😁
I just like how they look. Bit different than typical PC drives, somewhat eyecatching when someone has one of these in their machine.
20200728_184049890_iOS_.jpg
Hopefully it lasts but it seems like the main thing those drives do is die.
I've had luck with opening the slot load drives and giving everything a good cleaning and relube and they've came back to life. Since there not really sealed like a standard tray alot of dust a debris gets in and gums up the works.
I fell over when I opened up Deskpro 4/33i that arrived today to find out this is one of convertible 486 processor or 386DX 33 with 395DX 33 16K cache controller motherboard installed. I have another motherboard with 386DX pre-installed as backup. This computer contains 486DX 33 processor currently installed. No 64K cache card installed which still are very rare item than anything else.
Came with Conner 100MB hard drive. .. blech, will swap this turd out later with more reliable and faster hard drive later. I had bad experience with Conner back in the day. Slow and unreliable. I had three hard drives back in the day: Had repaired Conner by replacing the blown Cirrus Logic ATA interface, also very easy to fail and incompatible with master/slave if you wonder where my strong dislike comes from: Conner 200MB and IBM 270MB and Quantum 210MB, both IBM and Quantum is much faster.
This replaces the other Deskpro 4/33i with non convertible motherboard but unfortunately in poor condition (rust) and smashed front bezel.
Cheers,
Great Northern aka Canada.
Picked up some more junk 😀
According to seller it is:
IBM Aptiva Model 2170-26G
AMD K6-2 450Mhz / 128MB / 4GB HDD / CDRW / NIC / MODEM
Seller says it doesn't start, nothing happens when power button is pressed. I'm hoping it is just a matter of replacing the PSU. Even if it is totally trash inside, I'm happy to have this cool looking good condition case. It seems to accept normal mATX motherboards and ATX power supply, so it would be fun case to build some sleeper system in it.
CrFr wrote on 2020-07-28, 22:08:Bought another one of these Pioneer slot drives. This is the third one I've bought. Two others died quite soon after purchase. Maybe this will last 😁
I just like how they look. Bit different than typical PC drives, somewhat eyecatching when someone has one of these in their machine.
20200728_184049890_iOS_.jpg
I have two of those, but in CD-rom version.
One of them is in an optiplex Gx1 and has been working for years without issues, while the other one has been opened and cleaned more times than i care to count just to end up giving problems some weeks later again.
May your drive be blessed with everlasting durability.
Picked up this curious Parallel Backpack Bantam CD-ROM/16-Bit Sound Drive. Its came with the floppy disks but these would not read, but managed to find the drivers online. At first the drive was struggling to read disks, so i cleaned the eye with some alcohol and a cotton bud and it reads them fine now. I've not yet got the sound capabilities working yet. This will be use on my Armada laptop.
CrFr wrote on 2020-07-28, 22:08:Bought another one of these Pioneer slot drives. This is the third one I've bought. Two others died quite soon after purchase. Maybe this will last 😁
I just like how they look. Bit different than typical PC drives, somewhat eyecatching when someone has one of these in their machine.
20200728_184049890_iOS_.jpg
Looks like my first DVD Drive ! I remember I had loading issues after few years 😀
My Intel SE440BX-2 Intel's website Mirror : Modified to include docs, refs and BIOSes.
Proud owner of a TL866 II
Personal GitHub
Roland CM64 sound module new and sealed came today to my office 😀
- Macintosh LC475, Powerbook 540c, Macintosh Performa 6116CD, Power Macintosh G3 Minitower, Imac G3, Powermac G4 MDD, Powermac G5, Imac Mid 2007
- Cyrix 120
- Amiga 500, Amiga 1200
- Atari 1040 STF
- Roland MT32, CM64, CM500, SC55, SC88, Yamaha MU50
very nice :3
I'm jelly x3
Dimitris1980 wrote on 2020-07-29, 12:15:Roland CM64 sound module new and sealed came today to my office 😀
B-E-A-Utilful!
My Retro B:\ytes YouTube Channel & Retro Collection
Picked up a NOS case locally for €12, a Lian Li PC-A55
First thoughts are to mod a basic window in the side panel and use it for a dual build, possibly skt370 coppermine. With its front-mounted psu I may also rethink its position (top or bottom).
the air flow design on that case tho makes little since.
Warlord wrote on 2020-07-30, 04:18:the air flow design on that case tho makes little since.
Why not? The bottom is likely perforated, and as you can see on the pictures there's room below most of the bottom plate. Hot air naturally rises, and gets expelled from the top.
Of course the design is also a great vacuum cleaner (unless it has good filtering in place).
yawetaG wrote on 2020-07-30, 05:25:Warlord wrote on 2020-07-30, 04:18:the air flow design on that case tho makes little since.
Why not? The bottom is likely perforated, and as you can see on the pictures there's room below most of the bottom plate. Hot air naturally rises, and gets expelled from the top.
Of course the design is also a great vacuum cleaner (unless it has good filtering in place).
`
It's fine for a small build; the one issue being the front-mounted PSU fan trying to push warm air out front/bottom thru the one large unfiltered opening (unless you choose to flip the fan around in the PSU). I'm thinking I might top-mount the psu (sfx or tfx maybe) in the 5.25 bay, which I don't plan on using, and adding a vented Lian Li bay cover so that'll allow warm air to be pushed out front/top (better) and also allows me to mount front intake fans in the unused PSU mount area. Apart from that, I'd expect decent airflow from the two supplied 140mm fans (both filtered), plus I can add a rear 80/90mm exhaust as well (the board I'm thinking of has plently of fan headers).