Exactly 😆 Everything is super over the top, except the sound card. What's the story behind that?
I'm more of a fan of the Pentium III platform than of sound cards. I know the Sound Blaster PCI128 isn't the best, but I just had it there. If the board had sound on board, I would even have left it at that.
I am always open to suggestions with what I could replace the SB PCI128.
As DOS 🎮 seems to be no issue for you, I would reccomend Areal Vortex based card (Terratec XLerate a.E) or Soundblasters Live! If you prefere EAX.
The original Vortex really isn't that great. SBlive! also does A3D as well plus EAX in hardware.
Only Vortex2 cards are capable of A3D 2.0, so I'd recommend to only get a Vortex2 card if you want an Aureal chip.
Well, I have dual p3 @1ghz coppermine system with up to 4x agp (sideband) i gots a radeon sapphire HDMI X1600 DOESN'T hdmi do audio? I will assume best under 2k or xp if it does with this genre *anyhow* I'll post a pic when finished
Very nice build! I have one of those Maxdata cases, too. My Socket A build currently lives in there. But it's not modded in any way.
Regarding the sound card: Since you are probably running Win2k or XP (for dual CPU support), a Vortex 2 would not get you very far. Driver support is basically limited to Win9x. And they are relatively hard to find and expensive here in Germany.
Audigy 2 ZS on the other hand is very cheap (eBay Classifieds is full of listings for this card in the 5-15€ range), very compatible and would be a huge step forward from your PCI128.
vad4rwrote on 2021-04-29, 06:56:CPU: AMD-K7 800Mhz
Mainboard: Asus K7M-RM
RAM: 3x 128MB Infinion 133Mhz, CL3
GPU: ATI Rage Fury Maxx
NIC: 3com 3C905CX-TX-M
Soun […] Show full quote
CPU: AMD-K7 800Mhz
Mainboard: Asus K7M-RM
RAM: 3x 128MB Infinion 133Mhz, CL3
GPU: ATI Rage Fury Maxx
NIC: 3com 3C905CX-TX-M
Sound: Creative Sound Blaster Live! CT4830
FDD: 3,5" Disk
HDD: Maxtor Fireball 3 2F040L0 40GB IDE
ODD: AOpen DVD1648/APP pro
PSU: Seasonic SFX 300W 80+
Case: Micro ATX Case from Lite-On
OS: Windows 98 SE with Servicepack 2.1D
Wow, now that is a clean looking machine! Great! I like to put some effort into cable management myself, but you have done an incredible job, none of my builds has ever looked so clean (at least none of those in old cases without modern cable management features) - hats off!
I am planning to pair one of my Slot A boards with my Rage Fury Maxx, too. It's an appealing combination somehow.
Next system:
Case: Highscreen Kompakt II Desktop
Mainboard & CPU: Octek Jaguar V Rev. 2.0 with AMD386DX40 and Ulsi Advanced Math Coprocessor
RAM:: 8MB
I/O Controller: Goldstar Prime 2
GPU: Trident TVGA9000b with 512KB RAM
Sound: Soundblaster 16 CT2230 with IDE Connector for
ODD: Mitsumi LU005S CD-ROM
HDD: NoName Slotadapter with 512MB CF Card
FDD: 5,25" and 3,5"
todo: CD-ROM without function, original Mitsumi I/O Card without function too. Look for another drive.
Those scores are good nice job on that system I bet that thing is fun to play with. I love that little system you got and I also love that style CD ROM drive it reminds me of being a kid my uncle had a high end 486 system with that drive. Good times. He still has that system and I'm hoping one day he'll finally let me take it.
Do you have the proprietary mitsumi ide cable to go with the drive? You could try adding a SB16 or some sound card that has the mitsumi interface and see if the controller card is the issue potentially
bofh.fromhellwrote on 2021-04-29, 20:30:That's a very nice cable management.
Care to share how stuff is routed?
My intention is obviously to steal your ideas! ;) […] Show full quote
That's a very nice cable management.
Care to share how stuff is routed?
My intention is obviously to steal your ideas! 😉
Do you know the word "copyright"? xD
I think this picture will explain a lot:
The FDD cable goes between the IDE cables over and behind the HDD and comes to the connector between HDD and FDD. The best way to make a better cable managment: take old cables and practice to fold them. Example to turn around the pins:
(sry for my bad english, I hope you have an idea what I mean)
Do you have the proprietary mitsumi ide cable to go with the drive? You could try adding a SB16 or some sound card that has the mitsumi interface and see if the controller card is the issue potentially
This is the first time I hear from a special cable. I use a normal IDE 40 pin cable and have no function with the Mitsumi I/O card or over a SB16. Du you have the pin plan?
vad4rwrote on 2021-04-30, 06:43:Do you know the word "copyright"? xD
I think this picture will explain a lot:
AMD K7 Rage Fury Maxx (14).jpg […] Show full quote
bofh.fromhellwrote on 2021-04-29, 20:30:That's a very nice cable management.
Care to share how stuff is routed?
My intention is obviously to steal your ideas! ;) […] Show full quote
That's a very nice cable management.
Care to share how stuff is routed?
My intention is obviously to steal your ideas! 😉
Do you know the word "copyright"? xD
I think this picture will explain a lot:
AMD K7 Rage Fury Maxx (14).jpg
The FDD cable goes between the IDE cables over and behind the HDD and comes to the connector between HDD and FDD. The best way to make a better cable managment: take old cables and practice to fold them. Example to turn around the pins:
Falten1.jpg Falten2.jpg
(sry for my bad english, I hope you have an idea what I mean)
Do you have the proprietary mitsumi ide cable to go with the drive? You could try adding a SB16 or some sound card that has the mitsumi interface and see if the controller card is the issue potentially
This is the first time I hear from a special cable. I use a normal IDE 40 pin cable and have no function with the Mitsumi I/O card or over a SB16. Du you have the pin plan?
Neat. I guess the kind of cables you use are the ones that stay in shape instead of the ones from the early 90's?
Do you use some sort of clips on the bends? I just folled the one in your example to switch the red over to the other side but to keep the fault in place I definitely need some sort of clip...
You can bend the 80-wire cable better than the 40-wire cable. Nothing is needed for this to stay in place.
The 40-wire cable sometimes needs a dot of hot glue. If you disassemble it, the glue is easier to remove.
Next system:
This is a very cheap PC. I buy it some year before für 5€. I make only a function test and put him to my attic. The cablechaos triggerd my a lot and some days ago I make a cleanup - without test the system before - and the mainboard was gone (damaged capacitor). I assembled another MSI Board, from S939 to S462 - it's nothing exciting, but I had something to tinker with.
Mainboard: MSI KT6V with VIA KT600 chipset
CPU: AMD Barton 3200+
GPU: ATI Radeon 9600pro
RAM: Corsair DDR1 (forgot the specs)
Xilence Performance C Serie 80mm fans (very expensive, 3 pieces für 5,91€ including shipping ^^ )
Only onboardsound, no soundcard (I search one with red PCB (ideas?))
Ok, now I dare you to do a 386/486 AT build with an ISA/VLB IO controller, let's see if you can pull that off in a way that will make me feel ashamed..
Retronautics: A digital gallery of my retro computers, hardware and projects.