VOGONS


WORKING Shuttle HOT-613 (Single to Dual - Pentium Pro)

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Reply 60 of 74, by maxtherabbit

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well hot damn!

you're just like my mans mulder in paper hearts

Reply 61 of 74, by wiretap

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I think I'll stick with a period correct OS. I have a copy of BackOffice Server 4.5 -- per the description:

Includes Windows NT Server 4.0 SP4, Internet Information Services 4.0, Microsoft SQL Server 7.0, Microsoft SNA Server 4.0 SP2, Microsoft SMS 2.0, Microsoft Exchange Server 5.5 SP2, Microsoft Proxy Server 2.0, Microsoft Index Server 2.0, Microsoft Transaction Server 2.0, Internet Explorer 5.0, Microsoft FrontPage 2000, and Microsoft Visual InterDev 6.0.
*BackOffice Server 4.5 with 1 server license and 5 clients access licenses (CAL) was marketed for US$675. It required 2 GB minimum hard drive space, a minimum processor type of Pentium Pro 200 MHz, and a minimum RAM size of 128 MB.

Seems to meet the specifications perfectly. I might bump up the RAM to 256MB.

My Github
Circuit Board Repair Manuals

Reply 62 of 74, by chrismeyer6

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Oohh that'll make a great back office server system. Nice choice.

Reply 63 of 74, by RayeR

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Nice project, exactly my cup of cofee, congratulation!
Yes, during the time I learned some time it's good to check the soldering with mag. glass at good light, I also had some stories with improperly soldered pins or solder bridges between pins...

It remembers me still having an Asus P/I-P65UP5 MB with dead dual socket C-P6ND CPU card waiting for repair. The MB was tested with different CPU card and works. On CPU card I checked the VRM and clock generators works fine, I resoldered all chipset pins but didn't help. I suspect the chipset is some way damaged. I got this card already in dead state so I don't know what had happened to it. When I'll have a chacne to get another chipset from some donor board for reasonable price I'll replace it...

Gigabyte GA-P67-DS3-B3, Core i7-2600K @4,5GHz, 8GB DDR3, 128GB SSD, GTX970(GF7900GT), SB Audigy + YMF724F + DreamBlaster combo + LPC2ISA

Reply 64 of 74, by geekitup

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Very cool. You should contact Shuttle again and point them to this thread! 😀

Reply 66 of 74, by geekitup

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That's even better! Full props to Shuttle!

Reply 67 of 74, by RayeR

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BTW I have recently found a cool russian forum
https://smd.db-x7.ru/load/skhemy_materinskikh_plat/283
that contains a lot of schematics of motherboards, even quite modern ones like my Gigabyte GA-P67-DS3-B3 and GA-P67A-D3-B3. This helps a lot for HW modding and repair.

Gigabyte GA-P67-DS3-B3, Core i7-2600K @4,5GHz, 8GB DDR3, 128GB SSD, GTX970(GF7900GT), SB Audigy + YMF724F + DreamBlaster combo + LPC2ISA

Reply 68 of 74, by Sphere478

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This thread was inspiration for my most recent build.

Would be interested in your guys’s thoughts on some of the remaining questions of my project.

Thanks
😀

Re: Tyan S1564S to S1564D single to dual processor conversion

Sphere's PCB projects.
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Sphere’s socket 5/7 cpu collection.
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SUCCESSFUL K6-2+ to K6-3+ Full Cache Enable Mod
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Tyan S1564S to S1564D single to dual processor conversion (also s1563 and s1562)

Reply 70 of 74, by wiretap

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Finally put it in a case, along with a Voodoo 3, Sound Blaster Goldfinch setup, and a 3COM NIC.

PXL_20220607_232933481.jpg
PXL_20220607_232145067.jpg
PXL_20220607_225033504.jpg
PXL_20220607_021724170.jpg
PXL_20220607_021737904.jpg

My Github
Circuit Board Repair Manuals

Reply 71 of 74, by chrismeyer6

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That's a sweet looking case and it's a great fit for an incredible system. I'm glad you were able to get it all buttoned up.

Reply 73 of 74, by luckybob

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13071355_0.png

Great case! It's a perfect fit for that setup.

It is a mistake to think you can solve any major problems just with potatoes.

Reply 74 of 74, by reodraca

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Oh wow, I feel small now 🤣. Here I am, uploading my first post to Vogons about my dual Pentium Pro project, and then after browsing to read other projects and stories, I find this. And I thought my project was impressive. It's got nothing on yours. You literally converted a board to take a second processor and VRM, when all I did was stick a second one in with its VRM. Nice. Also, awesome case. Where'd you get the 'Dual Pentium Pro' sticker?